Based upon admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1333, Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(h), the plaintiff-mortgagee (“Ingersoll-Rand”) sues the defendant hull insurer (“Employers”) of a vessel to recover under a “standard” loss-payee mortgage clause. The hull insurance policy issued to the insured owner-mortgagor (“Mire”) of the vessel covered only named perils; these did not include the theft of the vessel. Under the findings of fact of the district court, which are not clearly erroneous, Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a), the loss of the vessel was caused by the theft of the vessel, but the theft resulted from the negligent acts or omissions of the insured, Mire. The district court granted Ingersoll-Rand, the plaintiff-mortgagee, recovery against Employers, the defendant insurer; the latter appeals, contending that the mortgagee cannot recover for a risk not covered by the insuring agreement between the owner-mortgagor and the insured.
We affirm. The standard mortgage clause creates a separate contract of insurance between the insurer and the mortgagee, and this clause provided that the interest of the mortgagee shall not be impaired “by any act of or omission or neglect” of the mortgagor-owner — in the present case, being the negligent acts and omissions that resulted in the theft of the insured vessel.
I.
Preliminarily, although the present marine hull insurance policy is a
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maritime contract falling within the admiralty jurisdiction of the federal courts,
New England Marine Insurance Company v. Dunham,
Employers’ hull insurance policy covering the vessel was a “named peril” policy, in which it insured the vessel against all the risks named in the perils clause (and, by implication, risks not named were not covered). Gilmore and Black, The Law of Admiralty, § 2-9 at pp. 71-72 (2d ed. 1975). 2 In the present policy, for instance, the named perils included “the adventures and perils of the waters ..., fire, lightning, earthquake,” etc.; also, loss of or damage to the vessel caused by accidents “in loading, discharging or handling cargo, or in bunkering,” breakdown of motor generators or other electrical equipment, “negligence of charterers and/or repairers,” “negligence of master, mariners, engineers or pilots,” etc. (The accidental loss was not covered, however, if it “resulted from want of due diligence by the assured, the owners or managers of the vessel, or any of them.”)
Both parties agree that loss by theft of the vessel was not among the named perils covered by the policy; so that the insured mortgagor-owner (Mire) could not itself recover on the policy for the present loss if occasioned by a theft of the vessel. The crux of the insurer Employers’ argument, not supported however by most if not all of the cases cited by it {see note 3, infra), is that the mortgagee-additional insured Ingersoll-Rand could not receive coverage by its standard mortgage clause (see II below) for a risk not covered by the principal policy to which this standard mortgage clause was an endorsement.
II.
The plaintiff Ingersoll-Rand had loaned Mire, the owner-insured of the stolen vessel, $55,000 and had been granted a first preferred ship mortgage on the vessel to secure the note. Ingersoll-Rand by endorsement to the hull policy issued by Employers to Mire was made an additional loss payee with regard to the insured vessel. By further endorsement, and in consideration of the premium included, the insurer Employers entered into an agreement with Ingersoll-Rand, the mortgagee, that sea *913 worthiness of the vessel was admitted, and further agreed that:
[T]he interest of the mortgagee shall not be impaired or invalidated by any act of or omission or neglect of the mortgagor, owner, master, agent, crew, of the vessels) insured by this Policy or by any failure to comply with any warranty or condition over which the mortgagee had no control or over which the mortgagee could, but has not exercised such control, or by any change in the title, ownership, or management of such vessel(s) ...
This is what is known as a “standard” or “union” mortgage clause.
May v. Market Insurance Company,
Where the issue has been squarely presented, the modern decisions are unanimous, and the earlier decisions virtually so, in holding that a mortgagee under a standard mortgage clause may (where not guilty himself of any breaches of policy conditions) recover from the insurer for a loss sustained by the mortgaged property, even though the risk be excluded from the policy coverage, where any act of the mortgagor has caused or contributed to the loss as resulting from an excluded risk; and even though as between the mortgagor-insured and the insurer there is no coverage because of some default by the mortgagor. The more recent decisions include:
Underwriters at Lloyd’s London v. United Bank Alaska,
*914 The rationale of these decisions may be summarized as follows:
The provision in the standard mortgage clause that with respect to the mortgagee the insurance shall not be invalidated by any act of the mortgagor does “not refer merely to acts prohibited by the contract or to failure to comply with the terms thereof, but literally embrace[s]
any
act of the mortgagor” that leads to impairment of the mortgagee’s insurance protection afforded by the clause. 10 Couch on Insurance 2d (Rev. ed.) § 42:719, p. 755) (1982) (emphasis added). “This clause constitutes an independent contract between the insurer and the mortgagee covering the mortgagee’s insurable interest, and not merely the property, and is affected only by acts of the mortgagee.”
Don Chapman Motor Sales, Inc., supra,
Although the precise issue before us has not surfaced in any reported Louisiana decision we could find, there is no reason to conclude that Louisiana would not adopt the nigh-uniform construction by other jurisdictions of the protection afforded a mortgagee’s interest a standard mortgage clause, which Louisiana recognizes as affording independent coverage to the mortgagee in accord with the terms of the clause.
May v. Market Insurance Company,
Only two decisions cited by Employers lend some support to its contention that the protection afforded a mortgagee by a standard mortgage clause may not afford the mortgagee coverage excluded by the unambiguous terms of the policy:
Avemco Insurance Company v. Jefferson Bank & Trust Company,
We thus find no merit to the defendant Employers’ contentions on appeal. 5
*915 Conclusion
Accordingly, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court granting the mortgagee Ingersoll-Rand recovery under its standard mortgage clause for the unpaid secured debt upon the stolen vessel.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We advert to these well-settled principles only because the defendant Employers on appeal contests their application, without advancing arguable reasons to the contrary. Employers does not, for instance, point to any federal rule contrary to the interpretations adopted by the Louisiana courts, which are, moreover, in accord with the interpretations adopted by the great majority of other American state jurisdictions.
. A “named peril" policy is to be differentiated from an “all risks” policy. “A policy of insurance insuring against 'all risks’ creates a special type of coverage that extends to risks not usually covered under other insurance; recovery under an all-risk policy will be allowed for all fortuitous losses not resulting from misconduct or fraud, unless the policy contains a specific provision expressly excluding the loss from coverage.”
Dow Chemical Company v. Royal Indemnity Company,
. The "standard” or “union” mortgage clause here applicable is to be distinguished from the "simple” or "open” mortgage clause. The latter simply provides that the proceeds of the policy shall first be paid to the mortgagee as his interest appears, but it does not provide a separate undertaking that the mortgagee's interest shall not be impaired by any act or neglect of the insured-mortgagor. In effect, the "simple” mortgage clause is simply to make the mortgagee an appointee of the insurance fund, with a right of recovery no greater than that of the mortgagor-insured.
See May, supra,
In Employers’ argument that the loss-payee mortgage clause can afford the mortgagee no greater rights than the coverage afforded by the principal policy, at least some of the decisions relied upon by Employers,
e.g., Wells Fargo Bank International Corporation v. London Steam-Ship Owners’ Mutual Insurance Association,
. In so doing, the Missouri intermediate courts characterized an "act" of the mortgagor that impaired coverage less broadly than did the decisions cited in this opinion (which included not only the mortgagor’s act but also its foreseeable consequences within the clause’s protection against impairment of the mortgagee's security), a distinction critically noted in
American National Bank and Trust Company v. Young,
. The defendant finally contends that a ruling that protects the mortgagee in this case will promote deliberate and fraudulent acts by a mortgagor that lead to loss of his vessel and the *915 payment of his debt through the insurance proceeds. This argument overlooks that the standard mortgage clause provides that, upon payment to the mortgagee, the mortgagee’s claim and security interest are assigned to the insuranee company to the extent of the payments received, thus giving the insurance company the right to collect from the mortgagor the debt still owed by him to the mortgagee.
