Traders Ins. Co. v. Aachen & Munich Fire Ins. Co.

89 P. 109, 150 Cal. 370, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 526
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1907
DocketS.F. No. 3660.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 89 P. 109 (Traders Ins. Co. v. Aachen & Munich Fire Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Traders Ins. Co. v. Aachen & Munich Fire Ins. Co., 89 P. 109, 150 Cal. 370, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 526 (Cal. 1907).

Opinion

SLOSS, J.

On the trial of this action the plaintiff had judgment according to the prayer of its complaint. The defendant moved for a new trial on the grounds of errors of law occurring at the trial and insufficiency of the evidence to justify the decision. The motion was granted, and the plaintiff now appeals from the order granting a new trial. It is not claimed by the respondent that the court below made erroneous rulings of law which would justify the making of the order complained of. The facts in the case appear without substantial conflict, and the question before us, therefore, is simply whether upon these facts plaintiff was or was not entitled to judgment.

The plaintiff and defendant are corporations engaged in the business of fire insurance. On the sixteenth day of January, 1901, the plaintiff issued its policy of insurance to the Menan Milling Company, insuring said company in the sum of three thousand dollars from the “16th day of January, 1901, to the 16th day .of January, 1902, against loss or damage by fire to a building and grain elevator situated at Menan, Idaho.” On January 21, 1901, the plaintiff, desiring to be re-insured in part, offered one thousand dollars of the risk to the defendant, the Aachen and Munich Pire Insurance Company, and that company delivered to plaintiff a “covering note” in the sum of one thousand dollars. This covering note or memorandum contained the following language: “from January 21, 1901 at noon. Insurance under this covering note to cease twenty days from this date at noon, or at such time prior thereto as this company’s policy may be issued on above described risk. Dated at San Francisco, January 21, 1901.” The plaintiff subsequently sent a formal application for reinsurance to the Aachen and Munich Insurance Company, and this was accepted and signed. On January 25, 1901, the defendant requested the plaintiff to place the reinsurance elsewhere. Thereupon the plaintiff made application to the Norwich Union Fire Insurance Company, which issued a covering note or memorandum which by its terms was to cease “ten days from January 25 at noon, or at such time prior thereto as the policy of this society may be issued on above named risk.” On the same day, January 25, 1901, the plain *372 tiff returned to the defendant the covering note which it had issued to plaintiff, and the application which plaintiff had made to the defendant was destroyed.

It was subsequently learned that on January 24th, the day before the cancellation, the building and elevator in question had been damaged by fire, causing a loss on account of which plaintiff was obliged to pay, under its policy, the sum of $2,450 to the Henan Milling Company, and it was further obliged to pay $102.45 as necessary expenses of adjustment. At the time when the covering note was surrendered and can-celled neither the plaintiff nor the defendant had any knowledge of the fact that a fire had occurred. On learning this fact, the plaintiff tendered to the defendant the premium for the reinsurance, and demanded payment of $850.82, the proportion of the loss represented by defendant’s covering note. On defendant’s refusal to accept the tender or to make the payment, this action was commenced, the plaintiff praying that the cancellation of the covering note be set aside, and demanding judgment for $850.82.

The plaintiff contends that, having surrendered the covering note under a mistake of fact, it is entitled to be relieved from this mistake, and to recover from the defendant the amount which was actually due when the covering note was cancelled. Such was the view originally taken by the learned judge of the trial court, but upon motion for a new trial he appears to have come to the opposite conclusion.

We think the result first reached was the right one. On the 25th of January, 1901, when the covering note was surrendered, the defendant was under a fixed liability to the plaintiff amounting to $850.82. The plaintiff, not knowing that such liability had accrued, surrendered it to the defendant in exchange for a release of the obligation to pay a much smaller sum as premium. It goes without saying that the covering note would not have been delivered for cancellation if the plaintiff had been aware that the loss had already occurred. It makes no material difference whether we say that the plaintiff consented to the cancellation in the belief that the insured property had not been burned, or, adopting the language of the respondent, say that the plaintiff acted in ignorance of the fact that a loss had occurred. In either view its consent was given through mistake, and was there *373 fore subject to rescission. (Civ. Code, secs. 1566, 1567.) “Mistake of fact is a mistake, not caused by the neglect of a legal duty on the part of the person making the mistake, and consisting in: 1. An unconscious ignorance or forgetfulness of a fact past or present, material to the contract; or, 2. Belief in the present existence of a thing material to the contract, which does not exist, or in the past existence of such a thing, which has not existed.” (Civ. Code, sec. 1577.) If. the plaintiff did not act under a “belief in the present existence” of the property insured, it was at least in “unconscious ignorance” of the fact that the property had been injured by fire. That the occurrence of a fire destroying or injuring the property insured was a fact material to the contract (i. e. of cancellation) is manifest. There would seem, accordingly, to be no reason why the party who acted under the influence of such mistake should not be permitted to be relieved from the effect of its action, upon offering to place the other party in the position which it occupied before. It is a familiar doctrine that one who has parted with money or property under a mistake of fact may recover what he has parted with, in the absence of circumstances which would render such recovery inequitable as against the defendant. In this case the success of the plaintiff would not subject the defendant to any loss which in equity and justice it ought not to suffer. The sum recovered would be merely the amount which the defendant had, for an adequate consideration, agreed to pay on the occurrence of the event which has actually taken place. The defendant would be deprived of nothing except the right to set up a release of an existing liability given by a creditor who was not aware that any liability existed, and who would not have given the release if it had been aware of the existence of the liability. It is argued the cancellation of the covering note was intended to operate as a surrender of all liability, past as well as future. This is no doubt true, but it does not answer the point that the plaintiff was acting under a mistake of a material fact when it consented to the cancellation. Not knowing that a loss had occurred, it intended and agreed to wipe out all liability, but it would not have so agreed had it known the facts. Plaintiff’s application to be relieved from the consequences of its action presupposes that, unless so relieved, the *374 defendant’s liability on the covering note would be absolutely extinguished.

The respondent contends further that while the appellant surrendered the covering note in ignorance of the fact that a loss had occurred, it did so knowing that a loss might have occurred.

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Bluebook (online)
89 P. 109, 150 Cal. 370, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/traders-ins-co-v-aachen-munich-fire-ins-co-cal-1907.