Acosta v. Roach
Decision Date | 24 February 1958 |
Citation | 12 Misc.2d 494,172 N.Y.S.2d 116 |
Parties | Pedro ACOSTA, as Administrator of the Estate of Andelmo Aponte, Plaintiff, v. Helen I. ROACH and Vincent De Palo, Defendants. Helen I. ROACH, Third-Party Plaintiff, v. GREAT AMERICAN INDEMNITY COMPANY, New York, Third-Party Defendant. |
Court | New York Supreme Court |
Nathan Dambroff, New York City, for plaintiff.
Martin, Wiltshire, Cambridge & Kerr, Brooklyn, for third-party plaintiff.
Bivin & Welch, New York City (Samuel Gottesman, New York City, of counsel), for third-party defendant.
Mrs. Roach was the owner of a building, De Palo was her superintendent and Aponte was a tenant. On December 17, 1955, De Palo got into a fracas with Aponte in the latter's apartment about payment of rent and shot and killed him. Mrs. Roach learned of this the following morning from De Palo's daughter. She followed the ensuing prosecution attending at court until De Palo's conviction and sentence sometime in June or July 1956. Her son who managed her business and affairs spoke to her insurance broker's son in March 1956, showing the latter a newspaper story of the incident which, according to the son, recited that De Palo went up to collect rent and shot and killed Aponte. Nine months after the incident Mrs. Roach's lawyer wrote to her insurer, Great American Indemnity Co., making reference to its Workmen's Compensation policy, and enclosing a claim letter addressed to her dated August 28, 1956 from a lawyer in behalf of the deceased's family. On September 19, 1956, Mrs. Roach made a written statement of the facts to the same insurer under her Owners, Landlords' and Tenants' Liability policy. On September 22, 1956, Acosta, as administrator of the deceased Aponte's estate, sued Mrs. Roach and De Palo for assault and battery against the deceased. Mrs. Roach's lawyers forwarded the summons to Great American on September 25, 1956 and on September 27, 1956 it was returned with a disclaimer for failure to give immediate written notice of the occurrence. Roach's lawyers then impleaded Great American, later there was an order of servance and for preliminary trial and the separate third party issue was tried to the court without jury. At the trial, upon consent, the third party complaint was amended to allege in Paragraph Ninth that notice was given by Mrs. Roach to Great American by letter dated September 13, 1956, and the complaint was deemed amended to recite a prayer for a declaration of obligation to defend and indemnify and the pleading was considered amended to conform with the proof.
The policy in question extends this coverage under the Definition of Hazards:
Among the recited conditions in the policy is the standard and familiar requirement for notice in these words:
* * *'
Superimposed over this part of the policy is a pasted label which states on a simulated medallion of the insurer's seal, in larger letters in blue, the warning to
There is no issue here about the form of the notice, viz. written or oral. The sole question is lack of timeliness in the circumstances. Mrs. Roach's legal position up to trial, in her lawyer's letter of September 13, and in her written statement of September 19, to her insurer, was that she believed that there was no liability on her part or that she anticipated no claim against her. In the statement of September 19, she stated 'A short time after this incident I casually mentioned it to my attorney but he did not advise me in any way.' At the trial the additional argument was advanced that she was ignorant of the coverage afforded by her policy for protection against this kind of claim for assault and battery. There is a further contention that absent a showing of prejudice by the insurer, it will not be relieved. The latter proposition is not the law here (8 Appleman Insurance Law and Practice, 1957 Sub. § 4734, n. 41.5).
Great American's position is that the breach of the condition in failure to give timely notice relieves it as a matter of law. There is an alternative and additional contention that Mrs. Roach's delayed acts after she received the claim letter in August 1956 are themselves indicative of undue delay amounting to a failure to give notice as soon as practicable but this phase is not considered because it is unnecessary to reach it.
The Court of Appeals has summarized the controlling principles of the notice clause in Deso v. London & Lancashire Ind. Co., 3 N.Y.2d 127, at page 129, 164 N.Y.S.2d 689, 691, as follows:
'It is unquestioned that a failure to satisfy the requirements of this clause by timely written notice vitiates the contract as to both the insured and the plaintiff recovering a judgment against him (Bazar v. Great Amer. Ind. Co., 306 N.Y. 481, 119 N.E.2d 346; see Coleman v. New Amsterdam Cas. Co., 247 N.Y. 271, 275, 160 N.E. 367, 72 A.L.R. 1443) and that the term 'as...
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