Williams v. Insurance of North America

9 How. Pr. 365
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 How. Pr. 365 (Williams v. Insurance of North America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Insurance of North America, 9 How. Pr. 365 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1854).

Opinion

Woodruff, J.

— This is an action to recover for insurance effected by the plaintiff with the defendants, c< for account of whom it may concern — loss, if any, payable to him,” to the' amount of five thousand dollars, upon freight valued at the sum insured, carried or not carried, for twelve calendar months, on board the propeller General Warren; and the policy provides that the policy shall be proof of interest, and “ in case of loss, such loss to be paid in thirty days after the proof of loss and proof of interest, and adjustment exhibited to the insurers.” The complaint sets out these facts, stating the policy in haec verla, and then contains averments of a total loss. That the plaintiff has performed all conditions and agreements on his part to be performed, &c., and that<e he furnished the defend[366]*366ants with due proofs of the loss aforesaid and of interestthat, by means of the premises, the defendants became indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $5,000—non-payment—wherefore, &c.

The defendants demur to the complaint on the ground that the plaintiff has not stated facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; and, especially, that it is not averred that the plaintiff had any interest in the vessel or her freight; and no interest being averred, the policy is not an insurance for the security or indemnity of the party insured, but is a wager, bet, or stake made to depend upon a chance, casualty, or uncertain event, and is therefore illegal and void.

Another specification was made in the demurrer, for that it is not averred that the vessel had any cargo on board or engaged, or any freight engaged; but the demurrer was not urged by counsel on the argument upon the ground contained in this specification.

It was not claimed by the counsel for the plaintiff that an action on a policy of insurance is within that provision of our Code of Procedure which authorizes a plaintiff, in an action founded on an instrument for the payment of money only, to declare, by simply giving a copy of the instrument, and stating that there is due to him thereon from the defendant a specified sum, which he claims.

The plaintiff’s counsel, in support of the complaint, insists that no averment of interest in the plaintiff is necessary; and, second, that the averment in the complaint, that the plaintiff “ furnished the defendants with due proofs of loss and of interest,” is a sufficient averment of interest in the plaintiff, if such averment be necessary.

First. Is it necessary, in declaring upon a policy of insurance, (since our statute relating to wagers, &c.,) that the plaintiff should aver an interest in the subject of the insurance 1

By our statute entitled “ Of Betting and Gaming,” (1 Rev. Stat., 662,) it is enacted in § 8 that “all wagers, bets, or stakes made to depend upon any .... lot, chance, or casualty, or unknown or contingent event whatever, shall be unlawful and all such contracts are declared void. And in § 10, that “ the two last sections shall not be extended so as to prohibit [367]*367or in any way affect'any insurances made in good faith for the .security or indemnity of the party insured, and which are not otherwise prohibited by law.”

It is not denied that a contract of insurance made for the benefit of one who hath no interest in the subject of the insurance is a wager. It has been so regarded by the courts since about the beginning of the last century, when, it is said, policies of insurance, “ interest or no interest,” were introduced in England.

Indeed, it being the object of insurance, in its original and proper use, to indemnify the assured against a real loss, it was a perv .rsion of the contract to apply it to cases in which there was no real loss against which indemnity was sought; and had the courts continued to regard the undertaking of the insurer as a contract to indemnify merely, no recovery could ever have been had by an insured party who had no interest in the subject. Viewing the contract in this light, the court of common pleas in England, as late as 1720, (Depaba agt. Ludlow, Com. R. 360,) construed the terms “ interest or no interest ” to import merely • that <c the plaintiff has no occasion to prove his interest, and that the defendant cannot controvert that.”

Regarding, then, a policy as a contract of indemnity, there could be no recovery by an assured having no interest, because he could not be damnified. But it being held that a wager was a valid contract, such policies were sustained as wagers, and only as wagers, in which aspect, although upheld by courts of law, the courts of equity refused to sustain or enforce them.

Our legislature regarded such contracts as wagers. This may be assumed, not only because for more than one hundred years in England and in this country they had been so regarded, but because the legislature, when passing the act declaring all wagers void, deemed it necessary to provide that an insurance made in good faith for the security or indemnity of the party insured, should not be thereby prohibited.

It may be added without much refinement upon the definition in the statute, that every insurance is in its nature a bet or wager; if not so according to the ordinary acceptation of those terms, it is so within the strict import of the language of the [368]*368prohibitory section of the statute. It is an agreement by which the insurer wagers a large sum, the payment whereof is “ made to depend upon the happening of some chance, casualty, or unknown or contingent event.”

I cannot resist the conclusion that the contract, as set out in the complaint in this action, when construed with reference to the provisions of our statute, is prima facie an insurance within the prohibitory clause in the statute, and not shown on its face, nor by any averment to be saved by the exceptions in the tenth section.

No property or interest in the subject of the insurance (the freight) is stated, no fact is alleged from which the law infers any interest in the freight. The insurance is expressed to be on account of whom it may concern, and there is no intimation that the plaintiff, or any person for whose benefit the contract was made, was in any manner concerned in the matter. No interest in the ship either as charterer or otherwise which would in anywise involve an interest in the freight is intimated. There is nothing to show that the plaintiff would be damnified by the loss, or that there was any thing in his relation to the subject which made an indemnity or security to him possible, and, finally, the freight is valued at the sum insured, u carried or not carried,” a provision, though somewhat speculative, perfectly proper if he had an interest in the freight, which might be earned upon cargoes to be procured within the twelve months, if the vessel was not lost, but which, if he had no such interest, made the wagering character of the policy most obvious.

It seems to me that the contract thus exhibited is an in- ■ surance without interest. It is suggested that the words in the policy, “ Policy proof of interest,” prevents such an inference.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 How. Pr. 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-insurance-of-north-america-nyctcompl-1854.