Shearman v. Niagara Fire Insurance

40 How. Pr. 393, 2 Sweeny 470
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedMay 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 40 How. Pr. 393 (Shearman v. Niagara Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shearman v. Niagara Fire Insurance, 40 How. Pr. 393, 2 Sweeny 470 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1870).

Opinion

By the court, Freedman, J.

It is now firmly settled that no transfer of interest will work a forfeiture under the clause contained in a policy, forbidding a transfer of the interest of the assured in the policy, or in the property insured thereby, without the written consent of the company, which does not so entirely deprive the assignor of all insurable interest as to prevent his recovering on the policy for his own benefit, if that clause was not contained in it. To take away the cause of action in one case, and to render void the policy in the other, equally requires a transfer or termination of the entire insurable interest. So long as the insured retains such an interest that he may be a sufferer by the loss, the policy remains valid to protect that interest. (Hitchcock agt. Northwestern Ins. Co., 26 N. Y., 68; Van Deusen agt. Charter Oak Fire and Marine Ins. Co., 1 Robt., 55 ; Fernandez agt. The Great Western Ins. Co., 3 Robt., 458 ; Phelps agt. Gebhard Fire Ins. Co., 9 Bosw., 405.)

[396]*396And, in case of an actual transfer of the entire insurable interest, the following additional propositions, arising under the same clause, have been established as the law of this state.

After a sale of the property insured, and previous to the assignment of the policy to the purchaser, the effect of the policy as an indemnity becomes suspended, not from any vice in the policy, but from the absence of a subject for it to act upon.

If a fire occurs during this time no recovery can be had against the underwriters, not because the,policy had become void, but because, at the time of the fire, the insured had no goods covered by the policy, and the purchaser had no policy to cover his interest in the goods.

But the moment the interests become again united by the union of the ownership of the goods and the interest in the policy in the same person, the policy again becomes effectual and reattaches to the goods.

And when the assignment of the policy, with the consent of the insurers, is absolute to one who has become the entire owner of the subject of insurance, it becomes a new contract of insurance between the underwriters and the assignee. If the assignment, taken in connection with the policy, plainly transfers the assured’s whole interest, the underwriters’ consent to it is evidently equivalent to their agreement to become directly answerable to the assignee. In such case the proceedings to enforce payment may be in the assignee’s name, and he becomes, to all intents and purposes, the substituted, party to the contract. (Hooper agt The Hudson River Fire Ins. Co., 17 N. Y., 424; Wolfe agt. The Security Fire Ins. Co., 39. N. Y., 51.)

It is true that in the last-named two cases the property insured consisted of a stock of goods kept for sale; and for that reason it may be claimed that the propositions therein laid down should be confined to that particular class of cases, on the ground that it must be considered as the [397]*397Intention of the parties to the policy that the assured may sell and replace his entire stock as often as his own interests may require, and that the policy is to protect whatever goods he may chance to have on hand at the time of the fire. But I can perceive of no good reason why the same propositions should not be applied in the decision of the case at bar. The cases cited by defendants on the argument afford no reason to the contrary. In Smith agt. The Saratoga Mutual Fire Ins. Co. (3 Hill, 508), and Neely agt. The Onondaga County Mutual Ins. Co. (7 Hill, 49), the assured, previous to the fire, had done an act which, according to the peculiar conditions of the policy, being that of a company organized on the mutual plan, put an end to the policy, and, as the consent of the company had not been obtained thereto in any manner, the court held that an assessment by the company for losses did not establish a waiver without further proof that the losses happened after the forfeitute of the policy bad accrued. And in Howard agt. The Albany Ins. Co. (3 Denio, 303), in which case the policy, covering a brewery and the stock and utensils therein, had been renewed several times, the same learned judge who had delivered the opinion of the court in Smith agt. The Saratoga Mutual Fire Ins. Co. (supra), expressly held " that when the assured owns the property, at the time the insurance is effected, a subsequent transfer of his interest cannot render the policy void. The contract will be of no value to the assured, for the reason that there is no longer anything upon which it can operate ; but the subsequent transfer cannot infuse any vice into that which was originally a valid agreement.”

These remarks dispose of the claim set up by the defendants that, because L. J. Shearman conveyed the property to his brother, the policy became a mere wager policy, and that consequently the renewal of it notwithstanding the acceptance of the payment of the premium, was null and void. The subseqent consent of the defendant's, indorsed upon the [398]*398policy, that the interest of L. J. Shearman in the said policy, not merely in the renewal receipt, but in the policy, be assigned to the plaintiff, subject to all the terms and conditions mentioned and set forth in the policy, revived the policy in favor of the plaintiff and re-attached it to the property described therein, just as effectually as if a new policy had been issued to the plaintiff therefor. In Wolfe agt. The Security Fire Ins. Co. (39 N. Y., 49), the property had been transferred from John Engleheart to one Stupp, who afterwards transferred the same to Margaretta, wife of John Englehart. The company never consented to the transfer to Stupp, but some months afterwards consented to the transfer of the interest of John Engleheart in the policy to his wife Margaretta, and upon that consent the company was held liable.

The defendants also claim that, inasmuch as their policy provided that if the property should be sold or transferred * * * or if the policy should be assigned without the consent of the company, to be indorsed thereon, the same should be void, it was necessary for plaintiff to show not only defendants consent to the assignment of the policy, but also their consent to the transfer of the property covered by it, and that they cannot be held liable in the absence of evidence that, in point of fact, they did consent in writing to the transfer of the property. It requires but little argument to demonstrate the hollowness of this claim. The assignment of the policy, in order to be of any benefit to the plaintiff as assignee had to be accompanied with-a transfer to him of the interest of the assignor, in the subject of insurance. Such being the case, the request made to the defendants, to consent to an assignment to plaintiff, was of itself notice to them that plaintiff had acquired, or was about to acquire, an interest in the insured property. Besides that they had actual notice of the fact that the said property had been conveyed to plaintiff. Their policy contained but one printed blank to be executed by the assignor to the assignee in case of an [399]*399assignment, and but one blank to be filled up and to be executed by the company for the purpose of demonstrating the company's assent to the assignment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 How. Pr. 393, 2 Sweeny 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shearman-v-niagara-fire-insurance-nysuperctnyc-1870.