Summary
In Rickerson v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 149 N.Y. 307, the circumstances while not exactly similar to the case at bar closely approached it.
Summary of this case from Alterman v. Home Insurance Co.Opinion
Argued April 13, 1896
Decided April 28, 1896
George Richards and Thomas McAdam for appellant. William D. Murray for respondent.
When the policy in question was issued the premises "known as No. 160 Mott street" consisted of a strip of land twenty-five feet wide, fronting to the north on said street, by one hundred and eight feet deep, upon which were certain erections, claimed by the plaintiff to have been three connected structures, divided only by interior partition walls with openings between, but which the defendant claims were two separate and independent buildings. In front was a brick building, worth $5,000, the main part of which was three stories high, and as wide as the lot, but the back part was only two stories high, and not as wide as the lot. In the rear was a five-story brick building, worth $7,000, of the same width as the lot. Between these two buildings was a stable, one story high, the front wall of which was the rear wall of the front building, and the rear wall of which was the front wall of the rear building. It was covered with boards, and boards were also nailed up on the east side. The west wall was the wall of the building on the next lot. The buildings thus formed a continuous structure, extending from the street to the rear line of the lot; and while there was no door between the stable and either building to the front or rear thereof, there was a window communicating with each. The stable and the rear part of the front building were not as wide as the lot, and this left an open space on the east side, known as "the yard." There was an arched passage or alleyway under the east side of the front building, on the ground floor, extending from Mott street to the yard, with a door therefrom opening into the street. The only method of reaching the rear building was by entering this door, passing through the alleyway into the yard, and crossing over it to the rear building, which communicated with no street except Mott street, and had no outside doors except those opening into the yard. The main floor of the front building was leased to one person, who occupied it for a saloon, and the upper part to another, who sub-let it for tenements. The rear building was leased and occupied by one person, who used the main floor as a salesroom and the upper floors for storing, upholstering and varnishing furniture. It had no steam or other power to run machinery, but frames made elsewhere were first stored in the basement, then taken to the upper floors to be upholstered and varnished, and after that brought down to the main floor for exhibition and sale. The most of the sales were made through traveling agents, by means of photographs, but customers also came to the salesroom to examine and purchase furniture. The stable was used by the tenant of the rear building. Water closets in the back part of the front building were used by the tenants of both buildings; but there was no other use in common of any other part of the premises, except the alleyway, which had a door opening into the saloon, and the tenants of the rear building had a key to the door opening from the alleyway into Mott street. There was a continuous and independent boundary wall on the lots adjoining to the east and west of the lot in question, extending its entire length, without doors, windows or openings of any kind. The entire property, including both buildings, was known as number one hundred and sixty Mott street.
The application for insurance was very brief, consisting mainly of the names of persons desiring insurance, and a description of the property to be insured, as "160 Mott," occupied for "stores and dwellings." The company consulted its insurance map before issuing the policy, and thus learned that there were two buildings upon the property, and the general location of each. It also learned the same facts from the clerk who delivered the application. The policy describes the property insured as "the brick building and additions, including gas, steam and water pipes, yard fixtures, railings, stoops and sidewalks in front of, and all fixtures contained in or attached thereto, or under sidewalk thereof, situate No. 160 Mott street, city of New York, occupied for stores and dwellings. Loss, if any, payable to the Washington Life Insurance Company of New York, mortgagee." In attempting to analyze this description the first words that attract attention are "the brick building and additions." The words "brick building" apply with equal force to the structure in front and to that in the rear, while the word "additions" is somewhat ambiguous, but the use of the plural form is not without significance as it calls for more than one addition. "Yard fixtures" apply to one building as well as to the other, while "No. 160 Mott street" applies to both and is the fundamental, if not the controlling, part of the description. "Stoops" applies to neither building, unless the steps extending from the yard to the door entering upon the main floor of the rear building are covered by that word. "Stores" apparently includes both buildings, if a saloon, or a manufactory with a salesroom, can either be properly called a store. As more than one store is called for by the plural form, unless both are included, the meaning of the term is uncertain. "Dwellings" applies to the front building only, as no part of the rear building was used as a habitation.
We thus have a policy which, if it had been read before the fire by a person standing upon the premises and familiar with the buildings and the way they were occupied, would leave him in doubt whether the property insured embraced all the buildings or only a part. For this ambiguity the company is responsible because it prepared and executed the contract, and the language used is wholly its own. While it is the duty of the court to so construe the policy as, if possible, to give effect to every word used, if the sense in which they were used is uncertain and the meaning is ambiguous, that meaning should be given which is most favorable to the insured. ( Herrman v. Merchants' Insurance Co., 81 N.Y. 184, 188; Allen v. St. Louis Insurance Co., 85 N.Y. 473, 477; Kratzenstein v. Western Assurance Co., 116 N.Y. 54, 59; Marvin v. Stone, 2 Cow. 806.) As said by Mr. May in his work on Insurance, "No rule, in the interpretation of a policy, is more fully established, or more imperative and controlling, than that which declares that, in all cases, it must be liberally construed in favor of the insured, so as not to defeat without a plain necessity his claim to the indemnity, which, in making the insurance, it was his object to secure. When the words are, without violence, susceptible of two interpretations, that which will sustain his claim and cover the loss must, in preference, be adopted." (May on Insurance, § 175.)
The trial court, however, resolved the doubt in favor of the insurer, as it found that the company "intended to insure and did insure only the three-story brick building situate on the front of the lot No. 160 Mott street in the city of New York," and that it "did not intend to insure and did not insure the five-story brick building situate on the rear of the lot No. 160 Mott street, New York city." While this was found, in form, as a conclusion of law, it embraced a question of fact also. Witnesses had been called by both sides to show the situation of the property, the way it was occupied and the circumstances surrounding the parties when they made the contract. The evidence permitted different inferences as to what facts and circumstances were known and understood by the parties when the policy was issued, and their intention thus became, to some extent, a question of fact, dependent upon those inferences. Therefore, when the trial judge found that the defendant intended to insure and did insure the front building only, it decided a question both of fact and law. In finding the fact, it is reasonable to presume that he was influenced by the testimony of the manager of the defendant in relation to that subject. He was asked: "When your company issued this policy on which this action is brought, which building did you intend to insure?" This was objected to as "incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial, and as calling for a conclusion;" but the objection was overruled and the plaintiff excepted. The witness answered, in substance, that he intended to insure the front building only. He was then asked: "Did you intend to insure more than one building?" and, subject to the same objection, ruling and exception, he answered "No." The witness was thus permitted to testify to the secret operation of his own mind, although it had not been communicated to the other party to the contract. He wrote the policy and countersigned it, and in doing so stood for the company. When the court allowed him to state his intention in issuing the policy, it virtually permitted one party to a written agreement to state what he meant by it, against the objection of the other. The writing, itself, was the best evidence of the intent and meaning of the company. As its meaning was ambiguous, evidence was properly received to place the court in the position of the parties and enable it to appreciate the force of the words they used in reducing the contract to writing. ( Thomas v. Scutt, 127 N.Y. 141.) It then became the duty of the court, sitting without a jury, to decide what the parties, thus situated, meant by the language employed. (1 Greenleaf's Evidence, § 295a.) But one party to a written contract cannot state how he understood it when he signed it, nor testify as to its meaning or as to his intent. ( Taft v. Dickinson, 6 Allen, 553, 555; Davis Sewing Machine Co. v. Stone, 131 Mass. 384; 1 Rice on Evidence, 304.) That would be a violation of the rule that the writing is the best evidence and would tend to destroy the effect of the promise. What the parties intended should have been gathered from the contract, read in the light of the circumstances surrounding them when they used the doubtful words. Parol evidence was not admissible to show what either party secretly intended, as that would add to or take from the writing, which is presumed to express the intention of both.
The secretary of the Niagara Fire Insurance Company was called by the defendant as an insurance expert and asked: "Where there are two buildings on a single lot, one used as a dwelling and store, the other used for some manufacturing purpose, one on the front lot and one on the rear, how would you describe in the policy the building situate in the front?" This was objected to by the plaintiff as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial, but the objection was overruled, an exception taken and the witness answered: "Simply describe it, situate number so and so in the street or thoroughfare." He was then asked: "How would you describe the building situate in the rear?" and under objection and exception he answered: "Describe it as situate in the rear lot." The object of this evidence was to show that a custom prevailed in the insurance business as to the manner of describing certain kinds of property. The usage of a particular business "when it is reasonable, uniform, well settled, not in opposition to fixed rules of law, not in contradiction of the express terms of the contract, is deemed to form a part of the contract and to enter into the intention of the parties." ( Walls v. Bailey, 49 N.Y. 464, 469.) The custom, however, must be shown to have been known to the parties when the contract was made, or to have been so generally known as to raise a presumption that they had it in mind at that tine. ( Howard v. Great Western Ins. Co., 109 Mass. 384, 389; Gabay v. Lloyd, 3 B. C. 793; Bliven v. New England Screw Co., 23 How. [U.S.] 420, 431; Barnard v. Kellogg, 10 Wall. 383; May on Insurance, § 179; Arnould on Insurance, 65; Starkie on Ev. 637; 2 Parsons on Contracts, 541.)
No evidence was given to show that the alleged usage was general, or even that it prevailed in a particular locality, or that the plaintiff or his assignors had any knowledge of it. As the questions objected to did not call for what the witness had done, or had seen done, but what he would do, they were not competent to establish a custom. Usage is a matter of fact, not of opinion, and must be shown by those who have observed the method of transacting the particular kind of business as conducted by themselves and others. ( Mills v. Hallock, 2 Edw. Ch. 652; Haskins v. Warren, 115 Mass. 514, 535; Chesapeake Bank v. Swain, 29 Md. 483, 498; Garey v. Meagher, 33 Ala. 630; 2 Rice on Ev. § 349.) But even on the assumption that a custom existed, neither the plaintiff nor his predecessors were bound by it, because it was not shown to have been generally known, or that it was known to either of them. As was said by this court in Harris v. Tumbridge ( 83 N.Y. 92, 100), "a custom or usage which binds the parties to a contract does so only upon the principle either that they have knowledge of its existence or that it is so general that they must be supposed to have contracted with reference to it."
We think that the evidence above referred to was improperly received and that the judgment appealed from should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed.