15 Wend. 532 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1836
By the Court,
The points upon which the plaintiffs in error seek to reverse the judgment below are two: 1. That seaworthiness of the vessel is a warranty and condition of the contract of insurance; and the breach of it dis
There is no doubt that seaworthiness of the vessel insured is an implied warranty or condition. This condition is complied with, if the vessel insured is in a proper condition to cany the cargo actually on board, or intended to be put on board, when the insurance is made. It is sufficient that the vessel is in a fit condition for the voyage. There is no question but that the vessel in this case was seaworthy at the commencement of the voyage, and continued so until she lost her anchor. The warranty of seaworthiness relates to the beginning of the risk ; if it be broken at the commencement of the risk, the insurers are discharged from all liability; but a breach of this warranty, subsequent to the commencement of the risk, does not discharge the insurers from the payment of antecedent losses ; nor does it from subsequent losses, unless the loss was the consequence of such unseaworthiness. This point was recently before the supreme court of Massachusetts, in Paddock v. The Franklin Ins. Co. 11 Pick. 227, where it was held to be the duty of the insured to keep the vessel seaworthy during the voyage, if in his power; and if she is rendered otherwise, he is bound to supply the damage or loss, as soon as he conveniently can. If, in consequence of his neglect to do so, a loss ensues, the underwriter will not be liable ; but if the loss was not attributable to the neglect of the insured, the insurer is not discharged ; forj instance, if the vessel sal’s without sufficient anchors, and is destroyed by lightning, the underwriters would not be discharged. In Holdsworth v. Wise and others, 1 Manning & Ryland, 673, 17 Com. Law R. 283,S. C., the insurance was on a ship from Belfast to her port of delivery in British America and home. When she sailed from St. Andrews, New Brunswick, for Valentía, in Ireland, she was leaky, and made from eleven to twelve inches of water every two hours. It was contended that the warranty implied seaworthiness in the ship at every port from which she sailed in the course of the voyage ; but the court were unanimous in the opinion that the implied warranty of seaworthiness did not extend so far as to require seaworthiness at every port from which she might depart, in the course of the voyage.
The next point urged in behalf of the insurers is, that the want of funds wherewith to make repairs is not a good ground of abandonment. The contract of insurance is a contract of indemnity, and the policy of insurance is, in substance, a bond of indemnity. The consideration is nailed the premium, and the contract itself receives the name of a policy ; but the difference between a policy of insurance and a bond of indemnity is merely in name. Where the loss is only partial, the amount of such loss affords the indemnity ; where the whole subject insured is lost, the whole value must be paid, to indemnify the insured ; and in such cases the analogy between a policy of insurance and the bond of indemnity is perfect, with the exception that in partial losses the whole amount is not paid. But when the doctrine of a technical total loss is considered, the analogy fails. Where the loss is actually total, then the principle of indemnity requires payment of the whole loss; but where the loss barely exceeds one-half, it may be difficult to perceive how the right to abandon and recover as for a total loss, was ever deduced from the obligation to indemnify. The right, however, is as perfect, under the construction which has long been given to policies of insurance to recover for a technical total loss, as for an actual total loss, or a partial loss. Mr. Justice Buller, in Mitchell v. Edie, 1 T. R. 608, and Lord Mansfield, in Goss v. Withers, 2 Burr. 683, have said, that the right of abandonment is one which ought not to be extended, and for the reason given, “ for fear of letting in frauds.” The cases in which the insured may abandon, and thereby turn that which is, in its nature, only z. partial loss, into a total loss, are enumerated by some of the writers on this branch of the law. According to the French law, the right o,f abandon-.
The following dissenting opinion was delivered by Mr. Justice Bronson.
I am unable to agree with my brethren in the opinion that there was any valid ground for the abandonment. The master estimated the expense of repairing the schooner at $1700, but according to the survey which he afterwards procured to be made, the repairs would not have cost above half that sum. The survey by competent persons specially appointed, rather than the opinion of the master; should govern in such a case ; but whichever may have been right, it was not pretended that the vessel had been damaged to half her value. She was in the port of destination. The master testified that he had no funds whatever on his arrival at St.Thomas; that he had not even been supplied with money for the ordinary expenses of the voyage. He could not obtain money to make repairs from the consignee, and failed in an attempt to raise it on bottomry. Under these circumstances the insurers insisted that the mere want of funds to make repairs in the port of destination did not constitute a valid ground for abandoning: but the learned judge charged the jury “ that the inability of the master to procure the necessary funds at St. Thomas was a valid cause of abandonment.”
I cannot subscribe to this doctrine. The assured sends out ihe vessel without furnishing the master with a single dollar
I shall not go into an examination of the cases. If the decision of the judge on the trial does not rest upon the ground of authority, (and none was adduced on the argument,) it cannot, I think, be sustained upon any general principle applicable to the law of insurance. The contract of insurance is a contract of indemnity. The underwriter agrees that he will pay all such loss or damage as the assured may sustain by any of the perils to which the policy extends. There is nothing in the nature of the contract to warrant the doctrine of abandonment, by which the assured is permitted to turn a partial into a total loss ; and although that doctrine is now well established, the policy of its original introduction has been questioned by high authority, and it ought not, I think, to be extended beyond the cases in which it has already been allowed. Permitting the assured to abandon and recover as for a total loss, where the deterioration of the subject insured only exceeds by a fraction the half of its value, was going a great way; and this rule, as was remarked by Chancellor Lansing in Smith v. Bell, 2 Caines’ Cas. in Err. 157, originated “ in the convenience of having a determinate and precise test in all cases, which, by its universality and uniformity, may render inquiries into minute objects, rather calculated to perplex than to elucidate, unnecessary.”
What will be the practical effect of the rule laid down by the judge on the trial of this case ? It will open a wide door to fraud. The owner may send out his ship without funds and without credit, and then, for the want of some trifling
Judgment affirmed!