Rosenthal v. American Bonding Co. of Baltimore

100 N.E. 716, 207 N.Y. 162, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1421
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 100 N.E. 716 (Rosenthal v. American Bonding Co. of Baltimore) 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
Rosenthal v. American Bonding Co. of Baltimore, 100 N.E. 716, 207 N.Y. 162, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1421 (N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

*165 Hiscock, J.

This action was brought to recover under a so-called burglary insurance policy for loss of goods stolen from plaintiffs. Concededly the policy extended insurance upon the goods in question against burglary under certain conditions, and it will only be necessary to give close consideration to two clauses for the purpose of determining whether those conditions have been complied with.

The first of these sets forth that the indemnity was granted “ For direct loss by burglary of any of the merchandise described in the schedule * * * occasioned by its felonious abstraction from the store, warehouse, office, loft or rooms, * * * occupied by the assured in the manner set forth in the schedule, by any person or persons who have made forcible and violent entrance upon the premises, or exit therefrom; of which force and violence there shall be visible evidence.”

The second clause, found among the so-called “Special Agreements,” provides: “The Company shall not be liable: — (1) Unless there are visible marks upon the premises of the actual force and violence used in making entry into the said premises or exit therefrom.”

The facts leading up to and constituting the alleged burglary, for which thus far a recovery has been allowed, were as follows: At about 'T.30 in the morning two of plaintiffs’ employees went to plaintiffs’ warehouse or loft for the purpose of opening the same and preparing for the day’s business. They unlocked and opened the outer door, and after entering closed the same, but did not lock it, and thus left it so that it could be opened by merely turning the knob. While they were engaged in their duties two persons opened the door with pistols in their hands and after assaulting the employees took and carried away a large amount of silks. It does not appear whether the wrongdoers closed the door behind them as they entered, but they did so close it when they left.

The question, of course, is whether these wrongful acts *166 constituted a burglary or offense which satisfied the requirements of the policy, and I shall consider them simply in connection with the two provisions which have been quoted.

Taking up the first one, I doubt whether the words “ forcible and violent entrance upon the premises, or exit therefrom ” were intended merely to define an element in the crime of burglary as it has been defined by the common law and by various statutes, and whether, therefore, their meaning is to be measured by reference to the meaning of such words as “break”' and “forcibly break ” as these words have been construed in such definitions of this crime, and which construction demanded only a very small degree of force in entering premises. The clause which we have before us first enumerates direct loss by “burglary,” a crime fully described by that single word, and it then adds that such burglary must have been committed in a certain way, namely, by a person who has made “forcible and violent” entrance upon the premises or exit therefrom. In thus specifying the particular manner in which the burglary must be committed it seems to me that the language of the policy should receive its ordinary and common meaning, and that in. order to constitute burglary under this clause there must - be an entrance or an exit upon or from the premises which is accompanied by such acts as would constitute force or violence in the ordinary acceptation of those words, rather than the somewhat technical force or breaking which would satisfy legal definitions. This view, however, is only of importance, if at all, as bearing upon the interpretation of the other clause to which attention has been called, because I shall assume without consideration for the purposes of this discussion, that the wrongdoers did commit burglary and that their entrance upon and exit from the premises was accompanied by force and violence within the meaning of the policy and that there was “visible evidence” thereof.

*167 This brings us to the second provision, and which, as already stated, exempts the defendant from liability in the case of a burglary “ unless there are visible marks upon the premises of the actual force and violence used in making entry into said premises or exit therefrom.”

The language used in this clause emphasizes the idea already suggested of real rather than technical force in breaking into the premises. When it speaks of the “ actual force or violence ” used in making entry into or exit from the premises, it employs words whose meaning is not easily satisfied by that somewhat theoretical force which has been held to meet the demands of legal definitions of burglary but which rather requires substantial violence. Frequently, if not generally, the employment of such a degree of force and violence in effecting an entry into premises would leave traces upon the building which had been entered, and proceeding, perhaps, on this theory the clause exacts that that which might be a frequent occurrence shall be an indispensable basis of recovery and formulates the requirement that there must be “visible marks upon the premises” of the force and violence which have been used, thus reaching and prescribing the condition which in my opinion stands as an effective bar to plaintiffs’ recovery.

It is hardly claimed that there were left upon the building any visible marks within the ordinary, common meaning of the words which have been quoted. It could not well be claimed that there were such. While in a general sense the entrance and exit of the wrongdoers was accompanied by force and violence, this force and violence were not manifested in the precise act of making an entry into or departure from the premises but rather characterized what was done after the men had entered. All that it was necessary for them to do in entering the premises was to turn the knob and open the door, and when they left this was closed. There was no forcing of locks or doors or any other act which left any mark upon *168 the premises unless the temporary and ordinary condition of an open door during business hours would constitute such mark, and this is not claimed. While it might be interesting to speculate on the exact nature of the signs of burglary which would satisfy the ordinary meaning of this clause, it is hardly useful to indulge in this speculation, but it is sufficient to say that in this case no such marks are found.

It is, however, urged that this requirement is of evidentiary facts which might be a protection against fraudulent claims and that there is no necessity for such safeguard in the case of a claim whose merits are supported by ample testimony of another character; that the interpretation urged by appellant would prevent recovery in many meritorious cases, and, therefore, it should be rejected and some other one be adopted which will serve the insured. Doubtless .the justice of the provision would be a subject for debate and disagreement between the parties to the contract. Quite possibly the interpretation which has been outlined might prevent recovery at times on bona fide losses.

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Bluebook (online)
100 N.E. 716, 207 N.Y. 162, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenthal-v-american-bonding-co-of-baltimore-ny-1912.