Judges: Mullin, Smith, Talcott
Filed Date: 4/15/1877
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The only question in this case that need be considered is, whether the breach of the condition respecting subsequent incumbrances avoided the policy as to the personal property as well as the realty. The case of Trench v. Chenango Mutual Insurance Company (7 Hill, 122), if followed, sustains the ruling at the Circuit. The correctness of the decision in that case was questioned by Boot, J., delivering the opinion of the Court of Appeals, in Wilson v. The Herkimer County Insurance Company (2 Seld., 53), and in Smith v. Empire Insurance Company (25 Barb., 497), Balcom, B, speaking for the court, at General Term in the sixth judicial district, said that the case of Trench had been shaken too much by the Court of Appeals, in Wilson's Case, to be followed. It is by no means clear, however, that the Court of Appeals intended to overrule the case of Trench. The case of Wilson was decided in 1851. Six years later, the case of Heacock v. The Saratoga County Mutual Insurance Company, not reported, came before the Court of Appeals. It was an action on a policy of insurance against fire, by which the plaintiff’s woolen factory, in the city of Buffalo, and the machinery therein, were insured for separate amounts. The building and machinery were entirely burned. On the trial of an action to recover the loss, before Justice Sill and a jury, the defendant proved that the title to the premises was not in the plaintiff at the time of the issuing of the policy, or at any time thereafter; also, that the plaintiff had enlarged the building and erected a new build
Judgment affirmed.