This is аn action on a policy of insurance upon the freight of the ship Tartar on a voyage from Calcutta to 27ew York. The insured value of the freight was
The case is apparently complicated by the fact that the ship, cargo, and freight all belonged to the same party; but each of these subjects was separately insured, and it is conceded on both sides that the case is to be treated as if the vessel and the cargo were owned by different persons. It will therefore be so treated, and the rights and duties of the plaintiff as shipowner considered, unaffected by the circumstance of his being also owner of the cargo, and vice versa.
An abandonment of the ship and cargo to the respective underwriters was proved to have been made and accepted, and a like abandonment of the freight to the defendant was sought to be established on the trial, but as to this fact the evidence was conflicting and the question was submitted to the jury, with the instruction that if they found such abandonment and that it was justified by the existing facts, the plaintiff was entitled to recover as for a total loss, notwithstanding the saving of a portion of the cargo. But the judge further charged, at the request of the plaintiff’s counsel, that if the jury should find that there was no formal abandоnment of the freight, but also found that no part of the cargo reached the plaintiff at the port of destination in specie, they might still find for the plaintiff, for there was then a total loss of the freight.
The correctness of the first branch of the charge is not disputed ; that of the second is. It impliedly concedes that if any part of the cargo saved reached its owner at the port of destination the loss of freight was not total; yet
This portion of the charge cannot be sustained. The counsel for the plaintiff however contends that the fact of abandonment of the freight is established by the verdict and that the recovery can be supported on that ground. This position is also untenable. The evidence as to the abandonment of the freight was conflicting, and the jury may have found for the defendant on that question, and still rendered a verdict for the plaintiff, under the charge, on the ground that there was an actual total loss of freight which entitled the plaintiff to recover without abandonment. The charge on the subject of total loss having submitted that question on an erroneous principle, it is impossible to sustain the judgment unless it appears that a total loss which entitled the plaintiff to recover the entire amount insured, without abandonment, was so clearly established that the plaintiff was entitled to have a verdict in his favor directed by the court on that ground. (Baldwin v. Burrows,
It is evident that had the master or shipowner in the present case incurred these expenses and sent on the cargo, but a small portion of the expenses would have fallen on the freight and the principal part of it would have been earned. In such a case, if the owners of the goods or their insurers arc willing to take charge of the goods at the place of the wreck, the master may still earn his freight by offering to carry on the goods. If the owners of cargo insist on taking it they must then pay full freight. If by mutual consent the cargo is delivered up to the owners or abandonees of cargo at the place of the wreck after such an offer, freight pro rata is earned. (Smyth v. Wright,
It is not necessary at this stage of the case, for reasons hereafter stated, to pursue the inquiry as to the expense of completing the transportation of the cargo in question. All that is necessary now to be inquired into is whether the circumstanсes proved by uncontroverted evidence, were such as required the court to direct a verdict on the ground that there was an actual total loss of freight, or in other words whether they established that by the perils of the sea the ultimate earning of any freight was rendered impossible or practically hopeless; for that must be the test. By insuring the freight separately, the shipowner assumed the same relations towards the insurers on freight, as though he had no interest in the cargo, and was bound to pursue the same course for the purpose of saving freight. The material-question is, could he have saved it or аny part of it ? To
The circumstances of the wreck were as follows : The ship 'having nearly accomplished her voyage from Calcutta went on shore on Deal Beach on the third of February. The hope of getting her off and saving her was not given up till the twenty-first of March, when a survey was held and she was condemned. During all that period she remained entire, aground on the beach, and partly out of water at all tides, and there was ample opportunity to take out her cargo and tranship it on other vessels. There is no proof that such assistance could not have been obtained by the master or owner. It is conceded that they made no effort to do so, but permitted the Coast Wrecking Company without objection, or any claim in respect to freight, to take possession of the cargo and tranship and deliver it at New York to the insurers on cargo, and to subject the cargo to a large claim for salvage. This course would have been proper if the plaintiff had given due notice of abandonment of the freight to the defendant and thus enabled it- to protect itself. Butin the absence of any such notice he was bound to use all reasonable endeavors to tranship, the cargo and save the loss of freight, and at all events to offer to do so, and thus entitle himself to freight pro rata. There is no proof that he was unable to do so and the judge refused to submit to the jury the question whether the owners or master, might by using the same means which the Coast Wrecking Company used, or by employing that company, have saved and landed in New York that portion of the cargo which was saved and landed by it. This we think was the material question in the case. The abandonment of the ship did not interfere with the performance of this duty in respect to the cargо. The master or shipowner could have held on to that, notwithstanding. (1 Pars. Mar. Law, 158, 160.) Neither could the abandonment of the cargo deprive the shipowner or his insurer on freight of the right thus to earn the freight. He had a lien on the cargo for the purpose of earning freight, which was paramount to
There is no doubt that had the master paid these expenses and delivered the cargo, the shipowner would have been entitled to collect his whole freight, and in addition, to be reimbursed the extra expense of saving and transhipping the cargo, it being an expense arising from the necessity of the cáse and which he could lawfully have incurred for account .of the owner of the cargo ; and that the insurers on cargo .would have been obliged to pay it. (5 J. R., 262;
The plaintiff makes the further claim that by a stipulation in the policy the loss was converted into a total loss by reason of the loss of the vessel and more than one-half of the freight. The clause is that no claim for a total loss shall
It is further claimed on the part of the plaintiff that by the abandonment of the ship to the insurers the shipowner lost all right to freight. That such freight passed to the abandonees of the ship, and consequently the owner had nothing to abandon to the insurer on freight. Such is the law in England, and there an abandonment of the ship entitles the abandonee to all the freight which may after-wards be recovered, and which was pending at the time of the abandonment, whether earned before or afterwards. But it is also there held that where the shipowner thus loses his freight and it passes to the abandonees, he cannot recover against the insurers on freight for two reasons, first, because he has lost it by his own act; and secondly, because it has been in fact earned. (M'Carthy v. Abel, 5 East, 389; Wilson v. Willes, 7 id., 124; 2 Arn. on Ins. [4th ed.], 969, 971, 911; Scottish Mar. Ins. Co. v. Turner, 1 Macq. [H. of Lds. Cas.], 334.)
In this State the rule is different in both respects. It is here settled that in case of an accepted abandonment of the ship before the completion of the voyage the freight must be apportioned pro rata itineris, and the part earned before the disaster belongs to the shipowner or his representative the insurer on freight, and only that subsequently earned to
The defendant makes the claim that the facts of this case
We think a case was not made out which entitled the plaintiff to recover as for a total loss of freight without an abandonment, and that the judgment must be reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.
All concur, except Miller and Earl, JJ., absent.
Judgment reversed.
