People v. Liverpool, London & Globe Insurance

2 Thomp. & Cook 268
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Thomp. & Cook 268 (People v. Liverpool, London & Globe Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Liverpool, London & Globe Insurance, 2 Thomp. & Cook 268 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1873).

Opinion

Miller, P. J.

The plaintiffs claim to recover in this action, upon a policy of insurance, issued to them by the defendants, on the 28th of October, 1869, on the New York State Inebriate Asylum, for the sum of twenty thousand dollars. At the circuit, the judge, passing by several grounds which were urged, dismissed the plaintiffs’ complaint for the sole reason that the person making ■the application who was the defendants’ agent, for the purpose of obtaining and issuing policies in the locality of the asylum, was not the agent of the company so as to bind them in this policy, and there being a carpenter’s shop on the premises, the policy was void, because the application did not state truly the condition of the property insured, and by means thereof there wag a concealment of a material fact in applying for the insurance.

If the dismissal can be upheld, upon any of the grounds which were taken, or upon any other arising on the evidence which could not have been obviated by the plaintiffs, then there was no error.

The ground taken by the judge presents the most important question in the case, and may therefore very properly be first considered. The concealment of a material fact, under ordinary circumstances, would necessarily vitiate the policy; but if the person who receives the application, accepts the insurance, and issues the policy, is an authorized agent of the company, and has knowledge or means of-knowing the existence of the alleged fact, and voluntarily accepts the insurance, with such knowledge, and without interposing any objection on that account, such act of the agent would constitute a waiver of the inbreased risk.

It is argued by the learned counsel for the plaintiffs, that Osbourn was the defendants’ agent in the transaction, although he was treasurer of the asylum; that at least the question whose agent he was, should have been submitted to the jury; that notice, if any he had, of the carpenters’ work came to him while he was acting as the agent of the company, and, even conceding that he was both the agent of the insurer and the insured, that no such defense was interposed in the defendants’ answer, or made at the trial, and, therefore, the difficulty, if it existed, was obviated. These views present serious questions which are not free from embarrassment and are entitled to careful consideration. As we are of the opinion that this branch of the case may be properly disposed of, without regard to the points stated, we will proceed to examine the question whether admitting Osbourn to be only the [271]*271agent of the plaintiffs, or that he did not acquire notice, while engaged in the business of the defendants, there was still any concealment which avoided the policy.

The application for insurance, which was introduced in evidence, is of the most general character. It does not state whether the building insured is of stone, brick or wood, or describe its particular dimensions or location. The same remark applies to the policy of insurance, and one of the conditions and stipulations to which the policy is subject, provides that the basis of the contract is the application of the insured, and if it does not truly describe the property, the policy shall be null and void. The policy itself contains no special provisions in reference 'to an omission to state, with entire accuracy, every thing which has any relation to the risk taken, nor were any questions asked or propounded in the policy, or by the defendant’s agent, in regard to the same. The insurer has a right to take all risks, and at such rates as may be agreed upon. He has also a right to relieve the insured from all responsibility in giving information, and circumstances may arise where such an intention •may properly and legitimately be inferred. If an applicant desires his house insured, and no questions are asked, and no attempt made at concealment, can it be said that there was fraud, because a portion of the house was occupied by carpenters who were engaged in making reparations, and that it was not a house, as a matter of law ? If the application was to insure a house, and it was proved to be a carpenter’s shop or a manufactory where combustible materials were employed, it might well be urged that the facts appearing were evidence of concealment, but without some proof of an intent to conceal or defraud the company, where it is not thus entirely clear from the circumstances, it is a fair question for a jury to determine whether there was any such concealment. The doctrine that the assured is bound, although no inquiry be made to disclose every fact within his knowledge, is not applicable, at least to its full extent, to policies of insurance against fire. Burritt v. Saratoga C. M. F. Ins. Co., 5 Hill, 192.

In the case cited, after laying down the foregoing propositionBkonsoh, J., says: “If a man is to consent to insure my house, without taking the trouble to inquire of what materials it is built, how it is situated with reference to other buildings, or to wliat uses it is applied, he has no ground of complaint that the hazard proves to be greater than was anticipated, unless I am chargeable with [272]*272some misrepresentation concerning the nature or extent of the risk.. It is, therefore, the practice of companies which insure against fire, to make inquiries of the assured in some form, concerning all such matters as are deemed material to the risk, or which may affect' the amount of premium to be paid.”

In Marshall v. Columbian Ins. Co., 27 N. H. 266, the court say, “ there are cases which hold that where no inquiries are made as to the title or situation of the property, and nothing appears to show that fraud was designed, a suppression of facts.will not make void the policy,” and see cases there cited.

In the case at bar there was no actual concealment or fraud proved, no representation whatever, and nothing showing an intentional suppression of facts. Nor was any inquiry made as to the uses for which the building was to be applied. Can it, then, be said that the insured has reason to complain when there has been neglect in making the required investigation, and that the insurer is chargeable with concealment, because the hazard was more than ordinary risks, which may or may not have been anticipated ?

It is certainly not manifest that the insured was called upon to speak, without being solicited to do so, or that, in any way, there was any intentional concealment of the real facts. When certain questions are put to a party desiring a life insurance and fully answered, it is not a fraudulent concealment if he omits to state facts material to the risk, not called for by any specific or general question. Rawls v. Am. Ins. Co., 27 N. Y. 282. The rule here laid down is, at least, equally applicable where the insurers do not put any questions whatever to the applicant for insurance. See, also, Bliss on Ins. 98.

In any view which may be taken of the subject, as there, was no direct proof of concealment, it should have been submitted to the jury whether the circumstances of the case showed a concealment of the facts. In Rawlins v. Desborory, 2 Mood. & Rob. 328, in an action upon a life insurance policy, at nisi prius. Lord Oh. J. D bu-has said to the jury, that if they thought the deceased, without being interrogated as to his habits, was aware of them, and knowing of their importance, studiously concealed them from the insurers, they should find 'for the defendant; but the mere non-communication of his habits of life, would not, of itself,

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Bluebook (online)
2 Thomp. & Cook 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-liverpool-london-globe-insurance-nysupct-1873.