Precipio v. Insurance Co. of Pennsylvania

137 A. 549, 103 N.J.L. 589, 1927 N.J. LEXIS 228
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMay 24, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 137 A. 549 (Precipio v. Insurance Co. of Pennsylvania) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Precipio v. Insurance Co. of Pennsylvania, 137 A. 549, 103 N.J.L. 589, 1927 N.J. LEXIS 228 (N.J. 1927).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Walker, Chancellor.

This case is one in the Supreme Court, Monmouth Circuit, tried before Circuit Court Judge Jess and a jury, at the court house, Preehold, March, 1926. The plaintiff counted for damages for loss sustained at a fire in which his household goods and personal property were totally destroyed; they having been insured by defendant company. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for $800, and defendant appeals to this court.

There are ten grounds of appeal, the first six comprehending the charge of the court to the jury; the seventh alleges that the court erred in admitting a witness to testify; the eighth and ninth comprehend the admission of exhibits; the tenth alleges that the court erred in refusal to grant defendant's motion for a direction of a verdict in its favor.

*591 The first point made by the defendant is that the court erred in charging the jury as follows: “In consideration of this case, gentlemen, I call your attention to the policy of the law which is that policies of insurance such as this are to be liberally construed to uphold the contract between the parties; and conditions contained in them which create forfeiture are to be construed most strongly against the insurer.”

And counsel says that the policy involved in this suit is what is known as the standard form of fire insurance policy; that the legislature of this state has prescribed what that form shall be, so that all policies of fire insurance issued upon property in the State of Yew Jersey are required to be in this so-called standard form; that it must therefore be manifest to this court that by reason of the erroneous charge on the part of the trial court to the jury, particularly by his concluding statement — which is not excepted to, but only mentioned arguendo — the defendant has been deprived of a restriction upon the ordinary prejudice of juries against insurance companies; that by reason of the technical language employed in the insurance contract and the fact that the defendant in this case was insisting upon a technical defense, the failure of the court to charge the law of this state was most harmful error to the defendant.

Quite aside from attributing to the trial court the use of language which deprived the defendant of a restriction upon the ordinary prejudice of juries against insurance companies, which is a reflection upon the trial court, such language iá also a reflection upon this court, as was said in our opinion last term in Mahray, Incorporated, v. McCullough, ante, p. 316. As in that case, it deserves severe censure. And the aspersions upon the court below and upon the jury, like that upon counsel in Bennett v. Piatt, 85 N. J. Eq. 602, are unwarranted by anything in this case.

The defendant-appellant relies upon Mich v. Royal Ex. Assurance Co., 87 N. J. L. 607, and Del Guidici v. Imp. & Ex. Insurance Co., 98 Id. 435, as authority for his proposition that the above excerpts from the charge are erroneous statements of the law as applied to the facts of the case. In the Del Guidici case this court held that where a policy of fire *592 insurance is written in a standard form, approved by governmental authority, the maxim Verba chartarum accipiuntur contra proferentum has no special application. And it will be noticed that it is not pointed out by counsel that the maxim has an application to the facts at bar, either special or otherwise; and as our cases (supra) go no further than to hold that the- maxim has, by reason of the standard form of policy, no special application — not that it has no application in any circumstances.

It appears that what was said in the Del Guidici case was predicated upon what was said in the Mick case (at p. 611), that the policy was apparently of the standard form, and, consequently, there was no special applicability of the maxim above mentioned. This, in turn, was based upon Nelson v. Traders’ Insurance Co., 181 N. Y. 472, the authority therein cited.

Ueither of our Hew Jerse_y cases define this maxim in terms, and while the Hew York case does not do it, nevertheless, the doctrine there enunciated on the subject of standard policies is in point and illuminating. Judge Gray, speaking for the New York Court of Appeals (1905), said (at p. 474) : “This w'as' a contract which, like any^ other contract, should be enforced according to its plain provisions. Its language is clear and unambiguous, and the provision, or condition, in question, cannot be construed otherwise than it has been, without twisting the words, and thus rendering nugatory a limitation of the hazard, which it was not improper, nor unfair, for the insurer to impose. It was for the purpose of having contracts of insurance read clearly and intelligibly to the ordinary understanding of men, that the legislature, in 1886, provided for a uniform, or standard, policy of insurance. Insurers issuing policies were compelled to use one form of contract whose meaning should not be obscured by unusual clauses, nor concealed in a mass of verbiage, and whose provisions, being plain, could result in no injustice in their enforcement. When such is the contract, the courts should not refuse to enforce the forfeitures, or limitations, which the parties are deemed to have agreed *593 upon.” And this fully expresses the law upon the subject in general, and is in accord with our views upon it.

Tims, it appears that, going back to the authority relied upon by this court on this question, a form of insurance contract, written upon a standard policy, neither repeals the law that such policies are to be liberally construed to uphold the contract between! the parties, nor that conditions contained in them which create forfeiture are to be construed most strongly against the insurers.

The argument, it will be observed, is general: It is that by reason of the alleged erroneous charge on the part of the trial court the defendant has been deprived of a restriction upon the ordinary prejudices of jurors against insurance companies. If the defendant had left out the scandalous imputation about the court and jury, and simply stated, as he properly might have, that by reason of this charge the defendant has been deprived of the benefit, by reason of the technical language employed by the insurance company and the fact that the defendant in this case was insisting upon a technical defense, the failure of the court to charge the law in this state was most harmful to this defendant, might have been employed arguendo. But it does not charge any particular law relating to insurance contracts, the failure to charge which was most, harmful error to the defendant. Even the word “most,” contained in the argument, should have been omitted. For, as we said in the Makray case: “The only question before us is, Was there error? If there were, if could not have been intensified by hostility from the court.

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Bluebook (online)
137 A. 549, 103 N.J.L. 589, 1927 N.J. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/precipio-v-insurance-co-of-pennsylvania-nj-1927.