The policies were issued to Martin Wallace, one of the firm of James Thompson Co., to which firm the loss, if any, was payable. The plaintiff derives title to the claim against the defendant by virtue of an assignment from Thompson Co., made June 11, 1873. The fire which destroyed the insured property occurred January 14, 1871. The proofs of loss were served immediately thereafter, and this action was commenced October 16, 1873 — nearly two years and nine months after the fire. The policies contain a provision that no suit for the recovery of any claim thereunder shall be sustainable in any court of law or chancery, unless it shall be commenced within twelve months after the loss or damage shall occur, any statute of limitation to the contrary notwithstanding. It is well-settled that the parties to a contract may provide *Page 502 for a shorter limitation to actions thereon than that fixed by the general law. Such an agreement is not expressly or impliedly prohibited by the general statute of limitations, and is consistent with the policy upon which statutes of limitation are founded. (Ames v. The New York Union Ins. Co., 14 N.Y., 253;Ripley v. Ætna Ins. Co., 30 id., 136; Roach v. N.Y. E.Ins. Co., id. 546; Mayor v. Hamilton Ins. Co., 39 id., 46.) The defendant, among other defenses, set up the contract limitation in bar of the action. The plaintiff, to avoid this defense, proved the following facts: In April, 1871, an action was commenced in the Supreme Court, in which the Cambridge Valley National Bank was plaintiff, and Wallace, Thompson Co. and The First National Fire Insurance Company of Worcester were defendants, in which the bank claimed by virtue of an alleged agreement with Wallace, to be entitled to the policies of insurance now sued upon, and to the money due thereon, and prayed for an injunction restraining the insurance company from paying, and Wallace, Thompson Co. from receiving any money on account of the loss of the insured property, and for other relief. An injunction order was granted in the action on the 27th of April, 1871, enjoining and restraining the insurance company frompaying and the defendants Wallace, Thompson Co. fromreceiving the loss or damage owing under or by virtue of the policies in question until the further order of the court. This order was served on Wallace, but was not served on the company, and it does not appear that the company had any knowledge of the commencement of the suit. The injunction was dissolved June 11, 1873.
It is claimed by the learned counsel for the plaintiff that the injunction restrained and prohibited the bringing of an action on the policies, and that this disability excused and relieved the asssignors of the plaintiff from the necessity of bringing an action within the year after the loss in order to save their rights; or, in other words, that the time during which the injunction was pending is not to be counted as *Page 503 any part of the time limited in the contract. It is to be observed that this claim is not justified by the terms of the contract. The provision fixing the time within which an action must be brought is distinct, definite and unqualified. The contract contains no saving of the right of action after the expiration of a year from the loss, for any cause whatever; and unless the bringing of the action within the time limited by the contract was waived by the defendant, or was excused and made impossible by the act of God or of the law, the remedy of the plaintiff has been lost. We shall assume, for the present, that the injunction order by its true construction prevented the commencement of a suit for the recovery of the claim. If the injunction had been procured by the defendant, then, within the principle that a party shall not take advantage of his own wrong or be permitted to claim a forfeiture by reason of an act or omission which he himself caused, the company would be precluded from the defense. "If the obligee himself be the cause that the obligation cannot be performed, there is no forfeiture for it in his own act." (Vin. Abr. tit. Condition N.C.C., 23; Bac. Abr. tit. Condition O., 3.) But the facts do not bring the case within this principle. The defendant neither procured the injunction to be issued nor was it procured with its privity or consent. It had no knowledge that it was to be applied for or that it had been issued; nor did the company consent to an extension of the time for bringing an action, or do any act upon which a waiver of the limitation could be predicated. The plaintiff to succeed in this case must maintain the proposition that an injunction is issued at the suit of a third person against one of the parties to a contract, restraining him from bringing an action thereon within the time limited thereby, is an act of the law which dispenses with the condition, excuses the delay and prevents a forfeiture. That an injunction staying the commencement of an action does notipso facto operate to suspend the running of the statute limitation, or relieve a party from its operation, was decided inBarker v. Millard (16 Wend., 572). The Revised Statutes *Page 504 contained a provision saving the rights of parties stayed by injunction (2 Rev. St., 299, § 36), which is now section 105 of the Code. This provision does not aid the plaintiff. The exception has no application where a limitation is prescribed by the contract of parties but only applies to cases governed the limitation in the general law. This is sufficiently clear by from a reading of the section, but the question has been adjudicated in a case arising under a contract similar to the one in question. (Riddlesbarger v. Hartf. Ins. Co. 7 Wall., 386.) If the issuing of an injunction restraining a party from bringing an action is an act of the law which suspends the running of a contract limitation, it must have the same effect in respect to cases governed by the statute, and upon this assumption the case of Barker v. Millard was wrongly decided. But it is clear that the court must have held the contrary, and the statute was amended to remedy the apparent hardship, that a restraint imposed by the court should operate to deprive a party of his right of action. That a court of equity may relieve a party who has lost his remedy at law on a contract, in consequence of an injunction procured by the other party, and prevent the latter from setting up the bar of the statute, we are not disposed to deny. In 2 Cases in Chancery (217), it is said: "If a suit be in chancery for a debt for rent, by lease, parol or simple contract, and beginneth within time of limitation, and be dismissed after the time of limitation, the court will not order the defendant to take no advantage of the statute of limitation. But if in such suit the party be stayed by act of the court, or by injunction, it is otherwise; for the act of the court shall do no prejudice, as in the case of demurrers at common law." Lord ELDON inPulteney v. Warren (6 Ves., 72) states very clearly the ground upon which a court of equity interferes to protect a party against an injury in such a case. He says: "If there be a principle upon which courts of justice ought to act without scruple, it is this; to relieve parties against that injustice occasioned by its own acts or oversights, at the *Page 505 instance of the party against whom the relief is sought." In some early cases it seems to have been held that equity will prevent the bar of the statute being set up at law in cases where the time has run during proceedings in chancery, without fault of the defendant. (Anon. 1 Vern., 74; 2 Atk., 615.) But the cases on this point are inconsistent. (1 Atk., 282; 2 id., 1.) And it is said by an English writer that in some recent and unreported cases no such relief has been allowed a plaintiff who has lost his remedy at law, while endeavoring to pursue it in equity. (Banning on Lim. of Actions, 33; see, also, Manby v. Manby, L.R. 3 Ch. D., 101.) It is difficult to perceive on what principle a party shall be deprived of the benefit of the statute of limitations, where he has not in any way contributed to the delay, and we have found no modern case supporting such a jurisdiction. It is no excuse that one has been prevented by a stranger from performing his contract. In Vin. Abr. tit. Condition, K.C., 1, it is said: "If the condition of an obligation be to deliver a certain thing to the oblige, bought of him of the obligor, it is not any discharge that a stranger recovered it from him after;" and Baron COMYN says: "If a condition be to do a thing, and a stranger interrupts him, that does not excuse the performance." (Com. Dig. tit. Condition, L., 14; see, also, People v. Bartlett, 3 Hill, 590; People v.Manning, 8 Cow., 297.)
In this case the Cambridge Valley Bank stood as a stranger to the defendant, and the injunction was not within the cases an act of the law which deprived the company of the benefit of the limitation in the contract. Moreover, if the injunction operated as an absolute restraint against bringing an action on the policies, the court would doubtless, on suggestion, have modified it so as to permit a suit to be brought to save the right of action; and it was laches on the part of the assignors of the plaintiff to lie by, without making an application; and if a suit had been brought, notwithstanding the injunction, the fact that it was brought in violation of it would have been no defense to the company; that *Page 506 would be a matter to be settled between the court and the party who had commenced the suit in violation of its order. (Kelley v. Cowing, 4 Hill, 266; Burt v. Mapes, 1 id., 649.)
But there is, we think, another answer to the argument of the plaintiff in this case; and that is that the injunction did not restrain the bringing of an action. The bank and the plaintiff's assignor had a common interest in keeping alive the claim against the defendant. Their controversy related merely to the title to the fund which might be realized from the policies. The injunction is carefully drawn, and restrains the insured fromreceiving the money from the company. The bringing of a suit to save the right of action and to ascertain the amount of the claim, by a judgment, would not be a violation of the order. It cannot be supposed, under the circumstances, that the plaintiff in the injunction suit intended to prevent such a proceeding. In construing an injunction order, it is not to be supposed that it was intended to restrain acts which would not be injurious to the rights of the complainant, and much less which would be beneficial to him, and unless the words are clear, it will not be deemed to prohibit them. (Parker v. Wakeman, 10 Paige, 485;Hudson v. Plets, 11 id., 180; High on Injunctions, 503.)
We are of opinion that the action in this case was barred by lapse of time, and this renders it unnecessary to consider the other questions in the case.
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.