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[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 599 The defendant is a domestic corporation, organized under chapter 308, Laws of 1849, chapter 2, Laws of 1853, and chapter 106, Laws of 1863, and it was authorized by its charter to engage in fire insurance, and in marine and inland transportation and navigation insurance.
It was engaged in both kinds of insurance, kept each kind separate in separate books, and had different policies for each. Grannis, defendant's agent at Macon, was authorized to engage in both kinds of insurance, and had blanks for both kinds.
On the 12th of December, 1865, McMahon, one of the assured, applied to Grannis for an insurance upon the cotton, and asked him for a policy. Grannis informed him that it was not his custom to give a policy, that it was an unnecessary expense, and that it was his custom to give such a paper as the receipt dated December 12, 1865, which was binding, and he, as a witness for plaintiff, testified that, in all cases where a policy was asked for, one was made out and given to the party insured, and the receipt was taken up, if one had been previously given, as he invariably told parties insuring that it was better to have the company's policy in case of loss. He reported the insurance to the company as a marine risk, and it was entered upon the open marine policy, which had been issued to him for the purpose of such risks, and was *Page 601 manifestly understood by him and the company as a risk in the marine department.
The plaintiff claims that the receipt embodies the whole contract of insurance, and hence, that the conditions set up in the answer have no application. The defendant claims that this was a mere application for a policy, and that the contract of insurance must be looked for in the form of marine policy used by the company, upon which the risk was indorsed. The judge at Special Term upheld the plaintiff's claim, and the important question for us to determine is whether this holding was correct.
According to plaintiff's claim this was a general insurance against every kind of risk, an insurance that the cotton would safely reach its destination. There were no limitations or conditions in the contract. It was an absolute unconditional insurance against every thing. Such an insurance Grannis had no authority to make. He was authorized to engage in the two kinds of insurance which the company, by its charter, was authorized to make; and he was to insure upon the terms, conditions and limitations mentioned in the blank policies with which he was furnished. Neither was it within the scope of his apparent authority to make such an insurance. It is not probable that any agent ever had such authority, or that any company was ever authorized to engage in such insurance. He was the known agent of a company engaged in fire and marine insurance, and such an agency gave him apparent authority only to insure in the modes authorized by the company's charter, and upon the terms and conditions inserted in their policies in ordinary use. No one could presume, from the fact of his agency for such a company, that he was authorized to make such an insurance as is claimed. Hence, if we assume that the receipt is a complete contract of insurance and that it embodies the whole contract, it would not, being in excess of the agent's authority, bind the company. But the receipt is not a complete contract of insurance. It does not purport to be. It is evidently inchoate. It does not even state that the insurance is *Page 602 against loss or damage from any cause. It does not specify the peril or risk insured against, and this every insurance policy must do. (1 Phil. on Ins., § 35; Baptist Church v. BrooklynIns. Co., 28 N.Y., 153, 161, 164; Tyler v. New Amsterdam Ins.Co., 4 Robt., 151.) Hence, if the plaintiff were obliged to stand upon this receipt as his only policy, he would fail in the action for the want of a complete contract in which the minds of the parties had met. This receipt must, therefore, when considered in connection with the parol evidence, be treated as a mere application for insurance, as evidence that the assured had paid the premium and were entitled to be insured from its date. (Ellis v. Albany City Fire Ins. Co., 50 N.Y., 402.) The assured must be held to have known the general character of business done by defendant. They went to the agent to be insured on their cotton in transit from Macon, by railroad and water, to New York, and for that purpose needed, and must have expected, a policy appropriate to the subject-matter and the perils to be insured against, and, hence, they must have intended to procure an inland policy, or what is sometimes mentioned in the evidence as a marine policy. Such an insurance was intended by the agent and was understood by the defendant; and it was such an insurance which the assured must have expected. Every business man knows that all insurance companies have forms of policies in common use which contain the terms, limitations and conditions to be inserted in all contracts of insurance. They must have expected an insurance upon the usual terms. It cannot be presumed that they expected a special contract variant from the usual terms imposed by the company. The assured went to the agent, asked for a policy, paid the premium, mentioned the subject-matter of insurance, and the route and destination of the cotton and left it to the agent to see that their insurance was entered in the proper department of the company, expecting to be insured in the ordinary way. They were assured that the receipt was binding, as it really was. Binding to what? Binding to an insurance in the usual form. Suppose the assured had *Page 603 returned the receipt and demanded a policy, what kind of a policy could they have compelled the defendant to issue? Clearly one in its usual form and no other. (Ang. on Ins., § 37; Phil. on Ins., § 15; Ellis v. Albany City Fire Ins. Co., supra.) It is said in Phillips that a memorandum that a subject "is insured," or "shall stand insured," means that "it is insured, or shall be so, according to the ordinary form of policy used in the office where the memorandum is made." We must, therefore, look to the marine and inland policies used by the company, upon one of which this risk was indorsed, for the limitations and conditions contained in the contract of insurance. The plaintiff, in drawing his complaint, treated proof of loss as a condition precedent and alleged that it had been made and the referee found that it had been made; yet this condition, a usual one in most, if not all, insurance policies, is not found in the contract as claimed by plaintiff. The judge at Special Term also found that plaintiff was entitled to interest on his claim only from thirty days after the final proof of loss had been delivered to the defendant and passed upon by it; and this finding was based upon nothing found in the contract as claimed by the plaintiff, and this condition must have been taken from one of defendant's policies proved upon the trial.
I am unable to discover how force could be given to these conditions and not to the two other conditions set up in the answer. I think they were part of the contract of insurance. According to the one condition the plaintiff could not recover unless his loss was at least $400, five per cent of the whole sum insured. I am satisfied, upon the evidence and the findings of the judge, that the entire loss was upwards of $400. The loss upon three bales of cotton was agreed upon at $384.96, which is only fifteen dollars and four cents less than $400. Two of the bales were so badly burned that they could not be forwarded to their destination. The other two bales were exposed to the same fire and were both burned and were both forwarded, and one of them reached its destination and was found to be damaged seventy-eight dollars and *Page 604 twelve cents. The other one, the fourth one, did not reach its destination, and it is not shown what became of it. There is no positive proof how much it was damaged. All the proof seems to have been given that was practicable. It was in the same car with the others. The person who saved the two bales which were forwarded mentions no difference in their appearance, and it may be inferred that he discovered none. Both were so much burned as to attract attention and be observed. The value of a bale was at least $200, and a small exposure to fire would cause damage to at least fifteen or twenty dollars. Hence, I am not prepared to say that the judge erred in holding that the fourth bale was damaged as much as the third. But if I were not satisfied that it was, as I am quite well convinced that the whole damage was at least $400, I should apply the rule of de minimis to any error as to the uncertain amount of damage above that sum at this stage of the case. This condition of the policy was therefore, so far as concerned the proof upon the trial, complied with. (Rogers v.Mechanics' Ins. Co., 1 Story, 603.)
As to the condition that suit must be brought within twelve months after the loss or damage shall occur, the defendant averred in its answer that twelve months had elapsed "since the making of any claim for loss or damage." Upon the trial the defendant asked leave to amend the answer by inserting that the time had elapsed prior to the commencement of the action, and this was denied and defendant did not except to the denial. Whether this amendment should have been allowed was within the discretion of the judge; and even if it was not, we cannot review his decision here as there was no exception. I do not agree with the judge who held at Special Term that this condition was waived. The plaintiff, under this condition, had twelve months from the time his cause of action accrued, to wit, from January 5, 1867, in which to commence his action (Ames v. N.Y. UnionIns. Co., 14 N.Y., 253; Mayor, etc., v. Hamilton Ins. Co., 39 id., 45), and after that date I cannot perceive that the defendant did or *Page 605 said any thing from which a waiver can be inferred. At or before that date the time had not arrived for the defendant to say any thing about that condition, and its mere silence about it can have no significance. At and before that date it placed its objection to pay upon the only condition then available. Between that date and the commencement of the action there appears to have been no interview or intercourse between the parties. There is no evidence that the assured were ignorant of this condition. Even if they had been, it would have made no difference with the rights of the parties. The defendant is in no way responsible for their ignorance. It was their duty to know what was contained in their contract of insurance, and they had been informed in time that the defendant claimed that the insurance was upon the terms contained in their marine policy and it did nothing to mislead them.
I think the defence was sufficiently set up in the answer and was available to the defendant. The summons and complaint were both dated August 26, 1869, and the suit was commenced on the next day, more than two years and a half after the cause of action accrued, and more than three years and a half after the loss. The condition was set out at length in the answer and it is entirely plain that the defendant meant to rely upon it as a defence, and the plaintiff must have so understood it. The condition appears in the contract upon which the plaintiff must recover if he recovers at all, and, hence, there is no room to presume that the plaintiff was misled by the form of the answer as to this defence. The whole answer shows clearly that defendant meant to rely upon this condition, and the non-compliance therewith by the assured, as a defence. The allegation in the answer as to the lapse of time must, under the circumstances, be construed as having reference to the time of the commencement of the action. The rule which requires that pleadings should be liberally construed with a view to substantial justice between the parties should be applied. (Code, § 159.)
The courts have decided that such conditions are valid. *Page 606 It is quite essential to insurance companies doing business in all parts of the country, at places distant from their location, that claims should be promptly made, and if disputed promptly prosecuted. Such a condition is not against public policy, and there is no reason why it should be looked upon with disfavor by the courts. A defence based upon it should be treated like any other meritorious defence which the law allows. Hence, I think there was error in not allowing the defendant the benefit of this condition.
There was one other condition precedent which the assured did not comply with. It was provided in the policy that "in case of loss such loss to be paid in thirty days after proof of loss, and proof of interest in the said property are furnished this company." The plaintiff in his complaint alleged the proof of loss, and the judge in his findings of fact found that the proof of loss had been furnished to the company. To this finding defendant excepted, and if there was an entire want of evidence to show that such proof was furnished to the company the question is before us for consideration upon the exception. The furnishing of proof was a condition precedent to the maintenance of the action. This is an ordinary condition contained in policies of insurance. It must be substantially complied with by the assured. The proof must show the character and extent of the loss and the amount claimed; and upon the trial the assured can recover no more than the amount shown and claimed in his proof of loss. This condition would be of little use if the assured could show and claim one amount in his preliminary proof and then upon the trial recover more. The object of this proof is to give the insurer notice of the nature, circumstances and amount of the loss as a basis of amicable adjustment, and it should be such as to show the insurer's liability and the extent of it. (Irving v. TheExcelsior Fire Ins. Co., 1 Bosw., 507.) In that case it was held that the assured was barred by his proof of loss as delivered, and that he could not, upon the trial, impeach its truth and recover upon testimony showing a different state of facts; that the insurer had the right to *Page 607 take and rely upon the facts as the assured stated them. (See, also, Phil. on Ins., § 1805, etc.; Ang. on Ins., § 228, etc.) In this case the assured first made their proofs of loss about August 13, 1866, and then claimed for damage to two bales of cotton only the sum of $306.84. The defendant promptly objected to paying this loss because it did not amount to five per cent of the sum insured. Afterward, in December, the assured furnished further proof of loss which consisted of the affidavit of Bard that the four bales were damaged by fire, that two were rejected by the connecting line of railroad, and that the other two bales, partially burned or somewhat damaged, were received and forwarded; and also a statement of the consignees that one of the bales received by them, which was one of the four bales, was damaged by fire to the extent of seventy-eight dollars and twelve cents. No proof was furnished or claim made as to the fourth bale; no proof was made that it did not reach its destination, and it does not appear that the assured, at that time, claimed any damage on account thereof. If they claimed any damage on account thereof, they could then have made it as well as upon the trial, and could have stated how much they claimed the damage on that bale to have been. The defendant again declined to pay, distinctly on the ground that the loss was not five per cent of the sum insured. No further claim or proof was made or presented to the defendant before the commencement of this action, more than two and a half years afterward. They should, therefore, be held concluded by the amount of loss which they claimed in their proof. They should not be permitted to lead the defendant into a litigation, and then upon the trial, for the first time, seek to recover by showing that their loss was greater than the amount claimed in their preliminary proofs. In this aspect of the case, it matters not that the margin between the loss as claimed and the $400 was so small. The assured took upon themselves, by the contract, the risk of all loss below $400. The truth probably is, that, at all times before the commencement of the action, the assured acted upon the theory *Page 608 that they were not bound by the five per cent condition, and the judge at Special Term tried and decided the cause upon the same theory.
Upon the two grounds above mentioned, therefore, I favor a reversal of the judgment and a new trial, costs to abide event.
All concur, on the ground that plaintiff's rights are to be governed by such a policy as the assured was entitled to have upon his application.
Judgment reversed. *Page 609