Stettiner v. Granite Insurance

5 Duer 594
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJune 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 Duer 594 (Stettiner v. Granite 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
Stettiner v. Granite Insurance, 5 Duer 594 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1856).

Opinion

By the Court. Woodruff, J.

This is an action brought to recover the amount of loss sustained by fire, under a policy, executed and delivered by the defendants, upon the plaintiff's stock of cap fronts and other goods, “ contained in the brick building situate No. 101 William street, city of New York.”

The defence insisted upon at the trial was, that the plaintiff, without the permission of the defendants, lighted the premises containing the subject of the insurance, with spirit-gas or camphene, contrary to the conditions of insurance.

The conditions of insurance annexed to the policy, and referred to therein as forming a part thereof, (and to which the plaintiff, by accepting the policy, must be deemed to have assented,) in the eighth article, contains these words:—“ The keeping of gunpowder for sale or on storage, upon or in the premises insured, or the lighting the same by camphene or spirit-gas, without written permission in the policy, shall render it void.”

On the trial, the witnesses for the plaintiff testified that on the evening of the fire, and on several evenings previous thereto, the premises occupied by the plaintiff, and containing the insured goods, had been lighted with burning-fluid.

The defendants’ counsel thereupon moved to dismiss the complaint, insisting that the testimony of those witnesses showed a violation of the above recited eighth condition of the policy. The motion was denied by the court, and the defendants’ counsel excepted.

[596]*596The reason stated in the bill of exceptions for the denial of the motion, is the same which formed the subject of a subsequent exception to the charge to the jury, to be presently noticed, viz.: That the eighth condition annexed to the insurance, related only to an insurance upon buildings, and not to an insurance upon goods contained in buildings.

It must, however, suffice to say in regard to this motion' for a, nonsuit, that it did not, .at this stage of the trial, appear that “ burning-fluid" was one of the prohibited articles. The eighth condition specified “ camphene or spirit-gas,” and the court could not say, that “ burning-fluid” was either the one or the other, and therefore the court could not say that it appeared affirmatively that this condition of the policy had been violated.

The motion for a nonsuit was, therefore, rightly denied, whether the reason assigned, therefor, was correct or not.

The defendants’ counsel thereupon called one witness, and one only, who, on his direct examination testified that he “ had dealt in and manufactured the article known as spirit-gas and burning-fluid. There is no difference between spirit-gas and burning-fluid; it is called, in the trade, spirit-gas as much as burning-fluid;” and also that he called at the premises after the fire, and found a lamp, filled with burning-fluid or spirit-gas, standing on a desk in the office, and also found a tin can containing a few drops of the same article.

But, on his cross-examination, he testified that “it is about three years since he was engaged in the manufacture of spirit-gas or burning-fluid; that he was, at that time, engaged in a drug store in Utica; that he had never dealt in or manufactured burning-fluid in the city of New York, and did not know any thing about the trade in said city, except that when he purchased for his own use he called for burning-fluid."

There was no distinct evidence showing where the contract of insurance was made. The attestation clause imports that it was signed by the president and secretary, at the office of the defendants, in Utica, and its effect is qualified by the words “ not valid unless' countersigned by J. W. Bouck, agent.” The policy, however, bears on its face, at its very beginning, an intimation that the policy was issued in the city of New York, thus: “No. 1178. $400. Granite Insurance Company, New York, of[597]*597ffice No. 78 Broadway,” and it is duly countersigned by J. W. Bouck, as agent.

Upon this evidence the court charged the jury, “ That whether spirit-gas or burning-fluid was the same article or not made no difference as to the result of this suit, inasmuch as the eighth condition of insurance related only to insurance upon buildings, and not to insurance upon goods contained in buildings.”

To this the defendants’ counsel excepted, and thereupon the court instructed the jury to find specially, in answer to this question, “Was the article of burning-fluid used as a means of light by the plaintiff the same article as spirit-gas mentioned in the eighth section of, the conditions of insurance annexed to the policy ?”

The counsellor the defendant objected, and took an exception to the submission of this question to the jury, “ on the ground that there was no evidence to discredit the witness who had testified that spirit-gas and burning-fluid were the same article, and, in the absence of any discrediting testimony, the court was bound to deem such evidence to be true.”

The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff, and, to the question specially submitted to them, they returned an answer in writing, that “ the fluid spoken of by the witnesses as * burning-fluid’ is not ‘ spirit-gas,' referred to and mentioned in the policy.”

Obviously, if this special finding is true, the first exception to the charge furnishes no ground for reversing the judgment. For if burning-fluid is not spirit-gas, then the condition in the policy has not been violated, whether that condition applies to an insurance upon goods or not.

I am of opinion that the court erred in the construction given to this condition, and that it applied to the present insurance as fully as it would to an insurance upon the building itselfj and that “ the lighting of the premises insured, by spirit-gas,” as used in that condition of a policy upon goods, meant the use of spirit-gas as a means of light in and about the goods at the place No. 101 William street, where the subject of the insurance is described in the policy to be. No part of the words of the policy ought to be rejected as insensible or inoperative, if a rational and intelligible meaning can be given to them, consistent with the general design and object of the whole instrument; and, if the condition was [598]*598broken, then clearly, in my opinion, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. (Wilson v. Herkimer Ins. Co., 2 Selden, 53; Mead v. The North-Western Ins. Co., 3 Id. 530; Westfall v. The Hudson River Fire Ins. Co., 2 Kernan, 289.)

But it is wholly unnecessary to discuss this question further, because the jury have found that the condition was not'violated, and, if that is so, it is quite immaterial whether the court erred in its construction or not. The error had no bearing upon the question of fact so found. *

Are the defendants entitled to have the judgment reversed on exception, because the Judge submitted the question to the jury, whether spirit-gas and burning-fluid are the same ?

We think not. It should be observed that this is not a motion for a new trial upon the ground that the verdict is against evidence, but it comes before us upon exception to the submission of the question to the jury at all; and, .unless the exception was well taken, we cannot reverse, although we may think that the weight of. evidence was.

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Related

Hoffman v. New York Central Railroad
14 Jones & S. 526 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1880)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Duer 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stettiner-v-granite-insurance-nysuperctnyc-1856.