Sherri v. National Surety Co.

153 N.E. 70, 243 N.Y. 266, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 750
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 9, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 153 N.E. 70 (Sherri v. National Surety 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
Sherri v. National Surety Co., 153 N.E. 70, 243 N.Y. 266, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 750 (N.Y. 1926).

Opinion

Crane, J.

After an unanimous affirmance by the Appellate Division, we allowed an appeal in this case, but a more thorough examination of the record and briefs convinces me that the case has been properly decided.

The plaintiff sought burglary insurance through her broker, L. T. Hollister & Co., Inc. In accordance with custom, a placer of that company made application on the risk to the National Surety Company, and received a binder insuring the plaintiff until a corrected policy *269 should be issued. The binder contained the following clause: We, the undersigned Insurance Companies, hereby agree to insure property as herein described for amounts subscribed.

“ This binder becomes void upon delivery of corrected policy to the office of L. T. Hollister, Inc.”

The term “ corrected policy ” had this meaning and significance. At the time of the issuance of the binder insuring the property which is given immediately upon the application of the placer, the insurer knows little or nothing of the risk. Any and all investigation as to its nature and soundness has to be made thereafter. Should the risk prove to be hazardous, the company may cancel the insurance. When the policy is thereafter issued it is accompanied by certain declarations annexed thereto which are supposed to be the answers to questions made by the insured. The fact is that the company issuing the policy writes in these answers as it understands the facts to be. After the receipt of the policy by the broker for the insured, if any of these answers are incorrect or inaccurate, the insurer is notified and a corrected policy is issued.

The clause quoted, therefore, was to be binding until such a corrected policy was issued. The binder in this case was issued by the defendant on March 10, 1922. Four days thereafter the policy of insurance with the proposed declarations attached, was executed and sent to the plaintiff’s broker, L. T. Hollister & Co., Inc. On the same day, the 14th of March, 1922, the National Surety Company received an unfavorable report on the plaintiff’s risk, and so notified the broker. Notice was also given that the company canceled the risk and demanded the immediate return of the policy. This notice was not in writing, the information having been imparted by an employee of the defendant who called .upon the brokers to procure the policy. The brokers refused to return the policy until they had insured the plaintiff elsewhere.

*270 Mrs. Antoinette Sherri, the plaintiff, was not informed -or aware of any of these proceedings. She had employed her brokers to insure her property. '

Some time about the 21st of March, 1922, the plaintiff’s home was burglarized and her property stolen. She brought this action on the policy of insurance to recover her loss. At the trial it became a question whether the insurance was in effect by reason of the binder or the policy. The trial justice permitted an amendment of the pleadings and the action was continued as upon the binder. The defendant complains of this amendment, but as its counsel did not claim surprise or unpreparedness to meet the issue, his only objection being the power of the court, we find no error in this ruling. (Struzewski v. Farmers’ Fire Ins. Co., 226 N. Y. 338; Walrath v. Hanover Fire Ins. Co., 216 N. Y. 220, at p. 226.) So far as we are concerned, therefore, the policy is eliminated from this case, except as it may become a part of the insurance contract effectuated by the binder. .¡

These insurance binders, so called, have been before this court in other decisions. In Lipman v. Niagara Fire Ins. Co. (121 N. Y. 454) it was held that these binding slips are a present insurance in the amount specified; that they are a short method of issuing a temporary policy for the convenience of all parties to continue until the execution of the formal one. The obligations, however, of the parties are according to the terms of the policy, in ordinary use by the company.” (See, also, Hicks v. British American Assurance Co., 162 N. Y. 284.) The policy issued by the defendant and the one customarily used contained, this clause: “ This policy may be cancelled at any time by either óf the parties upon written notice to the other party stating when thereafter cancellation shall be effective and the date of cancellation shall then be the end of the Policy Period.”

The binder issued by the defendant insured the plain *271 tiff’s property under the obligations of the usual policy containing this cancellation clause. Unless there was something in the binder indicating a contrary intent, written notice was required to cancel the insurance before the delivery of a corrected policy. In practice parties may, and no doubt do, at times waive such written notice, but this element does not enter into this case.

We find nothing in the binder nor in the findings of fact, unanimously affirmed, which renders this cancellation clause inoperative. The words of the binder state that it becomes void upon the delivery of the corrected policy to the office of L. T. Hollister, Inc. We may say here, in passing, that written notice given to Hollister & Co., the plaintiff’s authorized agents, acting in the matter, would probably have been written notice of cancellation within the terms of the policy. The broker was acting for the plaintiff at the time in the very transaction. The notice given, however, was an oral communication in demanding back the written policy. The demand was refused until other insurance could be placed.

The findings state that customarily a binder is issued pending an investigation as to the hazards of the risk, and if the report as to those hazards is not good, the company declines to issue a policy, and cancels the binder. The trial justice further found that the binder in this case was delivered subject to such a report. Finding of fact No. 12 reads as follows:

That on the 14th day of March, 1922, the defendant company received a 'report as to the moral hazard and risk in regard "to the plaintiff and as a result of said report, on said date notified L. T. Hollister & Co., Inc. that the report was unfavorable and that the company cancelled the risk and demanded the immediate return of the policy of insurance.”

This is not a finding that the cancellation was in writing within the terms of the policy. It is conceded that the.demand for the return of the policy was made *272 orally. The notice of cancellation was given in the same conversation. Examining the evidence, as we have a right to do, to sustain or to make a new finding; not inconsistent with others, in order to affirm a judgment, we ascertain that no written notice of cancellation was given to the plaintiff or to her agent, Hollister & Co. That this finding No. 12 did not refer to a written cancellation is quite evident from the fact that the trial justice based his conclusions of law and judgment for the plaintiff upon the failure to give written notice of cancellation in accordance with the policy. The fourth conclusion of law reads as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
153 N.E. 70, 243 N.Y. 266, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherri-v-national-surety-co-ny-1926.