63 N.Y.S. 125 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1900
This is an action brought on a marine insurance policy.
The plaintiff was the owner of the canal-boat A. & G. Rathgeber, which was insured by the defendant.. The boat was subsequently wrecked.
The defense is that the boat was injured and sunk by natural wear and tear, and not by the perils of the sea, or any of the perils insured against by the policy.
The facts are substantially as follows: The boat was insured for general freighting business in the navigation of certain waters in and about the city of Rew York. On or about the 18th day of October, 1898, the following indorsement was made by the defendant and attached to the policy of insurance: “ Canal-boat A. & G. Rathgeber. Privilege is hereby granted the above-named boat to make one trip to Glen Cove Bay and return, with privilege to discharge cargo at Hamaroneck, Rew York.”
The plaintiff with his boat secured a cargo of sand at Glen Cove Bay and returned to Hamaroneck, reaching there about four o’clock in the afternoon, and the boat was made fast to the dock or wharf at that place. Hamaroneck is a tidal harbor. A portion of the cargo of sand was taken off that night, work thereon being continued until about six o’clock. At about six o’clock, the plaintiff left his boat, returned again about ten o’clock, and went to bed on the boat: At that time the boat had taken the bottom on the falling of the tide. At about twelve o’clock he heard the boat creaking, but did not arise, and about six o’clock in the morning, found that the boat was full of water. The boat remained on the bottom until her
The testimony of the plaintiff, which is not contradicted, is, that at the dock at Mamaroneck, and about eight feet therefrom, there was a little gully about six feet wide, which had a running stream of water in it all the time, about three feet deep, no matter how low the tide was. After the tide went out, one-half of the boat, in width, was on the bank of this stream alongside the wharf, and the other half was over the stream on the aft side. The result of the tide leaving the boat was that the boat took the bottom in a malposition, the sand shifted to the aft side, and the boat shifted and leaned over to that side and was injured so that it was not worth repairing.
The plaintiff who was in charge of his own boat had never been at Mamaroneck before.
He knew, however, that it was a tidal harbor, but did not know of the existence of this small stream of water near the dock, nor anything about the condition of the bottom upon which the boat would rest.
The testimony is that the boat had been recently repaired and was seaworthy. There is no testimony tending to show unseaworthiness on her part.
The question before me is whether the loss in "the manner generally described above is a loss by one of the perils insured against. The defendant claims that it is not, that a boat entering a tidal harbor expects to take the bottom, and any damage that results therefrom is the natural wear and tear of the boat unless some storm, gale of wind or some fortuitous accident intervenes. While the plaintiff concedes the general rule to be as claimed by the defendant, he yet claims that the taking of the ground by the boat in the manner described was such an accident as brought it within the conditions of the policy.
I think the contention of the plaintiff is right and that the taking of the bottom in this tidal harbor, in the manner taken by this boat, was a loss within the perils insured against by this policy.
It was held in the case of Potter v. Suffolk Ins. Co., by Judge Story, in 19 Fed. Cas. 1186, that the underwriters on the common policy of insurance are liable for all accidents arising from all extraordinary circumstances, and not from the inherent weakness of the vessel. That was a case in which the brig Ben
It will be noted that this case is not so strong as the one at bar, for the reason that the court does not undertake to say, nor does the 'evidence disclose what particular cause. of several causes did the injury, while in this case it is apparent that the damage to the boat was done by the malposition in which she took the ground occasioned by the gully or stream of water flowing in the peculiar position that it did. near the dock or wharf at Mamaroneck.
This case (Potter v. Suffolk Ins. Co.) is followed in Hagar v. New England Mutual Marine Ins. Co., 59 Me. 463; the court- holding that- “ All ships moored in tidediarbors are liable, as the tide ebbs, to take- the ground in a mal-position, or to strike their bottoms against some hard substance, and to be thereby injured. , This danger constitutes one of the perils of the sea for which underwriters are responsible
The principal case (Potter v. Suffolk Ins. Co.) is also quoted with approval in Pennsylvania R. R. Co. v. Manheim Ins. Co., 56 Fed. Repr. 301. In that case a lighter in the employment of the plaintiff grounded upon a shoal in a slip
An English case of Magnus v. Buttemer, 11 C. B. 876, is claimed by the defendant to be authority for holding that this loss here is not within the perils insured against. I think that case is easily distinguishable from the one at bar. There the vessel was moored at a beach which was hard, shingly and steep. The vessel was there several days, and there was no accidental or unforeseen taking of the ground upon the tide receding, and the boat at each time floated upon the return of the tide. In that case the court held that whatever damage was sustained by the boat, was the natural wear and tear. In any event this case was an English case, and the rule does not seem to have been carried in this country to the extent claimed by the defendant here.
I conclude, that this was a loss within the policy, and findings may be prepared accordingly.
Ordered accordingly.