People v. . Mercantile Credit Guarantee Co.

60 N.E. 24, 166 N.Y. 416, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1290
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 60 N.E. 24 (People v. . Mercantile Credit Guarantee Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. . Mercantile Credit Guarantee Co., 60 N.E. 24, 166 N.Y. 416, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1290 (N.Y. 1901).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The defendant, as its name indicates, was incorporated for the purpose of making contracts of insurance or indemnity with traders and others to protect them from loss in their business by reason of the failure or insolvency,of their customers. It seems that the company itself failed and .passed into the hands of a receiver and two of the parties who had been insured under its contracts presented claims to the receiver as creditors. The receiver rejected the claims, and upon a trial of the questions before a referee there was a report that the claims’ were not covered by the contract or policy of the company. The report was confirmed and judgment against the claimants entered accordingly, which has been affirmed at the Appellate Division by a divided court.

*419 There is no dispute about the facts since they were found by the referee and appear in the record and are embraced in the questions certified to us by the court below. The question before this court involves a construction of the policy or contract which the company delivered to the claimants and which the latter insist entitle them to payment from the assets in the hands of the receiver. It will be convenient to consider the two claims separately, since the policies and the conditions governing the rights of the parties are different. The claim of the Winsted Hosiery Company amounts to $364.24, made up of three distinct items or debts due the claimant from three different customers for goods sold, namely, one Getz, $101.70; one Moses, $176.14, and Robie & Co., $86.40. The two former debtors are in Texas and the latter in Illinois. By the terms of the policy the defendant in consideration of $90 insured the hosiery company “ to an amount not exceeding three thousand dollars against loss sustained by reason of the insolvency of debtors owing the insured for merchandise usually dealt in, sold and delivered in the regular course of business.” The policy contains numerous conditions and stipulations which qualify the general obligation of the insurer, but we are now concerned with only one of those conditions, which was as follows : “The term ‘loss sustained by the insolvency of debtors ’ is agreed to mean losses upon sales made by the insured to debtors who have made a general assignment for the benefit of their creditors.” The question, therefore, is whether, upon the facts found, the three debtors named, to whom the insured sold goods and who failed, made a general assignment for the benefit of their creditors within the fair meaning of this provision of the defendant’s policy. They did make written transfers, respectively, of substantially all their property to pay or secure debts, and the question certified is whether either of the three instruments ajipearing in the record constitute a general assignment within the meaning of the policy “ when, at the time of their respective, execution, the property severally described therein constituted substantially all the property of the respective debtors and *420 was at once delivered, and the respective debtors thereupon at once ceased to do business.”

Before proceeding to answer the question, it would seem to be necessary to inquire with respect .to the scope, purpose and meaning of the policy under which the claim is made. It should be interpreted in such a way as to acconrplisli the general purpose in view and at the same time give effect to all the conditions according to their fair and reasonable meaning. It would be very difficult, indeed, for any business man to determine the effect of all the conditions that appear in the policy in question, but not very difficult to ascertain what the claimants had the right to understand by the condition that we are now concerned with. The purpose was to indemnify the claimants from loss by insolvency of such debtors as had made a general assignment for the benefit of creditors. The claimants have sustained the loss since an assignment has been made. The assignment or transfer in each case was for the benefit of creditors or a creditor, and it is general in the sense that it embraced substantially all the property that the debtor had. The assignee in each case went into possession and the assignor ceased to do business. The debtor owing the claimant thereby lost the title, possession and dominion over all he had, and thereby became disabled to pay any one else. It would seem to be reasonable in such a case to conclude that the claimant had sustained a loss by reason of the insolvency • of a debtor who had made a general assignment within the fair meaning of the policy.

The contract in question was prepared by the defendant and intended for use, not in any particular state or locality, but throughout the country generally. The local law of any state with respect to its construction is not to govern. Each state may have laws and statutes of its own that govern general assignments for the benefit of creditors, but these terms are not used in the policy in question in any statutory or local sense. When the defendant indemnified against insolvency of debtors who had made a general assignment for the benefit of creditors, the contract is not to be interpreted technically, but *421 the language must be held to mean what the words import to the commercial world. Hence, the character of the instrument or the nature of the transaction must be determined by the effect it has upon the debtor in the business community, and not by the name which the parties see fit to give to it. It may be a statutory assignment, a mortgage, a confession of judgment or some other contrivance, the purpose and effect of which is to dispose of all the debtor’s assets and disable him from paying his debts. In such cases the loss is fairly within the scope of the indemnity secured to the insured by this policy. It is the completeness of the transfer and its effect upon the debtor in business, and not the name or form of the instrument or transaction, that gives it character. Any transfer by a trader or merchant of all his stock and business, when it covers substantially all his property, may be-an assignment within the meaning of the policy in spite of its form or the name given to it. (Brown v. Guthrie, 110 N. Y. 441; Britton v. Lorenz, 45 N. Y. 51; Dana v. Lull, 17 Vt. 390; Kendall v. Bishop, 76 Mich. 634; White v. Cotzhausen, 129 U. S. 329.) In case of ambiguity or uncertainty concerning the meaning of conditions in contracts of this character, that meaning is to be adopted which is most favorable to the assured. (Allen v. St. Louis Ins. Co., 85 N. Y. 473.) That rule is justly applicable to the words used in the policy in question when there is nothing to show that they were used in any narrow, special or local sense. We think, therefore, that the three instruments described in the question certified were general assignments within the meaning of the policy. This proposition will be made clearer by a brief reference to each of the instruments. The transfer by Getz, one of the debtors of the claimant, was made on the 20th day of April, 1896, in Texas. On its face it assigns and transfers to a trustee named all his stock of goods, including fixtures and furniture of all kinds in his store, in trust for the benefit of creditors.

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Bluebook (online)
60 N.E. 24, 166 N.Y. 416, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mercantile-credit-guarantee-co-ny-1901.