109 N.Y. 504 | NY | 1888
The insurance on the Almeda was against "actual total loss only." In the month of November, 1877, the vessel was stranded at Port Glasgow, on Lake Erie. The plaintiff, owner and master of the vessel, gave immediate notice of the disaster to the agents of the underwriters at Buffalo. They sent one McKenna as their agent to Port Glasgow, who, after examining the wreck, directed the plaintiff to remove the rigging and whatever he could to the land.
The plaintiff, in his evidence, described the situation of the vessel and the efforts he made to rescue her. He said: "When the vessel struck the beach we went on broadside; her plankshire and her keelsons were crushed, and she humped up in the middle about three feet; her center-board box was all started; the head ledges of the center-board box were started; the rudder was unshipped and washed away; she was all started in the transom, all started loose; she filled with water up to the level of the lake. I remained with her forty-eight hours to do what I could to save her, and every man I had aboard worked to the last minute. I then left her and came to Buffalo. I left the mate in charge of the vessel. Served a notice on the insurance agent of the loss." The plaintiff further testified that McKenna said "the vessel was not worth getting off; that he was working for the insurance company, and he should have to get her off if he only took a piece of her to Detroit; that she was insured for a total loss, and it would not be a total loss if he got a piece of her off." On the *508 8th of November, 1877, the plaintiff served written notice of abandonment on the underwriters, but they refused to accept an abandonment, but determined to make an effort to save the vessel. They thereupon bargained with a company of wreckers and agreed to pay them $2,500, on condition that they got the vessel off and delivered her at Buffalo or Detroit, but if they failed they were to receive nothing. The wrecking company succeeded in getting off the vessel and towing her to Detroit, and on reaching Detroit she sunk near the shore in shallow water. In January, 1878, the underwriters not having paid the salvage expenses, the vessel was libeled by the wrecking company for the $2,500, and in the same month was sold by the marshal under a decree in admiralty in that proceeding, at public sale, for the sum of $675, which, as the proof tends to show, and as the referee finds, was her full and fair value at that time. The purchaser afterwards fitted her up as a barge at an expense of from ten to fifteen hundred dollars, and she was in use as a barge for some years afterwards. The evidence also tends to show that the cost of repairing the damage to the vessel caused by the disaster would have exceeded her value when repaired. The plaintiff was not a party to the contract with the wrecking company. It was exclusively a contract between the underwriters and that company, made by the underwriters on their own account for the purpose of rescuing the vessel and thereby preventing an actual total loss under the policy. The plaintiff had no notice of the contract or of the proceedings in admiralty. The underwriters did not tender the vessel to the plaintiff, or offer to restore her, nor is it claimed that they demanded of the plaintiff reimbursement for the salvage expenses. The rigging and other articles taken from the vessel were taken to Buffalo, and were also sold under process in the admiralty proceedings.
The question whether, under the circumstances proved, there was an actual total loss of the Almeda, within the policy, has been argued with great ability by the respective counsel. There can, we suppose, be no doubt that there may be an actual *509
total loss of a vessel within the true meaning of that phrase in a policy of insurance, although the vessel remains in specie, or, in other words, there may be an actual total loss according to the law of marine insurance, although the vessel is in existence as such when the loss is claimed. "Actual total loss" does not imply in all cases the actual physical destruction of the thing insured. The case of hostile capture or condemnation, or where a ship is justifiably sold by the master from a necessity springing from a peril within the policy, are illustrations. In these cases the ship remains in specie, but is irretrievably lost to the owner, and this is considered as constituting an actual total loss which renders the insurer liable without abandonment. (Benecke on Mar. Ins., 336; 2 Par. on Mar. Ins., 74, 86, and cases cited.) It is insisted on the part of the plaintiff that the same principle applies to a case where the vessel has sustained damage from a peril within the policy, which although not destroying its character or identity as a vessel, nevertheless has injured it to such an extent that the cost of repairs will exceed the value of the vessel when repaired. There is no legal distinction, it is claimed, between the total loss of the thing and a total loss of the value of the thing, and that in the one case as well as in the other there is as to the insured an actual total loss within the fair meaning of the policy. We are not prepared to assent to this construction of the contract. We have not been referred to any authority which supports it. The general rule as to what constitutes the total loss of a ship is stated by SEWALL, J. in the case of Murray v. Hatch
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The point that the mortgagee of the vessel should have been made a party was not taken by demurrer or answer, and was, therefore, waived. (Code, § 499.) The contract was made with the plaintiff. He had an interest as owner of the property in the collection and application of the insurance money. The one year limitation in the policy has attached so that an action could not now be maintained by the mortgagee in his own name. The plaintiff was a proper party and *512 will hold the proceeds of the policy for the benefit of the mortgagee, if the latter is equitably entitled to them.
We think the judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.