The London Assurance v. Bigeleisen

39 A.2d 494, 135 N.J. Eq. 564, 1944 N.J. LEXIS 413
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedOctober 16, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 39 A.2d 494 (The London Assurance v. Bigeleisen) 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
The London Assurance v. Bigeleisen, 39 A.2d 494, 135 N.J. Eq. 564, 1944 N.J. LEXIS 413 (N.J. 1944).

Opinion

*565 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wells, J.

This is an appeal from a final decree of the Court of Chancery, advised by Vice-Chancellor Kaj^s, dismissing complainant’s bill of complaint, which is in the nature of a bill of interpleader.

The bill alleges substantially that the complainant, London Assurance, issued its policy of insurance on March 10th, 1943, to the extent of $2,000 which it agreed to pay to Harry Bigeleisen and Esther Bigeleisen, partners trading as H. Bigeleisen and Company, “in the event of a loss or damage by fire, to fixtures, machinery, ladies cloth coats and suits, fur coats, and merchandise usual to the business of the said defendants, Harry Bigeleisen and Esther Bigeleisen, including samples, labels, full and empty packages, boxes and similar containers, the property of the insured or held in trust, on commission or otherwise, for which the insured may be legally liable, or sold but not delivered or removed.”

The complaint further alleged that on April 15th, 1943, while said contract of fire insurance was in full force, the said defendants, hereinafter referred to as Bigeleisens, sustained a loss or damage and as a result thereof the complainant agreed to pay to the Bigeleisens the sum of $1,907.54, in payment of such merchandise as may have been the property of said defendants or the property of such persons for whom the said defendants were trustees; that said complainant required of the said defendants the names of such persons, and the amount due them, so that complainant might pay such claims to. the persons lawfully entitled to receive same in accordance with the policy of insurance.

The complaint then sets forth a list of twenty customers furnished by the Bigeleisens of those who delivered merchandise to them, with the value of the articles delivered, ranging from $100 to $300 and aggregating $3,000. The complaint goes on to allege that there were numerous other claims under the sum of $100 and these claims together with the claims listed were far in excess of the amount of insurance granted to the Bigeleisens and that complainant was unable to determine to which of the named customers the said sum was due, *566 nor in-.which proportion said claims should be paid; that complainant had also been advised of the claim of the Eire Association of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, which held a subrogation in the sum of $2,265, for an amount paid b}r said company for one, Mrs. Murray Cohen, one of the customers of the Bigeleisens and who sustained a loss in said fire; that the Bigeleisens had brought suit in the New Jersejr Supreme Court against the complainant, for the sum of $1,907.54, and the said suit was then pending in said court; that complainant has always been willing and still is willing to pay said sum to such person or persons as is or are lawfully entitled to receive the same, and to whom it could pay with safety; and complainant offered to pay the $1,907.54 into court.

The complainant, claiming it was without adequate remedy in the courts of law, prayed that the defendants, Bigeleisens, the Eire Insurance Company of Philadelphia and the other defendants named on the customers’ list might answer the bill of complaint and interplead and determine their rights to the money in question and that complainant upon payment thereof into court might be discharged from all liability to said defendants and be paid out of said sum its costs.

An order, was entered on August 3d, 1943, restraining the Bigeleisens from proceeding further with their suit at law and enjoining them and all other named parties from commencing any suits or proceedings against complainant to recover said sum of $1,907.54. Thereafter the Bigeleisens moved for an order striking the bill of complaint and vacating the order of restraint on the grounds, among others, that said bill failed to set forth a cause of action cognizable in the Court of Chancery and that the Bigeleisens exclusively were entitled to payment of the said sum of $1,907.54 from complainant and that none of the other defendants had any legal or equitable right to the same.

The learned Vice-Chancellor, after hearing the matter on affidavits, said in his conclusions that he was “satisfied that complainant never intended to insure the customers of the defendants and that said customers have no beneficial interest in the contract; see Crown Fabrics Corp. v. Northern Assurance Co., Ltd., 124 N. J. Law 27.” The Vice-Chan *567 cellor thereupon advised the decree dismissing the bill of complaint and dissolving the restraint, and this is the decree now under appeal.

It is contended on behalf of the complainant that the Vice-Chancellor committed reversible error in applying the Crown Fairies Case to the instant case. With this contention we are not in accord. In the Crown Fairies Case plaintiffs, customers of a named assured who was, by defendant insurance company’s policy, protected against loss by sprinkler leakage to property owned by it and indemnified against liability on customer-owned goods for like cause, sued the defendant insurer for damages to their goods by sprinkler leakage while on the assured’s premises, claiming direct benefit under the policy. -It was held that "plaintiffs were strangers to the execution of the contract and to the consideration upon which the contract became effective. Before a claimant becomes entitled to favor as an assured he must establish that he has the status of an assured. Ordinarily the obligations arising out of a contract are not enforceable by a person who is not a party to it or in privity with it. By the statute now extant as R. S. ,2:26-3.6 a person for whose benefit a contract, either simple or sealed, is made may sue thereon in any court although the consideration of the contract did n,ot move from him. But one who is not a party to a contract has no status to sue upon it if he be a person with whom the contracting parties never meant to come into contractual relations; a possible benefit to such a party by the performance of a contract is not enough to give him the right to maintain an action upon it. To have that effect it must appear that the contract was made for his benefit. Standard Gas Power Corp. v. New England Casualty Co., 90 N. J. Law 570; Styles v. Long, 70 N. J. Law 301; Lawrence v. Union Insurance Co., 80 N. J. Law 133.”

We think that the above recited quotation from the Crown Fairies Case is applicable to the instant case. Complainant does not dispute the soundness of the law but argues that it does not apply here because in the Crown Fairies Case there was no "in trust, on commission” clause in the policy but that the presence here of such a clause ties in the customers of Bigeleisens to the policy and elevates them to the status *568 of an insured and that complainant by incorporating the “in trust and on commission” clause into the policy intended to assume a direct obligation to the customers of the insureds and consequently their customers have a beneficial interest in the policy even though they knew nothing about the policy nor paid any part of the premium.

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Bluebook (online)
39 A.2d 494, 135 N.J. Eq. 564, 1944 N.J. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-london-assurance-v-bigeleisen-nj-1944.