Nugent v. Rensselaer County Mutual Fire Insurance

106 A.D. 308, 94 N.Y.S. 605
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 106 A.D. 308 (Nugent v. Rensselaer County Mutual Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nugent v. Rensselaer County Mutual Fire Insurance, 106 A.D. 308, 94 N.Y.S. 605 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Chase, J.:

The defendant is a domestic mutual tire insurance company doing business in the county of Rensselaer, N. T. It has a board of directors and officers including a president,, secretary and treasurer, and a vice-president who is also the general manager of the company. It is made the duty of the general manager of the company to approve or disapprove applications for insurance' and adjust losses. Policies of insurance are generally issued for the company by the secretary, bearing the signature of the president and secretary.

On 2d day of January, 1904, the plaintiff applied to a local agent and one of the directors of the defendant for a policy of insurance on the buildings on the farm occupied by him and owned by the heirs at law of his deceased father, ánd also .for a further policy of insurance on certain personal property while contained in said buildings which personal property was owned by the plaintiff. A written application for the insurance on said personal property was prepared by said director and signed by the plaintiff. Such application was forwarded to the secretary of the company. The general manager examined said application, approved thereof, and directed the secretary to issue a,policy, which he did, and it was forwarded to the plaintiff about the 12th day of January, 1904. On the 31st day of January, 1904, part of the buildings so insured were burned, together with their, contents. The personal property so insured consisted of household, furniture, provisions and wearing apparel, live stock, wagons, harness, sleighs, etc., and farm produce. The horses, cows, two wagons, hay, potatoes, oats,, buckwheat, barley and peas so insured were included in a chattel mortgage previously.given by the plaintiff to one Reynolds and duly filed in the town clerk’s office of the town where the plaintiff so resided. The amount of said mortgage was $1,000. The application for such insurance signed by the plaintiff stated “ That he is the sole owner of the. property hereby sought to be insured and that the same is in no way incumbered.”

It is claimed by the plaintiff that at the time he made said application he stated to the director of the defendant taking the same; [310]*310that there was a chattel mortgage of $1,000 on the personal property (but not on the household goods) and the-name of the mortgagee.. This is disputed by the director, and it is claimed by the defendant that the evidence relating thereto should not have been recéived to vary the terms of the written application, and for the further reason that, no such claim is alleged in the complaint, but ■the exceptions relating thereto are immaterial if the County Court was right in its determination of the case, as will be hereinafter stated.

It is not disputed that such director, prior to taking the application, had heard by neighborhood talk that the plaintiff had borrowed money from Reynolds to buy stock and had given a chattel mortgage on part of the property sought to be insured. But he says that inasmuch as the plaintiff said to him that the- property was not incumbered he believed the statement of the plaintiff and assumed that there was a mistake in the information that he had received.

The annual meeting of the defendant was held on the 19th ■day of January, 1904, and the director of the defendant who took the application, when on his way to such meeting, was told by the mortgagee that he had a chattel mortgage on the personal property and that the mortgage itself could be examined by going to the town clerk’s office. The director who took the application visited the scene. of the fire on the morning thereafter and before the burning was over.

Plaintiff notified said general manager of the fire. On the 4th day of February, 1904, said general manager wa.s told of the chattel mortgage, and on the 5th day of February, 1904, he went to the town clerk’s office and examined the same, and on that day he, ■with the director of the company who .took the application, went to the scene of the fire and examined the ruins, and then to the house of a neighbor, where proof of loss on the buildings was prepared by said general manager and signed and sworn to by the plaintiff as agent for the owners, and the plaintiff paid said general manager -one dollar and fifty cents for his trouble in preparing said proofs of loss. The general manager started to make out the proofs' of loss as to the personal property, but the plaintiff did not have time to think over the details of his loss,' and- he was told by said general [311]*311manager to make out the proofs of loss on the personalty and deliver them to said director.

Thereafter and about February 10, 1904, the proofs of loss were completed, the director assisted the plaintiff in making such proofs of loss and the plaintiff paid him one dollar and fifty cents therefor. The pi’oofs of loss so prepared included a statement of the chattel mortgage existing on the. property and that part of the proofs of loss was written therein by said general manager. After the proofs of loss were received by the company some errors were discovered in details and as to the place where they were signed and said general manager directed the secretary to return them for correction, and they were so returned to said director and he sent for the plaintiff and the suggested corrections were made by the plaintiff. It was necessary for plaintiff to travel six miles for the purpose of complying with such request. The proofs of loss were returned to the company February 16, 1904. On the 19th of February, 1904, the plaintiff was notified in writing to attend at the office of the company, in which notice it is said: Our executive board will meet in the office of the company on Saturday, February 27th, at 1 p. si., to consider jour claims and in-order to perfect the adjustment it will be necessary to have yon present.” The plaintiff did so attend and his expenses in so doing were four dollars and fifty cents. He was questioned in regard to the fire, the amount of his loss and the existence of such chattel mortgage, and after a consultation by the president, secretary, general manager and a director of the company the plaintiff was told that his proofs of loss were rejected and his claim was disallowed on the grounds that he had concealed the fact that there was' a chattel mortgage on the property when the application was made and that he had overestimated in the value of the articles alleged to have been lost.” The proofs of loss, were never returned to the plaintiff," and they were never objected to or rejected as proofs of loss other than in the general way in connection with the rejection of the claim as stated.

It does not appear that the defendant ever suggested that the plaintiff’s policy was void prior to February 27,1904.

At the opening of the trial the defendant moved that the plaintiff’s complaint be dismissed upon the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

[312]*312' Plaintiff’s complaint is in the usual form in actions to recover. for a loss upon policies of insurance and in the complaint it refers to the policy, and states: “ Said policy of insurance No.- 9876 is hereby made a part of this complaint.”

It appears that the complaint was served without having a copy of such policy of insurance attached thereto. No objection was made to the complaint by reason of the failure by inadvertence or otherwise to attach to the complaint a copy of the policy as- stated therein until the opening of the trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 A.D. 308, 94 N.Y.S. 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nugent-v-rensselaer-county-mutual-fire-insurance-nyappdiv-1905.