192 F. 212 | S.D.N.Y. | 1911
(after stating the facts as above).
“The terms and conditions of this form should be regarded as substituted for those of the policy in so far as inconsistent.”
Theré are two possible grammatical meanings — that the terms and conditions are substituted for corresponding terms and conditions; the other, that all the terms and conditions of the rider are substituted for all the terms and conditions of the policy. I think the meaning is the latter one, and that the terms and conditions as a whole are substituted; including all those parts of the policy which can properly be regarded as terms and corlditions at all. That phrase, it seems to me,, should reasonably include all the 'general stipulations of thfe policy, which .the'rider supplies, being itself a well-known form of instrument, .complete in itself. I therefore conclude that the limitation in this particular is not a part of the contract of the parties.
In the case at bar, assuming the rule to be as stated by the Supreme Court, and disregarding the absence of the exception, there is no adequate evidence that the sound blades broke because of the prior break of the other two. It is true that this might have been the cause of the injury1, but further than that the proof does not go. It is clearly possible that the Santurce might have struck some floating obstacle, and that this was what caused the loss. This would be more likely, if, as a matter of fact, the two stubs which first broke were found broken a second time. The evidence does not satisfy me that the two sound blades necessarily broke because the vessel was being navigated with only two.
There is, however, aside from this, a second and conclusive reason, which arises from the words of the rider, as follows:
‘•This insurance also to cover subject to the special terms of this policy, loss of ana/or damage to hull or machinery through the negligence of master, mariners, engineers, or pilots, or through explosions, bursting of boilers, breakage of shafts, or through any latent defect in the machinery or hull, provided such loss or damage has not resulted from want of due diligence by the owners of the vessel, or any of them, or by the manager.”
Now the loss in this case, on the respondent’s theory, was due to the negligence of the master in putting out from San Juan in bad condition. Assuming, without deciding, that in this case the exception expressed in Union Insurance Company v. Smith might otherwise be implied, here the express words just quoted provide the contrary. Only want of due diligence by the owner or manager will supply the place of the master’s negligence, and'there is no evidence of that. The respondent seeks to supply the place of such negligence by asserting that San Juan was one terminus of the libelant’s line. There is nothing that shows that there was any manager there, or that he had anything to do with directing the Santurce to proceed as she was. On the contrary, the master’s protest, which wa.s put in evidence by the respondent, states that on the 27th, at Jobos, she received orders to put on her spare propeller, and the master disregarded these orders, because the weather was unsettled. Whether these orders came from San Juan or not does not appear. Nor does it appear who represented the libelant at San Juan, or whether he was manager as stated in the rider.
Both defenses therefore fail, and the usual libel should go against the respondent.