33 Mass. 303 | Mass. | 1835
delivered the opinion of the Court. We proceed to consider the validity of the points made in the defence.
1. That the taking in the mackerel at St. Thomas and disposing of it at Ponce, was a trading from port to port, and so not within the protection of the policy.
2. If not so, and if it were taken on board as ballast, yet as it was taken out at Ponce, and no ballast put on board, the vessel was not seaworthy in the passage from Ponce to Guayama.
3. That the return to Ponce to complete the voyage was a deviation, inasmuch as there is no liberty given in terms to go backwards and forwards, or more than once to the same port.
4. If the defendants are liable at all, it is only for a partial loss.
As to the first objection, we think that the taking in the mackerel was lawful, for two reasons : 1. because there was no delay, increase or variation of the risk occasioned thereby ;
As to the second objection, going from Ponce without replacing any ballast for the mackerel which was taken out there, xxe do not think the evidence in the case is sufficient to warrant a verdict of unseaworthiness on that account. The voyage from Ponce to Guayama is an inland navigation, which for aught that appears might be safely performed by the Pedler without taking in any more ballast.
But there is another answer. If it were not proper to make that passage xvithout more ballast, yet it was no breach of the original implied warranty of seaworthiness, but a neglect to keep the vessel in that state. And if she had been lost in consequence of such neglect, the defendants might have availed themselves of that neglect. But she made the passage in safety. The defect, if there were any, was cured. For it is not suggested that she was not in good sailing trim, when she left the West Indies upon her returning voyage to the United States.
The validity of the third objection, will depend upon the true construction of the policy. The voyage or risk is described, “from Boston to St. Thomas and.a market in the West Indies, and at and from thence to a port of discharge in the United States. Premium 2§ per cent., to add one fourth per cent, if to more than one port.” This is what is called a West India voyage. The object is obvious, viz. to get the outward cargo to a market, and to procure a return cargo. She proceeded to St. Thomas, the first port named in the policy. If there were no market there, she might go from thence to any port in the West Indies for a market, and to effect that object, it seems to us to be very clear, that she was not confined to any order, but might look to the expected profit to be made, rather than to the geographical position or convenience of visiting the several islands in the West Indies.
It would unquestionably be otherwise if the West Indies, were between the termini of the voyage, and the vessel had liberty to touch and trade on her passage. In such case she must take the ports in their convenient and geographical order.
But we think that the counsel for the defendants are right upon their fourth point, viz. that they are liable only for a partial loss, if liable at all.
Upon this point, the counsel for the plaintiffs contend,
1. That if a vessel is so far a wreck, that she cannot oe repaired, except at a cost exceeding her value, the loss is total, without abandonment. Gordon v. Mass. F. & M. Ins. Co. 2 Pick. 249 ; 2 Phillips on Ins. 279 ; Hughes on Ins. 384 ;
2. That this value is to be settled at the time and place of the wreck, even in a valued policy. Peele v. Merchants Ins. Co. 3 Mason, 27 ; 2 Phillips on Ins. 287 ; and,
3. That the above are the general rules of law, and are not altered by the form of the Boston policies, except in a case where abandonment is necessary to make a total loss, when the value in the policy governs ; and that in this case the assured did not claim under an abandonment, nor for a constructive total loss, but for an actual total loss.
Now it is a fixed rule, that if the ship be injured by the perils insured against, so as to require repairs to the extent
The case (Peele v. Merchants Ins. Co.) in 3 Mason, 27, was the case of the ship Argonaut, which was litigated fot years under circumstances of considerable excitement. It was at first brought before this Court. Afterwards it was sustained under the admiralty jurisdiction of the court of the United States for this circuit, and a decree was made for the plaintiff, accompanied with a most elaborate and learned argument ir support of the decree. An appeal was taken to the Supreme Court of the United States, and it is believed, that the admiralty jurisdiction was not sustained. At any rate the case appeared again in our Court. And it was tried repeatedly ; and the law was ruled according to the case of Wood v. Lincoln & Kennebeck Ins. Co. so far as that case applied ; which in many respects was not conformable to the views of the
In the case at bar, the opinion of the learned judge of the United States court in the case of the Argonaut (3 Mason, 27), is urged upon our consideration. But we cannot yield to its reasoning. This is no time for a connected view of the law which this Court entertain in regard to that case. We certainly have no disposition to volunteer on the subject! But when points come up for consideration, which were ruled in that case, and in which the Court are agreed, they will be decided according to our understanding of the law.
It became necessary for the judge of this Court who tried that cause, to decide whether the value of the vessel as she lay upon the rocks, or the value as mentioned in the policy, should be taken, in order to ascertain the legal rights of the parties ; and also, to decide whether one third new for ola should be deducted from the expenses of repairing the damage, in order to determine whether a technical total loss had happened. These points had not before been brought expressly before the Court. The presiding judge was of opinion, that the value named in the policy should be taken as the true rule, and that one third new for old should be deducted. And after much consideration of the cases cited in 3 Mason, 27, and of the acute reasoning of the learned judge, there to
And in regard to the deduction of one third new for old, we think there is just as good a reason to apply the rule to the consideration, whether or not there was a technical total loss, as there is to apply it to a partial loss. In the latter case it has been long settled, is uniformly applied, and generally works well. We know that the Supreme Court of New York, in Depuy v. United States Ins. Co. 3 Johns. Cas. 182, held, that “ the rule that the insured may abandon where the repairs exceed half the value, is general, and has no reference to the distinction of one third new for old.” It was an opinion per curiam, and no reasons are given. But this point came expressly under the consideration of the Court of Errors in New York, in Smith v. Bell, 2 Caines’s Cas. 153, where the majority of the Court of Errors concurred with the opinion of Lansing C., that to constitute a technical total loss of a ship by the perils of the sea, she must be in jured to the amount at least of half her value after deducting one third new for old. This is a practical rule, of the utility of which merchants and underwriters may perhaps be as competent to decide as judges are ; and it may not be amiss to observe, that it has been introduced into some, if not all, of the Boston policies.
Judges would be influenced, without doubt, by the consideration, whether abandonments for technical total losses ought to be favored or restricted. We are among those, who think that this part of the law of insurance, as it now is administered, is a clear departure from the great principle of indemnity upon which the contract of insurance should rest. According to the original intent surely, the underwriters were to pay the damage, the actual loss. They were not to become ship-owners, brokers, or merchants. This idea was expressed by. Buller J., one of the most eminent judges of England, about fifty years ago. Mitchell v. Edie, 1 T. R. 615. We must decide the law as we now find it. But
We hope that in this State it will be considered as settled, that the value in the policy is to govern ; and that a deduction of one third new for old is to be made in regard to technical total losses, as it is made in regard to partial losses. If after such deduction the expenses of repairs exceed one half of the value in the policy, the assured may abandon, and claim as for a total loss ; otherwise he is to keep the ship and recover for a partial loss only.
And we think that the rule will operate beneficially, for toe assured are generally more competent to manage the property that remains, than the underwriters can be.
This view of the case disposes of the objections of the plaintiffs’ counsel to the fourth point made by the counsel for the defendants. For if the damage would not amount to one half of the value of the vessel, to be ascertained as is before stated, it would follow conclusively, that the ship was not such a congeries of planks, as Abbott C. J., in Cambridge v. Anderton, 2 Barn. & Cressw. 692, describes a mere wreck to be. That suggestion is utterly contradicted by the facts found in the survey. The vessel was not stranded ; she had suffered much sea damage ; she had been thrown upon her beam ends ; four or five feet of water had got. into her hold, and melted some of the sugar. But it is found that her main hatch was well secured ; and the rest of the cargo of sugar was dry. The injury therefore was not such as to make her a wreck, in such a sense as to entitle the plaintiffs to recover without abandonment.^ If, as is admitted, it were not to an amount sufficient to constitute a technical total loss, a fortiori it could not be considered as an absolute destruction.
According to the agreement of the parties, a new trial is granted.