104 Mass. 510 | Mass. | 1870
A vessel arrives at a port of discharge when she arrives at any place at which it is usual to discharge cargo, and to which she is destined for the purpose of discharging cargo. Upon her arrival at that place, a policy insuring her until arrival at a port of discharge terminates, and cannot be extended or revived, after she has discharged part of her cargo there, by her removal to another port, or to another place in the same port, either for the purpose of discharging the rest of her cargo, or for any other purpose. This rule has long been established, so far as to exclude the continuance of the risk to a second port under a policy insuring a vessel to a single port of discharge. Leigh v. Mather, 1 Esp. 411. Coolidge v. Gray, 8 Mass. 531. Dodge v. Essex Insurance Co. 12 Gray, 65. Fay v. Alliance. Insurance Co. 16 Gray, 455. 1 Phil. Ins. §§ 955, 962, 993. The removal, after discharging part of her cargo at a place at which she has anchored for the purpose, to another place in the same port, is within the same principle.
The case of Whitwell v. Harrison, 2 Exch. 127, is decisive of this question. In that case, the policy was upon a ship from Liverpool to Quebec, and thence back “to her discharging port in the United Kingdom, and until she had moored at anchor twenty-four hours in safety.” The ship was chartered to take on board a cargo of lumber at Quebec and proceed therewith to Wallasey Pool in the River Mersey, or as near thereto as she could safely get, and there discharge her cargo. She came into the Mersey, and being unable, by reason of her too great draft of water, to get into Wallasey Pool, anchored abreast of it, and proceeded for several days to discharge her cargo and raft it into the port, and, while doing so, fell over and sustained damage. It was proved that the captain always intended to take the ship into Wallasey Pool with as much of the cargo on board as she could safely carry there. Upon these facts, Baron Rolfe (after-
Anchoring for the purpose of discharging cargo at a place to which the ship is destined for that purpose, and at which ships usually discharge cargo, is equally an arrival at a port of discharge, although the place is not within any harbor. It is not necessary to refer to cases of time policies, for it is clear that such a place is a port, within the meaning of the description of the voyage insured in a voyage policy. De Longuemere v. New York Insurance Co. 10 Johns. 120. Sea Insurance Co. v. Gavin, 4 Bligh, N. S. 578; S. C. 2 Dow & Cl. 129. Lindsay v. Janson, 4 H. & N. 699. Harrower v. Hutchinson, Law Rep. 4 Q. B. 523, and Law Rep. 5 Q. B. 584.
We find nothing inconsistent with these views in the decisions cited by the learned counsel for the plaintiffs. In Dickey v. United Insurance Co. 11 Johns. 358, Zacharie v. Orleans Insurance Co. 17 Martin, 637, and Samuel v. Royal Exchange Assurance Co. 8 B. & C. 119, the vessel had been obliged by order of the port authorities, or stress of weather, to anchor without reaching any place at which she intended to remain or to discharge any part of her cargo.
In Brereton v. Chapman, 7 Bing. 559, the only point decided was, that the lay days allowed by a charter party for the ship’s discharge were not to be reckoned from her arrival at the entrance of the port, although she there removed a portion of her cargo into lighters because she drew too much water to proceed with her entire cargo; but it was admitted on all hands, and declared by the court, that they would run from the time of her arrival at the usual place of discharge That case appears to us, us it did to the court of exchequer in Whitwell v. Harrison, not
In Taber v. Nye, 12 Pick. 105, which was upon a seaman’s contract for a whaling voyage “ from New Bedford and back to New Bedford,” it was only decided that the voyage had not terminated by the grounding of the vessel, without casting anchor or furling sails, on a bank outside of the harbor, though within the legal limits of the town and port of New Bedford, and remaining there a few hours, after which she floated and was brought into the harbor. Mr. Justice Putnam, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: “ It is perfectly clear that by the returning to New Bedford the parties meant to her destined place of mooring there, and not merely to the waters and territory within the limits of the town and port of New Bedford.” “ But this ship took the ground while she was proceeding to her place of mooring.”
The case of Meigs v. Mutual Marine Insurance Co. 2 Cush. 439, was of a policy upon a ship for a whaling voyage, and back to Mattapoisett, and to continue until she had arrived and been moored at anchor twenty-four hours in safety. The question whether the ship had arrived was submitted to the judgment ol the court upon the testimony of the pilot who brought her into the harbor, which the court held must therefore be taken as true, and the essential part of which, and the question arising thereon, were thus summed up by Mr. Justice Fletcher in delivering judgment: “ One of the facts most expressly and distinctly
The effect of the clause in the policy, by which the risk is to continue until the vessel shall have safely arrived and be moored twenty-four hours in good safety, is settled, in accordance with a judgment of this court delivered by Chief Justice Parsons sixty years ago, to be simply to continue the risk against the perils insured against for twenty-four hours after the arrival and mooring of the vessel. If at the expiration of that time she has suffered no loss from those perils, the policy is at an end. Bill v. Mason, 6 Mass. 313. Lidgatt v. Secretan Law Rep. 5 C. P. 190. 1 Phil. Ins. § 968.
The fact, if proved, that one of her owners, being then at Valencia, “ whither he had gone to look after the general business of the ship, to collect her freight, and to seek future employment for her,” intended to take her into the inner basin to complete her discharge, could not be allowed any greater weight as against the controlling fact that she had, arrived and been moored twenty-four hours in good safety at the place to which she was originally destined as a place of discharge, at which she did discharge a substantial part of her cargo, and at which similar vessels uniformly discharge in wnole or in part, than was allowed by the court of exchequer to corresponding evidence in Whitwell v. Harrison, above cited.
Judgment for the defendants.