78 Mass. 65 | Mass. | 1858
This risk terminated at Salem, and the property being lost, on the passage from Salem to Boston, under an order given to the master at Salem after arrival there, it was not a loss covered by this policy. The open policy from any port or ports in the United States to any other port or ports in the United States constituted no contract of insurance, until made operative and efficient by the indorsement. The termini, uncertain in the open policy, are made certain by the indorsement. Its legal operation is like that of a policy on property, by the Potomac, from Norfolk to Salem or Boston, with the liberties expressed in the policy, and in the caption to the indorsements. The terminus a quo is Norfolk, and the terminus ad quern is either Salem or Boston, as the assured might direct. It is left uncertain by the contract, but it must be made certain at some time, and must be determined by the court. At whatever time that election might be made, within the stipulated limits, whether at the time of the departure from Norfolk, or at any time before arriving at the dividing point in the voyage, or at what other time, it must be before the termination of the risk, and that risk will terminate on arrival at Boston or Salem, whichever shall first happen. This appears to the court to be the clear legal result of the contract; and we see nothing in the anterior usage or practice of the parties to vary this result. If we look at all beyond the policy, we find that the cargo was shipped for account of the assured, under a contract with the owners of the vessel to carry it to Salem, with a further stipulation, that if on its arrival at Salem the shipper should desire it to be carried by the vessel to Boston or any other port equally near and convenient, it should be done for a small additional freight, showing the first destination to be Salem. Had there been a similar stipulation in the policy, it might have been different. When a risk is intended on any terms to be extended beyond the fixed terminus, either in time or place, it must be done in explicit terms, and the conditions strict^ complied with. Salvin v. James, 6 East, 571.
Plaintiffs nonsuit.
R. H. Dana, Jr. & T. P. Pingree, Jr., for the plaintiffs. This suit is within the limitation of twenty years, fixed by the Rev. Sts. c. 120, § 7, unless it is within § 1, limiting the time of bringing certain actions to six years. It is not expressly included in § 1; for no cause of action at law under the policy ever existed; and a cause of action in equity to reform the contract, so as to give an action at law, did not lie until after the passage of the Sts. of 1855 and 1856. Even if the cause of action is to be dated as if there had always been equity jurisdiction, it did not accrue until 1854, when it was first decided that there was no remedy at law, and therefore that the remedy, if any, was in equity. The plaintiff cannot justly be held bound to have known this from the first. The lapse of time occurs pendente lite, and perhaps by the fault of no one, or of the defendants.
If an action at law is brought upon a certain construction of a written contract, and the existence of the cause of action is solely a'question of law on that construction, and it is rejected, and a suit in equity is thereupon brought between the same parties, solely to remedy the defect in the written contract, the time during which the suit at law was pending is to be deducted from the limitation of the statute; at least, unless there was want of good faith, or of reasonable cause, or of reasonable diligence. 1 Story on Eq. 529. Lopdell v. Creagh, 1 Bligh N. R. 255. Suppose the plaintiff, after the decision in June 1854, had obtained leave to amend his declaration by inserting a bill in equity to remedy the defect in the contract, could the statute of limitations have been afterwards pleaded as a legal bar to the amended bill, the six years not having expired when the
In June 1854, which was within six years from the loss, the amendment could not be made, nor a new suit brought, because the legislature withheld the remedy. The case is therefore within the equity of the Rev. Sts. c. 120, § 11, allowing actions seasonably commenced and defeated by defects in form or service, to be renewed within a year. Woods v. Houghton, 1 Gray, 580.
The statute of limitations against a suit in equity, founded in fraud, accident or mistake, runs from the time when the fraud, accident or mistake is discovered; or at least from the time when, with reasonable diligence, it ought to be discovered. This plaintiff could not discover it, until the legal decision at law, and he took the best and only course for discovering it. On a fair question of pure law, where two courses are open to him, he cannot be held to guess right and anticipate the court’s decision at his peril, whichever course he takes. 2 Dan. Ch. Tract. (Amer. ed.) 736 & notes. Angelí on Lim. §§ 28, 191, 193. Emmons v. Hayward, 6 Cush. 501. First Massachusetts Turnpike v. Field, 3 Mass. 201. Rev. Sts. c. 120, § 12.
O. P. Lord, for the defendants.
Bigelow, J. It is unnecessary to consider most of the questions discussed at the argument of this case, because we are of opinion that the statute of limitations is a bar to the maintenance of this bill. It was filed on the 23d of May 1856. The loss which is claimed under the policy happened on the 17th of July 1848, and the amount alleged to be due from the defendants on the contract of insurance became payable, if at all, in sixty days after proof and adjustment of loss. The action at law to recover the amount of the loss was commenced on the 24th of October 1848, and was tried in this court in November 1849. At the trial the point of law on the construction of the clause of the policy, which it is the purpose of the suit to reform as having been inserted by mistake, was raised, and subsequently it was decided against the plaintiffs. It is clear beyond controversy on these facts that a suit at law on the policy would be barred.
But if this be not so, there is still an insuperable difficulty which stands in the way of giving the plaintiffs any equitable relief. The authorities are quite decisive that even in the courts of chancery in England, where the statute of limitations is acted on only as a guide to the discretion of the court, in cases of bills filed to correct mistakes in contracts, the courts will refuse to grant relief, as in cases of fraud, if the period of limitation has elapsed between the filing of the bill and the time when the mistake was discovered or when by the use of due diligence it ought to have been discovered. Brooksbank v. Smith, 2 Y. & Col. Exch. 58. Blair v. Bromley, 5 Hare, 542, and 2 Phil. Ch. 354. Hough v. Richardson, 3 Story R. 659. Assuming this to be the true doctrine, it is decisive against the right of the
It is scarcely necessary to add that the legislature, in giving to this court jurisdiction in equity in cases of fraud, accident and mistake, did not intend to revive claims or causes of action which had become barred before the statute was passed. Such a retroactive effect of a statute would be contrary to the ordinary and regular operation of legislative enactments, and cannot receive judicial sanction, unless required by a provision of the statute expressed in terms too clear to admit of doubt.
Bill dismissed.