delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question for decision is how far hull insurers upon a valued marine insurance policy are entitled, in case of total loss, to participate by way of subrogation in a recovery by the insured against a tortfeasor responsible for the loss.
In 1918 petitioners, with several other underwriters, insured the hull of respondent’s vessel, the “Almirante,” by policies in which it was agreed that the value of the hull was $632,610,- materially less than its true value. The policies provided for a stipulated indemnity to the owner “irrespective of the value of the vessel,” and that the owner was free to effect other insurance to any amount and without disclosure of the amounts so insured. As the total of the valued policies was $582,002.25, respondent was co-insurer for about $50,000; and so far as the valued hull policies were concerned it was uninsured, to the extent of any loss, in excess of the stipulated value. As protection against these risks, respondent' procured from English underwriters additional P. P. I. (policy proof of interest) insurance, aggregating £65,105, partly upon hull and partly against other losses incidental to total loss of the vessel. ' The P. P. I. policies waived all rights of subrogation and were “honor” policies, concededly payable only at the option of the insurers because unenforceable under the Act of Parliament of December 31, 1906, § 4. Edwards & Co. v. Motor Union Ins. Co., [1922] 2 K. B. D. 249.
*433
In 1918 the “Almirante” became a total loss as the result of a collision with' the S. S. “Hisko,” a vessel belonging to the United States Government. The underwriters of both the valued policies and the P. P. Impolicies - paid themJn full.- The former joined with respondent in retaining attorneys to press the claims for collision damages against the United States. Suit brought against the United States under a special act of Congress, resulted" in a recovery which included $1,750,000 as the value of the vessel, but without interest since the act did not authorize allowance of interest. Compare
Boston Sand
&
Gravel Co.
v.
United States,
Petitioners, who are underwriters on some of the valued- hull policies, brought the present suit in the district court for southern New York to participate in respondent’s recovery against the United States, feelying. on the valuation clause- of their policies as conclusively fixing the value of the vessel for all purposes of the adjustment, they contest the allotment, insisting that they should bear no part of the expenses, and-that they are entitled to interest on the amounts of their policies from the several dates on which they were paid. They also make, but do not stress hére, the point that the hull insurers are entitled to tíre whole recovery. - The district court gave judgment for the full amount which petitioners had paid on their policies without deduction for expenses, but without addition of interest.
Petitioners’ argument turns upon their contention that the valuation clause, either by estoppel or by contract, is conclusive between the parties for all purposes and that as respondent has recovered from the Government more than the stipulated value of the vessel, petitioners are entitled to the benefit of the recovery, at least to the full extent of the payments on their policies with interest. We think that the valuation clause in its usual form does not operate as an estoppel or by agreement to foreclose proof that actual value exceeds agreed .value when the question is of the insurer’s right to subrogation. The application of the agreed value to the insurance adjustment does not depend upon estoppel,
Gulf Refining Co.
v.
Atlantic Mutual Ins. Co.,
supra,
712; British & Foreign Marine Ins. Co.
v.
Maldonado & Co.,
*435
But beyond its controlling effect in determining the insurance liability, the clause does not-operate to exclude proof of actual value when relevant. -Even in an action on the policy the actual rather than, the agreed value has been held to be controlling for the purpose of determining whether there is a constructive total loss.
Bradlie
v.
Maryland Ins. Co.,
These variations in the effect of the valuation clause, in fixing the liability of the insurer, do not alter the character of the valued policy as a contract of indemnity, or afford any basis for alteration of his rights as an indemnitor. Whether upon a valued or an open policy, he is entitled to share in the insured’s recovery of damages only by way of subrogation, whose sole object and justification is to make indemnity to the insured up to the amount of the policy, the measure of the liability of the insurer.
Standard Marine Ins. Co.
v.
Scottish Metropolitan Assurance Co.,
No question is raised by the petition for certiorari or appears to have been raised below as to the correctness of the adjustment statement, if the valuation clause does not foreclose proof of actual value and if 'respondent is therefore to be regarded as a co-insurer of the hull in event of total loss. Petitioners make no contention that respondent, if so regarded, has received more than appropriate indemnity after the distribution of the proceeds of the collision suit. The total insurance received by respondent from the insurers in 1918 and 1919, aggregating $886,068, was approximately $863,932 less than the prime value of the vessel, which some thirteen years later it recovered in the collision suit, without allowance of interest and after the expenditure of more than $300,000 as *437 costs of the litigation. Petitioners submit no interest computations and have otherwise made no effort to sustain the burden of proving that respondent has received more than indemnity for the delay in payment of as much of the loss as was not covered by.insurance.
Since the expenses have been apportioned by charging the insured with a proportion greater than its share of the risk, and the apportionment is not assailed except as it may be wholly precluded by the valuation clause, it is unnecessary to consider whether the distribution of expense should be upon principles of co-insurance or whether the insured should be fully indemnified for it before the insurer is entitled to subrogation.
Petitioners point to no practice of underwriters with respect to the valued policy or its rate of premium as compared with that for the open policy, which supports the rule for which they contend. But they insist that it has been adopted in England and has become so well settled m New York where the insurance was effected, that it must be taken to be an- implied term of the policies. It is true that
North of England Iron S. S. Ins. Assn.
v.
Armstrong, supra,
lends support to petitioners’ argument. There, upon a total loss, the insured had recovered as collision damages an amount less than the agreed valuation and it was held that the insurer, who had paid the policy in full, whs entitled to have the benefit of the entire recovery. The court thought that the case was analogous to that of abandonment in case of a constructive total loss where the underwriter, by virtue of the abandonment, is entitled to' the wreck and to such profit from it as he can make. Pursuing the logic of its reasoning, the court declared that the insurer would have been entitled to the insured’s full recovery even if it exceeded the agreed value. But it seems plain that there is no analogy between the insurer’s right to be subrogated to the fruits of the insured’s recovery from a wrongdoer
*438
and the insurer’s right, to a wreck which is his by abandonment.
The Potomac,
North of England Iron S. S. Ins. Assn.
v.
Armstrong, supra,
was cited in
The Potomac, supra,
635, and in
Mobile & Montgomery Ry. Co.
v.
Jurey,
We recognize that established doctrines of English maritime law áre to be accorded respect here, Queen Ins. Co. v. Globe & Rutgers Fire Ins. Co., supra, 493; Gulf Refining Co. v. Atlantic Mutual Ins. Co., supra, 715, but the pronouncement in North of England Iron S. S. Ins. Assn. v. Armstrong, supra, has never been adopted by *439 an English appellate court. It was doubted by eminent judges in Burnand v. Rodocanachi Sons & Co., [1882] L. R. 7 App. Cas. 333, 342, and in Thames & Mersey Marine Ins. Co. v. British & Chilean S. S. Co., [1915] L. R. 2 K. B. 214, 221. Its reasoning, conflicting as it does with established principles of maritime insurance law, and found to be incapable of consisteñt application both in The St. Johns, supra, 474-475, and in The Livingstone, supra. 750, should be rejected here,
Affirmed.
