From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Duncan v. C.M. Ins. Co.

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Dec 1, 1891
29 N.E. 76 (N.Y. 1891)

Summary

In Duncan v. China Mutual Ins. Co. (129 N.Y. 237, 244) this court said: "The technical phrase `for whom it may concern' or any other terms of equivalent import * * * will be applied to the interest of the party for whose benefit it was intended by the person who procures or orders the insurance.

Summary of this case from O'Donnell v. Marine Transit Corp.

Opinion

Argued October 29, 1891

Decided December 1, 1891

J. Langdon Ward for appellant. Everett P. Wheeler for respondent.



The plaintiff recovered, as for a total loss, upon a policy of insurance issued by the defendant upon the steamship Samana for $5,000. At the time the insurance was effected the vessel was owned by the Steamship Samana Company, Limited, a corporation organized under the laws of Great Britain. The policy was to be in force from the 3d day of August, 1888, to the 3d day of August, 1889, at noon. The Samana sailed from New York November 22, 1888, bound for a port in the West Indies, and has never since been heard from. At the trial the jury found upon sufficient evidence that the steamer was lost in a storm on the voyage and by perils of the sea, one of the risks covered by the policy prior to December 3, 1888. The policy bears date July 28, 1888, and the portions of it, material to the questions involved here, are as follows:

"By the China Mutual Insurance Company — W.B. Duncan, Jr., on account of whom it may concern, in case of loss, to be paid in funds current in the United States or in the city of New York, to Steamship Samana Co., Limited. Doth make insurance and cause to be insured at and from the 3d day of August, 1888, at noon, until the 3d day of August, 1889, at noon. * * * Upon the body, tackle, apparel, ordinance, munition, artillery, boat and other furniture of and in the good steamship or vessel called `Samana.' * * * The said ship, etc., for so much as concerns the assured, by an agreement between the assured in the policy, are and shall be valued at as follows:

"Hull, tackle, apparel and furniture ............ $25,000 "Machinery and boilers .......................... 20,000 ________ "$45,000 ========

"Forty-five thousand dollars — sum insured $5,000.

"To return pro rata premium for every thirty days of unexpired time, if this policy be canceled on arrival. * * *

"It is agreed that any change of interest in the vessel hereby insured shall not affect the validity of this policy."

The plaintiff was the general manager in New York of the Steamship Samana Company, Limited, and owned all of its stock, except twenty-five dollars, which was held by five other persons in order to satisfy some requirement of the English law. On the 5th of October, 1888, the plaintiff, in behalf of his company, entered into an agreement in writing with one Colville, in behalf of another limited company to be organized under the laws of Great Britain, for the purchase and sale of the Samana for $41,000, a portion of the purchase-price to be paid down and the balance secured by a mortgage on the vessel. The contract also provided that the insurance, then existing upon the steamer, should stand and be held for the benefit of the vendee until other policies could be arranged, and that the vendee should pay the unearned premiums up to such time. The Banana Steamship Company was organized, and in pursuance of the contract the Samana was transferred to it on November 15, 1888, by a regular bill of sale, executed by the plaintiff as manager of the Steamship Sanana Company, Limited. On the same day the Banana Steamship Company executed to the plaintiff a mortgage on the vessel to secure $28,500 of the purchase-money remaining unpaid. This was the condition of the title to the vessel at the time of the loss. During all this time the policy remained in the plaintiff's possession. The Steamship Samana Company made an oral assignment of its claims under the policy to the plaintiff and subsequently, but after this action was commenced, the company in writing transferred, through a third party, its claim to the plaintiff. It appears from the proofs of loss, which were not objected to, that before the commencement of this action, the plaintiff sent a cable message to Collville, who, it may be assumed, was the manager of the Banana Company in Europe, asking him "shall we commence suit or make policies over to you?" to which message there was a reply instructing plaintiff to collect the insurance himself. We do not understand that there is any substantial dispute between the parties that the interest of the Samana Steamship Company as mortgagee could be recovered in an action upon the policy. The insurance was, by the terms of the policy, payable to that company and, when the loss occurred, it still had an interest in the vessel, not as owner, it is true, but as the holder of a mortgage to secure a portion of the purchase-money. The only point that is made by the defendant's counsel, so far as this interest is concerned, is that it cannot be recoved by a suit brought by the plaintiff in his own name and, in any event, the amount of the recovery must be limited to such proportion of the interest represented by the mortgage, as the amount insured bears to the whole value of the ship, or to one-ninth of $28,500. The contract was made by the defendant with the plaintiff, though the loss if any, was made payable to the Steamship Samana Company (Limited). The plaintiff was the manager and owner of the company except the five shares of $5 each. The policy was in his possession from its delivery, by the defendant, to the time of the commencement of the action. It was agreed, at the time of the sale of the vessel to the Banana Company that the mortgage for the purchase-money, should run to the plaintiff instead of the Samana Company, and it was agreed that he should hold the policy for the benefit of all interests. All the facts showing the plaintiff's connection with the transaction, the sale of the vessel and the title to the same, the execution of the mortgage to the plaintiff and the agreement in regard to the insurance, appeared upon the face of the complaint. As the defect of parties plaintiff was not raised by the defendant, either by demurrer or answer, the objection is deemed to be waived. (Code, §§ 488, 498, 499; Sullivan v. N.Y. R.C. Co., 119 N.Y. 356.) Under these circumstances, if the action was simply to recover for such interest as the Samana Company had in the loss, the plaintiff's right to recover, as trustee or assignee, could be upheld. ( Cone v. Niagara Fire Ins. Co., 60 N.Y. 619; Martin v. Tradesmen's Ins. Co., 101 id. 504.) But in order to justify the full recovery in this case it must be shown that the indemnity of the policy extended to the interest of the Banana Company as vendee, at the time of the loss, and that the plaintiff was, under the circumstances of the case, competent to sue for and recover such interest also. The contract insures "W.B. Duncan, Jr., on account of whom it may concern, in case of loss, to be paid * * * to Steamship Samana Company (Limited)," and this is accompanied with a stipulation by which the parties agree that any change of interest in the vessel thereby insured, shall not affect the validity of the policy. While contracts of marine insurance are to be liberally construed, in favor of the insured, they are not deemed to cover any risk or any interest that was not fairly within the scope and intention of the parties when the contract was made. The technical phrase "for whom it may concern," or any other terms of equivalent import in such a policy will be applied to the interest of the party for whose benefit it was intended by the person who procures or orders the insurance. These terms will not carry the benefit of a policy to a risk or an interest not fairly within the contemplation of the parties to the policy. (Phillips on Ins. § 383; 2 Pars. on Marine Ins. 45; Hooper v. Robinson, 98 U.S. 528; Henshaw v. M.S. Ins. Co., 2 Blatchf. 99; Rogers v. Traders' Ins. Co., 6 Paige, 583.) The result of this principle is that a party who has an interest in the property covered by such a policy at the time of the loss, will be protected, without any express stipulation to that effect, though he had no interest at the commencement of the risk, providing he was intended to be insured. The construction that should be given to such contracts was thus stated by Judge FOLGER in Waring v. Indemnity Fire Ins. Co. ( 45 N.Y. 612):

"Of course, it must be made to appear that the owner was in the intention of the person effecting the insurance when the contract was made. Such intention need not have fastened at the time of entering into the contract upon the very person who, when the contract matures, seeks to take the benefit of it * * * and it is to be assumed that every one was in the intention of the insurer, who subsequently with design takes such relations to him as brings him within the clauses of the policy. The intention must have been to effect insurance for my person and all persons who during the running of the policy should have goods within its description of property insured."

When the contract in question was made, there was but one party interested in the ship, namely, the corporation of which the plaintiff was the manager. But, beyond all question, the parties to the contract intended that the protection and benefit of the insurance should be extended to persons who should subsequently acquire and, at the time of the loss, have an interest. By agreeing to indemnify in case of loss "whom it may concern," and in the same contract stipulating that any change of interest should not affect the validity of the policy, he underwriters must, in the absence of some condition to the contrary, be deemed to have contemplated a sale of the vessel, such as took place in this case, and a liability on their part to the vendee in case of a loss. The contract was not a personal one between the plaintiff or the Steamship Samana Company in the one hand and the defendant on the other, but was intended to apply to and cover subsequently, acquired interests of others under transfers from the insured. These principles could, of course, extend the benefits of the policy in question to the Banana Company without any notice to the defendant or any further assent on its part. The only remaining question is the right of the plaintiff to sue for and recover that part of the claim under the policy, arising from the loss, that belonged to the Banana Company. We do not think there any embarrassment in the fact that the mortgage for the purchase-money ran to the plaintiff. On the undisputed evidence he took this security for the benefit of the corporation, of which he was the manager and agent. It is competent to look beyond the mere form of the instrument to the actual transaction, and then it is seen that the interest represented by the mortgage was that of the Samana Company, which, for all the purposes of this case, can be said to be the real mortgagee. It is quite likely that, upon a complaint properly drawn, there was evidence enough in the case to warrant a finding that the parties in interest intended to transfer their respective interests to the plaintiff, to recover for them as an assignee. But the complaint does not seem to have been framed, nor the trial had, upon this theory. It is, however, substantially alleged and proved that, at the time of the loss, the plaintiff held the policy under an agreement between all the parties interested in the vessel, that it should stand in his hands as an indemnity to them in case of loss. He was their trustee, and as such could enforce the contract for their benefit. The plaintiff also seems to be within section 449 of the Code, which authorizes the trustee of an express trust to sue in his own name without joining with him the party for whose benefit the action is prosecuted. A person with whom, or in whose name, a contract is made for the benefit of another, is a trustee of an express trust within the meaning of that section. The contract in question was made by defendant with the plaintiff. It ran to him by name for the benefit of the Samana Company, and, as we have seen, by the use of the phrase "for whom it it may concern," to its transferee. In the absence of any pleading by defendant raising any question in regard to the non-joinder of parties in interest, and in view of the fact that payment of the loss to the plaintiff will, under all the circumstances of the case, discharge the underwriters, the objection now as to the form of the action is, we think, quite untenable. The exceptions taken at the trial were properly disposed of in the courts below.

The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.

All concur, GRAY, J., in result, EARL, J., not voting.

Judgment affirmed.


Summaries of

Duncan v. C.M. Ins. Co.

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Dec 1, 1891
29 N.E. 76 (N.Y. 1891)

In Duncan v. China Mutual Ins. Co. (129 N.Y. 237, 244) this court said: "The technical phrase `for whom it may concern' or any other terms of equivalent import * * * will be applied to the interest of the party for whose benefit it was intended by the person who procures or orders the insurance.

Summary of this case from O'Donnell v. Marine Transit Corp.
Case details for

Duncan v. C.M. Ins. Co.

Case Details

Full title:WILLIAM B. DUNCAN, Jr., Respondent, v . THE CHINA MUTUAL INSURANCE…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Dec 1, 1891

Citations

29 N.E. 76 (N.Y. 1891)
29 N.E. 76

Citing Cases

Howell v. Globe Rutgers Fire Insurance Co.

It is an established rule that contracts of marine insurance are to be liberally construed in favor of the…

York-Buffalo Motor Express v. Nat. F. M. Ins. Co.

) Thus the plaintiff is suing as trustee of an express trust for the benefit of the shippers or consignees.…