19 F. Cas. 98 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts | 1822
This cause has been here heard upon the merits, the respondents having appeared under a protest to the jurisdiction, and meaning to insist upon that objection, if there should be an appeal to the supreme court, they have filed a general denial, putting the material facts in issue, and thus brought the entire law as well as facts before the court for consideration. Upon the subject of jurisdiction I have no more to say, than that I have seen no reason to change the opinion which I expressed several years since, that originally and of right the jurisdiction did belong to the admiralty. Whether it is become obsolete by disuse, or by the preponderating authority of the common law courts, so that it cannot and ought not now to be exerted by our courts of admiralty, is a question upon which I have no right even to conjecture what will be the judgment of the appellate court I have, indeed, hitherto supposed the point rather of theoretical than practical Importance, presuming that from private convenience, the benefit of a trial by jury, and the confidence that is so justly placed in our state tribunals, the insured would almost universally elect a domestic forum. I shall most cheerfully acquiesce in any judgment which may be ultimately pronounced on the point of jurisdiction; but entertaining, as I do most sincerely, the opinion, that this court is rightfully possessed of it, 1 feel myself compelled by a sense of duty to entertain the suit, and to give my deliberate judgment, however unavailing it may be, upon the great and interesting points which have been presented at the bar. I cannot, Indeed, but express my deep regret, that the cause has come before this court at all, and especially under circumstances of so much embarrassment and difficulty. My own situation in relation to it is somewhat delicate and perplexing. But every consideration of this sort becomes trivial, when put in comparison with the serious thought, that a veiy small sum only was originally in controversy; and that there is an almost moral certainty that the whole property will perish before the suit is finally terminated, so that a total loss, with all the expenses and charges of litigation, must be borne by the unsuccessful party. I may add too, that the case appears to be contested upon principle; that the conduct of the parties is perfectly fair; and that there is not the least reason to impute to either, any desire to avail themselves of any rule of law, which is not founded in general justice and equity, and which may not consist-with the most liberal good faith in matters of insurance.
The policy on which the suit is brought, bears date on the 6th of December, 1S20, and insures for the plaintiffs “thirty thousand dollars on the ship Argonaut, valued at $12,000, and on property on board — viz, $4,000 on the vessel, 826,000 on the property on board, at and from Leghorn to her port of discharge in the United States.” The loss is alleged to have been total, by reason of the perils of the sea, stranding and shipwreck. The material facts, as disclosed in the testimony (for there
“Boston, March 26, 1821. Joshua Blake, Esq — Dear Sir: The ship Argonaut having been stranded on Gerrish’s Island, near Portsmouth, and abandoned to the insurers, we have consulted together, and appoint you the agent of the companies we represent, to act and do what is needful in this business. With regard to giving instructions, we have only to say, that we leave to you to attempt to get the ship oft', or to sell her as she lies; to sell the materials there, or to send them to Boston; and generally to exercise your own discretion, in which we doubt not you will do whatsoever shall be most for the interest of all concerned. The cargo has not been abandoned — you therefore can have no controul of that; but still we wish you to do all in your power to make the loss as small as possible. Shall be obliged by your" informing us, when convenient, what is the situation of the property. Respectfully, &c.”
Mr. Blake further states, that at the same time he received a memorandum, as part of his instructions, but which was not seen by the plaintiffs, which after stating certain particulars respecting the ship and cargo, and suggesting what it might be best to do, in case the ship was got off, or was sold, adds: “Capt. Wheatland, one of the owners, is there, and it will be proper to consult him in what concerns the cargo, as he has not abandoned the cargo. If the loss should prove to be less than fifty per cent, on the ship, the abandonment will not take effect The ship’s provisions belong to and make a part of the ship.” Mr. Blake went to Portsmouth, saw the state of the ship, and returned to Boston on Thursday morning, leaving a Mr. Hawkes as the agent for the underwriters, with authority to endeavour to get the ship off, and proceed in every respect as to him should seem best for the preservation of the ship and property', during his absence, or until another agent was appointed by the underwriters; and this agency was confirmed by the three presidents by the mail of the next day. Mr. Hawkes accordingly set to work with forty or fifty men, and eventually succeeded, by great exertions, and the use of rags, beef, &e. in stopping the principal leaks, and getting the vessel off, though the weather was unfavoura-ble, and with the assistance of about twenty-boats, on Friday, the 30th of March, towed her up to a wharf in Portsmouth. There were several holes in the bottom of the ship, lying principally within the space of six feet. Prom the time of the abandonment, the ship owners ceased to have any thing to do with the ship; they never assented, and were not asked by the underwriters to assent, to the appointment of Mr. Blake or Mr. Hawkes as agent, and the whole proceedings to get the ship off, were exclusively directed by the underwriters and their agents, at their own cost and expense. The expense of getting off the ship was about $907. On Monday, the 2d day of April (a week after the abandonment), and not before, Mr. Balch, in behalf of the Boston companies, informed the plaintiffs by letter that the ship was got off, offered to make a compromise, and wished them to take the ship and repair her. He added, “Should we not agree in this, it is our intention to have the ship repaired as soon as practicable, and to return her to you.” This letter was never answered. About the 8th of April, the underwriters sent an agent to Portsmouth, to make an estimate of the necessary repairs to put her in as good order as she was before, who estimated the gross amount, making the most liberal allowance, at $5,412. As soon afterwards as could conveniently be done (about the 20th of April), the repairs were begun, under the direction of a skilful and intelligent agent; and all the repairs were made by him according to his best judgment, with suitable instructions from the underwriters, and were completed about the 19tb day of June, 1821. The underwriters on the 23d of June, wrote a letter to the owners, stating the 'fact, that the vessel was repaired, and offered to deliver her to them. The plaintiffs on the 26th of June, replied, rejecting the offer, and relying on their abandonment as accepted, and offered to execute a further transfer, reciting according to the laws of the United States, the certificate of registry. They also declined to agree to the proposal of a sale of the ship without prejudice, assigning as a reason the insufficiency of the repairs, &c. To this letter the defendants replied on the next day, (the 27th June) denying any acceptance of the abandonment, and expressing surprise at the assertion, and added: “On your informing us that the ship was ashore and bilged, and in a situation in which it was not probable she could ever be got off, and that you therefore wished to abandon; under the impression that your information was correct, we sent an agent with full powers to act as he should think proper, after he should have ascertained the facts; but on his arrival he found the facts materially differ; ent — the ship was not bilged, although her keel was badly chafed, and she leaked badly; nor was she in so desperate a situation as we-had been led to believe. He therefore took measures immediately to get her off, and easily succeeded, and carried her to the wharf,, where she now lies.”- The plaintiffs replied to this letter on the 9th July, declining any further correspondence. The defendants again wrote the plaintiffs on the 28th July, stating, that an offer had been made for the ship of $11,000, and that the agent thought he could get $12,000, if he was authorized to sell her, and proposed giving him authority to sell her. No reply was made to this letter, and here the correspondence closed. The ship yet remains at the wharf in Portsmouth; and recently, the leak, which after the repairs continued for many months, has ceased, but the place where it is, and the manner in
The questions made and discussed at the bar with great diligence, learning and ability, from which I have derived no small share of instruction, and have been taught the intrinsic difficulty of the subject, are first, whether the plaintiffs had a right of abandonment upon the 26th of March, unuer all the circumstances of the case; secondly, whether, assuming that there then existed no such right, there was an acceptance' on the part of the underwriters, of the abandonment tendered by the plaintiffs, so that they are now bound to pay as for a total loss. As preliminary to the first enquiry, I think it important to notice'a difference between the courts of this country and those of England, in respect to the right of abandonment. With us, an abandonment once rightfully made, is conclusive between the parties, and the rights flowing from it are not divested by any subsequent events, which change the situation of the property, and make that, which was a total loss at the time of abandonment, a partial loss only. And the right of abandonment is to be decided by the actual facts at the time of the abandonment, and not merely by the information of the assured; and consequently, if the facts do not then warrant it, no prior or subsequent events will give it any greater efficacy. This is the established doctrine, as I take it, of all, or at least of the principal commercial states (Wood v. Lincoln & K. Ins. Co., 6 Mass. 479; Adams v. Delaware Ins. Co., 3 Bin. 287; Jumel v. Marine Ins. Co., 7 Johns. 412); and has been solemnly settled, upon the fullest deliberation, by the supreme court of the United States (Rhinelander v. Insurance Co. of Pennsylvania, 4 Cranch [8 U. S.] 29; Marshall v. Delaware Ins. Co., 4 Cranch [8 U. S.] 412). Whether this decision has given entire satisfaction to the profession, is more than I can presume to say; and whether at a future time it may be fit to undergo a revision, as has been intimated at the bar, I pretend not to determine. I can only say, that the decision already made, is conclusive upon my present judgment; and so far as I have been able to comprehend the grounds on which it rests, it appears to me founded on sound reasoning, public convenience, and the great principles of equity, which regulate the contract of insurance. The rule in the English courts is, as we all know, very different. There it has been held, that if an abandonment be rightfully made, it is not absolute, but may be controlled by subsequent events; so that if the loss has ceased to be total at any time before action brought, the abandonment becomes inoperative. M’Carthy v. Abel, 5 East, 388; Bainbridge v. Neilson, 10 East, 329; Patterson v. Ritchie, 4 Maule & S. 393. The cases, in which this doctrine has been asserted, do not to my humble judgment, present any solid reasons to support it. They appear to me to trench very much upon the true principles of abandonment, and to be supported by analogies not very exact, or very cogent. And I find that they have struck the comprehensive and disciiminating mind of Lord Chancellor Eldon in the same manner. Smith v. Robertson, 2 Dow. 474. The doubts which he has thrown out have not been as yet satisfactorily answered. And it is no slight recommendation of the American doctrine, that it stands approved by the cautious learning of Valin, the moral perspicacity of Pothier, and the practical and sagacious judgment of Emerigon. 2 Valin, Comm. 143, lib. 3, tit 6, art. 60; Pothier, c. 3, note 135; 2 Emerig. c. 17, § 6, p. 194. And see Roccus, Ins. note 66.
It appears to me that this distinction has not at all times been sufficiently adverted to in our examination of the later English cases. Some of the remarks to be found there have a tacit reference to this doctrine; and many things, thus receive an easy explanation, which it would otherwise be found somewhat difficult to reconcile with our stricter notions on the subject of abandonment. It has been said too at the argument, that abandonments are not to be favoured; that they have been liable to great abuses, and that courts of law are not disposed to enlarge the practice. See Lord Ellenborougli’s remarks in Bainbridge v. Neilson, 10 East, 329, 343. I am very much inclined to believe, that of late years this consideration has had quite as much weight as it deserved; and it is by no means clear, if the spirit of the cases decided by that great man, Lord Mansfield, had been fairly followed, that much uncertainty as to the law would not have been done away, and many fruitful sources of litigation dried up. At present there is enough of doubt and obscurity as to the right of abandonment in cases of sea damage, stranding, shipwreck, and loss of the voyage by the ship, to encourage expensive suits, and to lead one to the conclusion, that it were far better for the question to be settled upon some general principle in any way, than to remain in its present condition.
The plaintiffs contend that they had a right to abandon, (1) because the ship at the time was cast ashore and bilged, and in so dangerous a situation that the chance of recovery was desperate; (2) because she was injured by the accident to more than half her value, which of itself constituted a technical total
It has been very justly stated, that a tolal loss ip the contemplation of law does not necessarily suppose the actual destruction of the thing insured. It may technically exist, when the thing is in safety, but is for the time being lost to the owner, or taken from his free use and possession. Such are the common cases of total losses by capture, by embargoes, and by restraints and detain-ments of princes. On the other hand, it is as clear, that the mere occurrence of these accidents does not constitute a total loss, if, in point of fact, the peril has passed away at the time of the abandonment. Lord Mansfield, upon one occasion said, “no cases say that the bare existence of the hull of the ship prevents the loss from being total.” Milles v. Fletcher, 1 Doug. 231. And on another occasion he observed, alluding to the objection, “it might as reasonably be argued, that if a ship sunk be weighed up again at a great expense, the crew having perished, the insured could not abandon, nor the insurer be liable, because the body of the ship was saved.” Goss v. Withers, 2 Burrows, 683, 697. See, also, 2 Emerig. Ins. c. 17. § 2, p. 181; 1 Emerig. Ins. c. 12, § 13, p. 400. On the other hand, Lord Ellenborough has told us, that “there is not any case nor principle, which authorizes an abandonment, unless where the loss has been actually a total loss, or in the highest degree probable at the time of the abandonment.” Anderson v. Wallis, 2 Maule & S. 240, 248. I lay great stress on these last words, because it is manifest from the case, that they were used with reference to a technical total loss, and shew that the right of abandonment does not always depend upon the certainty, but upon the high probability of a total loss either of the property or voyage, or both. And in one of the latest cases ever decided by the same learned judge, he uses expressions indicating a perfect coincidence with the opinion of Lord Mansfield. He there observed, “the mere restitution of the hull, if the plaintiff may eventually pay more for it than it is worth, is not a circumstance by which the totality of the loss is reduced to an average loss.” M’Iver v. Henderson, 4 Maule & S. 576, 584. See, also, Bell v. Nixon, 1 Holt, N. P. 423. I think, therefore, that it may be assumed as a position not now controverted, that the existence of the ship does not prevent the loss from being considered total to the owner. Peters v. Phœnix Ins. Co., 3 Serg. & R. 25.
What then is the criterion by which we are to ascertain when a total loss of a ship has
The cases on this subject are not perhaps easily reconcilable in their full extent; but it appears to me important to review them for the purpose of ascertaining what at least is the leading principle. The first is Goss v. Withers, 2 Burrows, 683, which it is material on many accounts to consider. There was an insurance in that case, and the suit was brought on both policies; the declaration in that on the ship (which was a valued policy)
Then came Hamilton v. Mendes, 2 Burrows, 1198, which was a valued policy on the ship, and on goods on board, on a voyage from Virginia or Maryland, to London. The vessel was captured on the voyage, and was retaken and brought into Plymouth; and afterwards the plaintiff offered to abandon, but the underwriter refused' it, and offered to pay the salvage and losses, and •charges occasioned by the capture. The ship afterwards came to London, where the cargo was delivered to the freighters, and the ship sustained no damage by the capture. The plaintiff claimed for a total loss, -on account of the capture, and the court held it a partial loss only. Lord Mansfield among other things said, “It does not necessarily follow, that because there is a recapture, therefore the loss ceases to be total. If the voyage is absolutely lost, or not worth pursuing; if the salvage is very high; if further expense is necessary; if the insurer will not engage in all events to bear that expense, though it should exceed the value, or fail of success; under these, and many other like circumstances, the insured may disentangle himself and abandon, notwithstanding a recapture.” He then proceeded to show, that none of these circumstances occurred in the case before the court, and in this respect it was distinguishable from Goss v. Withers. I know very well, that Lord Ellenborough, on a late occasion, (Falkner v. Ritchie, 2 Maule & S. 290, 293,) complained of the looseness and generality in these expressions, as inclining him to pause upon them, and referred to Pole v. Fitzgerald, Willes, 641, as fit to be resorted to, in order to purify the mind from these generalities. On this I have only to observe, that these cases have been acted upon for more than a half century, and have never been shaken. And as to Pole v. Fitzgerald, whatever may be its authority, seeing that it was opposed by the judges of the king’s bench, at the head of which there then presided one of the greatest insurance lawyers of his day, it may be well doubted if some of the dicta in it now stand commended to the judgment of the profession. See the observations of Lord Eldon in Brown v. Smith, 1 Dow. 350, 358. And if I do not mistake, Lord Ellenborough himself, on more than one occasion, has reposed his judgment upon the authority of these very cases.
Then came the case of Milles v. Fletcher, 1 Doug. 231, which was an insurance on the ship and freight from Montserrat to London. The vessel was captured on the voyage, and part of her cargo was taken out. She was afterwards retaken and carried into New York, where the captain on his arrival found that- part of the cargo was washed overboard, and part of the residue was damaged, and the ship was leaky, and could not be repaired without unloading. The owner had no storehouse at New York, to store the cargo, nor any agent there. No sailors were to be had, and the only way of paying the salvage was by selling part of the cargo. The expense of repairs would have exceeded the value of the freight by £100. There was an embargo on all vessels at New York till the 27th of December, and the ship by her destination was to have arrived at IiOndon in July. Under these circumstances, the master, after consulting his friends, sold ship and cargo. The latter was paid for; but the person who had contracted to buy the ship, ran away, and she was left in a creek at New York. The owner afterwards, on information, abandoned, and it was held a total loss. Lord Mansfield, in delivering the opinion of the court, affirmed the doctrines already stated by him in the
The case of Furneaux v. Bradley (Park. Ins. c. 9, p. 219), followed. The insurance was on the ship, in port or at sea, for six months, from 18th July, 1777. The ship was in government service, bound from Cork to Quebec. She arrived there, but tne season being far advanced before she was ready to return, she was removed into the basin; but on the 19th November she was driven from thence by á field of ice, and damaged by running on the rocks. Her condition was not examined till April following, after the expiration of the policy.. She was then found to be bilged, and much injured, but not thought irreparably so. In the progress of the repairs, difficulties arose from the want of materials, and the captain, after consulting the merchants and agents, sold her. An account was made up, charging the insurers with the whole amount, and crediting them with the sums for which the ship sold as salvage. After argument, the court held that the loss in November should be taken as an average, and not as a total one; that the ship should be considered as damaged on the 19th November, but not totally lost. The grounds of this determination are not stated in the report; but there seems no reason to doubt its correctness. The question turned altogether upon the quantity of damage done in November; and the court thought it merely partial. There does not appear to have been any abandonment, nor could it have been well made for any injury sustained subsequently to the 17th of January, when the policy expired; and without an abandonment in a reasonable time, there could be no recovery for a total loss. See Mitchell v. Edie, 1 Term R. 608; Da Costa v. Newnham, 2 Term R. 407; Martin v. Crokatt, 14 East, 465; Davy v. Milford, 15 East, 559; Bell v. Nixon, 1 Holt, N. P. 423. The voyage was not lost by the accident, for the vessel did not intend to return that season, and before, by the opening of the river in the spring, the voyage could be resumed, the policy had expired. The court clearly did not consider, that if the voyage had been lost, an abandonment would not have been good; for that would have been contrary to their prior as well as subsequent decisions. Chief Justice Parsons has commented on this case with the same views. Wood v. Lincoln & K. Ins. Co., 6 Mass. 479, 485, 486.
The next case was Manning v. Newnham, Park. Ins. c. 9, p. 221. See Marsh. Ins. 586; s. c. 2 Camp. 624, note. It was an insurance on ship, cargo, and freight, at and from Tortola to London, warranted to depart before a particular day, and free of particular average. The ship was a Dutch prize, and sailed on the voyage under convoy, and on the second day afterwards was compelled, in consequence of leaks occasioned by stress of weather, to return to Tortola. A survey was there had, and the ship declared unfit to proceed to London, and that she could not be repaired at Tortola, or any of the English West India Islands. No ship could be had at Tortola, to bring the whole or the greater part of the cargo to London; and the cargo did not appear (as one of the reports states) to have received any special damage; and was sold for £700 within the sum in the policy, which was above £12,000. The ship, and the whole of the cargo, was sold accordingly at Tortola. The assured claimed for a total loss, and the jury found a verdict in his favour. On a motion for a new trial, it was overruled. Lord Mansfield said: “If by a peril insured the voyage is lost, it is a total loss. In this case, the ship has an irreparable hurt within the policy; this drives her back to Tortola, and there is no ship to be had there, which could take the whole cargo on board. It is admitted there was a total loss on the freight, because the ship could not perform the voyage. The same argument applies to the ship and cargo.” The ground of decision, therefore, was, that the voyage as to the ship was lost by the impossibility of her being repaired in that or the neigh-bouring ports, so as to complete the voyage; but the question of the quantity of injury received by the storm, was not made in the cause. I am aware that Lord Ellenborough, in Anderson v. Wallis, 2 Maule & S. 240, 246, seems inclined to doubt this case, but I find that in another case he distinctly acceded to its authority. Wilson v. Royal Exch. Assur. Co., 2 Camp. 623.
The case of Cazalet v. St. Barbe, 1 Term R. 187, 190, 191, was a policy on the ship from Wyberg to Lynn. In the course of the voyage the ship received damage to the amount of forty-eight per cent., which sum the underwriters paid into court She arrived at her port, and so performed her voyage, but on arrival she was not worth repairing. The question was, whether the
Parsons v. Scott, 2 Taunt. 363, was an insurance on the ship, which was captured, and afterwards liberated, and returned to England, not having performed her voyage, and an abandonment took place. Upon the first argument, Chief Justice Mansfield admitted, that if a capture has occasioned the loss of the voyage, although the ship remains in such a state that she may be repaired, and may again be taken possession of by the owner, yet it is a total loss. But he said the question was, what shall be deemed a loss of the voyage; and adverting to Goss v. Withers, remarked, that Lord Mansfield took various circumstances into consideration; the nature of the commodities, the defeating of the voyage, the amount of salvage, the captivity of the crew, and the loss of the freight. Lawrence, J., admitted that the dicta in the authorities went the length of asserting generally, that wherever the voyage is defeated by any of the perils insured against, there is a total loss; but that he could find no authority applicable to the case of a ship in the hands of the owner in the country where he resides. He added, that in Manning v. Newnham, a loss of the voyage as to the ship did arise, though not as to the cargo. On the second argument, the court held that there was no total loss. I advert to this case, to show that the cases alluded to were not attempted to be overthrown, but their authority admitted, and the case before the court was distinguished from them.
Shortly afterwards came the case of Martin v. Crekatt, 14 East, 465 (see, also, Bell v. Nixon, 1 Holt, N. P. 423), which was an insurance on the ship and goods from Carls-crona in Sweden, to Deptford or London, warranted free of particular average, &c. The ship on the voyage was run foul of by another vessel in a gale of wind, and from that and other perils of the sea. received so much damage as to be obliged to put into Warberg Roads, a small fishing place in
In Thomson v. Royal Exch. Assur. Co., 1 Maule & S. 30, which was a policy of insurance on bottomry on the ship, at and from St. Christophers to London, it appeared that the ship was much disabled by storms in the voyage, and narrowly escaped foundering at sea; but was towed into Falmouth. A survey was then made of the state of the ship, and the expense of repairs, when it was found that it would amount to £3,200, and after their completion she would be worth only £2,000. The owners therefore broke her up and sold her. Her value, when she left St. Christophers, having been £4,000. The decision turned upon the point, that in cases of bottomry there must be an absolute destruction of the thing to entitle the insured to recover. And Lord Ellenborough, in noticing the distinction between a policy on the ship, and on the bottomry bond, said in the former ease, if the voyage be lost, or the ship be reduced to such a state, that she cannot proceed without refitting, the expense of which would greatly exceed her value, the insured may abandon and recover as for a total loss. The language of the learned judge without doubt referred to the case before him, which was treated as clearly a technical total loss of the ship. And yet if the value at the time of departure on the voyage be taken, and a deduction be made from the necessary repairs of one third new for old, it is manifest that the damage was less than one half of that value.
Another case, which I think it necessary to notice, is Thornely v. Hebson, 2 Barn. & Aid. 513, when in consequence of severe injuries occasioned by storms, the ship was deserted by the crew, and afterwards was taken possession of by volunteers from another ship, and brought into port, and a moiety decreed as salvage, and the ship sold to pay it. In a suit on a policy on the ship, the court held that the owners had no right to abandon and recover for a total loss, because it did not appear that they had made any exertions to pay the salvage, and thus prevent the sale of the ship. Upon this case I have only to observe, that I do exceedingly doubt its authority, for the injury and loss to the owner in every event must have exceeded half the value. See Marine Ins. Co. of Alexandria v. Tucker, 3 Cranch [7 U. S.] 357. It has been supposed at the bar, that this case establishes the doctrine, that desertion of the ship at sea, in consequence of perils insured against, does not authorize an abandonment. I cannot admit this conclusion, for the abandonment was not made until after the ship was recovered, and had arrived in port. There is not a single dictum in any English case, which shows that an abandonment during the time of such desertion would not be good, whatever might be the effect of a subsequent recovery upon the title of the plaintiff.
Falkner v. Ritchie, 2 Maule & S. 290, is a strong case. ' The insurance was on a ship at and from Cadiz to any ports or places on the coast of Africa, during her stay and trade there, and thence to Cadiz and Lisbon. The vessel sailed on the voyage, and arrived on the coast of Africa, and the crew, while the master was on shore, seized the ship, and carried her to South America, There, after plundering, they deserted her except one black man, and she was there taken possession of by part of the crew of a British ship of war, and afterwards sent to England. Part of her rigging was gone, and she could not be made fit for the voyage again without considerable expense, and providing a crew and stores. The owners abandoned, but the underwriters refused the abandonment; and the court held the loss to be a partial loss only, upon the ground, as it should seem, that there was a retardation or suspension only, and not a destruction, of the voyage, as to the ship. And Lord Ellenborough asked, what the loss of the voyage had to do with the loss of the ship. In respect to this case it is not necessary to say much. It does not appear to me to be reconeileable with Brown v. Smith, 1 Dow. 349, in the house of lords, where, under circumstances very similar, it was holden by the highest authority, that the insured had a right to abandon as for a total loss.
These, I believe, are all the material cases which are to be found, bearing on the point before the court. I have forborne to touch on any, which exclusively applied to cargo, being of opinion with Chief Justice Tilghman, that there is a great difference between an insurance on • ship and on cargo, and that some confusion has been introduced from blending them. The cases which have been reviewed, do, as I think, authorize the conclusion, that the question of the right of abandonment of the ship is to be judged of by all the circumstances of each particular case; and that no such general rule has as yet been established, as that the injury to the ship by the perils insured against, must in all cases exceed one half her value, to justify an abandonment. At all events, I think I may say, that there is no English case, in which, under circumstances like the present, an abandonment of the ship has been adjudged void.
I do not think it necessary to comment at large on all the American cases cited at the bar; but shall content myself with a reference to a few, which have been supposed most strongly in point. The fair conclusion from Fontaine v. Phœnix Ins. Co., 11 Johns. 293 (see, also, Bell v. Nixon, 1 Holt, N. P. 423), seems to me to be, that which the reporter has drawn, that if a vessel, after being stranded, should be deemed a wreck, or her situation desperate, it will justify an abandonment, though she should be got off by other persons, and repaired for a sum less than half her value. And the circumstances of that case bear a very strong resemblance to that now before the court. The case of Goold v. Shaw, 1 Johns. Cas. 293, turned upon the point, that the ship could have been repaired for less than half her value, and might have performed her voyage, which was broken up merely on account of the deterioration of the cargo. It stands therefore on the same ground as Alexander v. Baltimore Ins. Co., 4 Cranch [8 U. S.] 370. But the case which has been pressed with the most earnestness upon the court, as decisive of the merits of this, is Wood v. Lincoln & K. Ins. Co., 6 Mass. 479. The opinion there delivered by the late learned chief justice, is certainly entitled to great weight and consideration, from the elaborate manner in which the subject is discussed. I have not the slightest inclination to doubt the authority of that case, upon its own particular circumstances. At the time of the abandonment there does not appear to have been any serious injury to the vessel; she was merely upset, and at high water was nearly covered; and it was not until after the abandonment, that she was disengaged from the rock and sunk in deep water. She was afterwards weighed and carried to her home port of destination, which was only five miles distant. The learned judge himself, in commenting on the circumstances, observed, ‘■‘that it was not stated, that she received any essential injury by this accident, or that an attempt to weigh her, and prepare for finishing her voyage, would have been hazardous, or very expensive.” In the present case, on the contrary, the vessel was essentially injured, and in a very perilous situation; and the repairs must be very expensive, and of such a nature too, that they could not be completed under a long period of time, as long as the usual period of the whole voyage insured. The learned judge also laid stress upon the circumstance, that the vessel at the time of the abandonment was stranded, but not sunk in deep water. He
The case of Hart v. Delaware Ins. Co. [Case No. 6,150]. cited in Marsh. Ins. (Condy’s Ed.) 281b, 562, has been supposed to indicate a rule on this subject more broad than that which appears to me ever to have been entertained in the British courts. If the case be correctly reported, the court on that occasion is supposed to have held, that the insured had a right to abandon the ship, if the injury exceeded one half of her value, unless the underwriters offered at all events to pay the amount of repairs: and if they did, then the abandonment would not be good. This doctrine, at least to me, is new. On what authorities it rests, I have not been able to learn, from the short note in Mr. Condy’s edition of Marshall on Insurance. If it rests on Hamilton v. Mendes, Milles v. Fletcher, or Da Costa v. Newnham, with the highest possible deference for my learned brother, Mr. Justice Washington, I am not able there to find a warrant for it. The point is not directly before the court, as it was a policy on freight. It does not appear that the ship was abandoned, and if the underwriters offered to repair her, and she might have gone upon the voyage, the loss of freight was by the volun
I know of no judgment where it has been held, that in a case of capture, embargo, or blockade, the right of the insured to abandon, can be intercepted by an offer of the underwriters to indemnify and pay all the expenses. And indeed, if it could be by such an offer, then an abandonment in all such cases would be perfectly nugatory, for the policy always imports on the part of the underwriters an agreement to this effect. And yet, if the principle be correct, I do not perceive why it is not equally as applicable to a case of capture as of sea damage, to a •case of blockade as of shipwreck. It is said indeed, that the contract of insurance is a contract of indemnity only; and therefore if the underwriters will bear all the expenses there is no ground to claim more, and if all the expenses are paid, the insured is completely indemnified. This is true in a general sense, sub modo, but not universally. The insured by the same law has a right of abandonment, and this right is the result of the construction of the same contract, which is called an indemnity. If the insured abandon for a just cause, he is entitled to recover for a total loss, and that is deemed by the law his just indemnity; and he is not obliged to take the remnants and surplusses of a lost voyage or adventure, and claim of the underwriters merely the average or expenses incurred by the calamity. The cases are familiar in the books, where the insured has successfully insisted upon his right to a total loss, notwithstanding an offer of payment of all charges incurred. The difference may be and often is, very material to the insured, whether he is obliged to take the property upon the payment of damages and expenses, •or to abandon it and recover for a total loss. As I understand the law, it has given to him, and not to the underwriters, the option to abandon or not; and if he does abandon in a proper case, he may stand upon his rights uncontrolled and uncontrollable by the other party. It appears to me, meaning to speak with all deference for other judgments, to be introducing a new element of discord into the law of insurance, to allow the right of abandonment to be a shifting right, dependent upon the will of both of the parties, and to be defeated by any act of one, after it has rightfully attached by the act of the other. And I am yet to learn how it is, that an offer made at the time of abandonment to pay all expenses, can have more efficacy than the same offer, incorporated as it is, in the original terms of the policy. The insured is in no case bound to abandon. He may in all cases elect to repair the damage at the expense of the underwriter: and if he acts bona fide and with reasonable discretion, there is no decision yet pronounced, which declares that he shall not be entitled to a full compensation, however great it may be, even if it should equal, or even exceed, the original value of the ship. And until such a decision is made, the direct terms of the policy seem strong enough to justify such a claim. But if the doctrine be otherwise, which I cannot admit, still it does not apply to the present case. Here, no request was made to the owners to repair the ship, and no offer to bear all the expenses, whatever might be the event. It is true, that a week after the abandonment, when the ship was off the rocks and lying at the wharf in Portsmouth, such a request and offer were made. But that was clearly too late. If an offer is to have any effect, it must be made at the time of the abandonment, with reference to the state of facts then existing.- The underwriter cannot lie by and profit by the event He must decide recenti facto upon the notice and application to abandon; and if he does not then make the offer, he waives all right of benefit from it In the present case, it cannot be denied that there was the most ample time for deliberation, and as early as Thursday morning the most ample knowledge of all the facts, by the underwriters, through their own special agent Even if it were possible to contend, that the right might be in suspense up to this period, any subsequent delay was unreasonable and unjustifiable.
The American cases then may be dismissed without farther commentary, since they furnish no new rule on the subject of abandonment; at least none which applies to circumstances like those of the case at bar. We are therefore driven back upon general principles, and must extract them, as we may, from the current of authorities, to aid us in the present inquiry. The right of abandonment has been admitted to exist, where there is a forcible dispossession or ouster of the owner of the ship, as in eases of capture; where there is a moral restraint or detention, which deprives the owner of the free use of the ship, as in case of embargoes, blockades, and arrests by sovereign authority; where there is a present tota) loss of the physical possession and use of the ship, as in case of submersion: where there 'is a total loss of the ship for the voyage, as in case of shipwreck, so that the ship cannot be repaired for the voyage in the port, where the disaster happens; and, lastly, where the injury is so extensive, that by reason of it the ship is useless, and yet the necessary repair's would exceed her present value. None of these cases will, I imagine, be-disputed. If there be any general principle, that pervades and governs them, it seems to be this, that the right to abandon exists, whenever from the circumstances of the case, the ship, for all the useful puiposes of a ship for the voyage, is, for the present, gone from the control of the owner, and the time when she
But If this rule, or the application of it, should be deemed doubtful; still I have the right to stand upon the ground, which every other judge has assumed and acted on, and decide this case upon its own circumstances. There is no case, as has been already sufficiently shown, which in terms or in effect decides the present. Each has been decided upon its own peculiar circumstances, and by reference to the analogies of the law. I am not for extending the right of abandonment beyond the principles already settled; neither, on the other hand, am 1 for shutting out from the benefit of those principles new cases, simply because they do not go quatuor pedibus with former cases. New cases, as they arise, must be settled, as Goss v. Withers and Milles v. Fletcher were settled before our time, by general reasoning applied to. the nature of the contract, and the general convenience and policy of the commercial world. We are not to stand upon the niceties of special pleading, or the exact weight of every one of the ingredients. There must be, or there never will be an end of litigation, some broad line of distinction to govern us. I have deliberated with as much patience and caution, as I am able, upon the present case; and under all its circumstances, I cannot resist the conclusion, that, at the time, they fully justified the abandonment; and the abandonment, once well made, was forever conclusive upon the parties. Let me again enumerate these circumstances. The ship was stranded, and bilged, and sunk, in an exposed situation upon a ledge of rocks, and in imminent danger. Her cargo was unavoidably discharged for safety, and forever separated from her. Her sails and rigging were cut away, with a view to the pressing necessity of saving them. The master and crew had deserted her as helpless and hopeless. The voyage must be suspended for a long time, as long as the voyage insured. The expenses of attempting to get off the ship must in every event be considerable, and might be very heavy. The chance of success was exceedingly doubtful, and dependent upon the most uncertain of all things, the winds and weather, in a proverbially variable season of the year. The reparation of the actual injuries was, in the most favorable view, so expensive, that it was not expected to cost much less than half the value of the ship; and these injuries were necessarily liable to augmentation from every delay and unfavourable change of weather. 1 do not say, that all these circumstances are necessary to constitute a case for abandonment. They are of various import and cogency. But as they exist in the case, I use them in combination, to show, that the voyage with that ship was not worth farther pursuit, the expenses being very high, the dangers imminent, the benefit uncertain, and the present value of the ship estimated by competent judges little more than the value of her materials. To use the strong language of Lord Ellenborough, already cited, (Davy v. Milford, 15 East, 559, 564), the ship at the time “had ceased to exist for any useful purpose,” as much so, as if there had been a total submersion; and a total loss was “in the highest degree probable” (Anderson v. Wallis, 2 Maule & S. 240, 248). I think too, that the delay of the voyage, though inevitable from the accident, was in itself unreasonable with reference to the nature and objects of such a voyage, and the right of the owner to the present beneficial use of his property. I adopt the reasoning of Chief Justice Marshall, in Rhinelander v. Insurance Co. of Pennsylvania, 4 Cranch [8 U. S.] 29, 45. See, also, Marshall v. Delaware Ins. Co., 4 Cranch [8 U. S.] 207. “There are,” says he, “situations, in which the delay of the voyage, the deprivation of the right to conduct it, produce inconvenience to the insured, for the calculation of which the law affords and can afford no standárd. In such cases there is for the time a total loss.” And I am unable to persuade mj’self, that so long as the doctrine prevails, that a ship may exist, and yet in contemplation of law be totally lost, a case of stranding so pregnant with distress, injury, danger, and hopelessness as the present, can be displaced as a case of abandonment. I am much deceived, if some of the cases already quoted are more calamitous or pressing in their circumstances, where learned judicial minds have not hesitated to pronounce for the right of abandonment. Let me add also, that according to my impression of the established law, if the abandonment had not been made at this time, but had been postponed, until the vessel had become a technical wreck, or had been got off at an expense exceeding three-fourths of her value, the plaintiffs could not then have elected to abandon, for they would not have had a right to lie by and sptxm'ate upon events. The delay to abandon would have been fatal. See Marsh. Ins. bk. 1, c. 13, § 2, p. 589; Martin v. Crokatt, 14 East, 465; Mitchell v. Edie, 1 Term R. 608; Da Costa v. Newnham, 2 Term R. 407. So that the plaintiff's must either have abandoned at the time when they had notice of the loss, or they would have been forever concluded. Surely the law cannot have placed them in such
But I may be wiong in this judgment, whatever may be my .confidence in its soundness, and I proceed to the next point so fully argued at the bar, and upon which the parties are entitled to my opinion. It is not denied, and if it were, it is so well established by the general current of authority, that it may be considered as a fixed rule, that if the ship be injured by perils insured against, so as to require repairs to the extent of more than half her value, the insured is entitled to abandon as for a total loss. The rule seems to be founded upon this consideration, that a ship so much injured is not worth repair, and therefore she may be abandoned as innavigable, and infected with a fatal infirmity. It was in its origin undoubtedly borrowed from the French law. It is to be found stated in Le Guidon, one of the earliest treatises on Insurance (chapter 7, arts. 1, 9), and is there applied to the case of goods. It is there said, that the merchant may abandon, where there is a shipwreck of the whole or of a part, when there is an average, that exceeds in damage a moiety of the merchandize, when there is a capture by friends or enemies, an arrest of princes, or other like disturbances in the voyage, or such deterioration of the merchandize that it cannot be carried to the place of destination, or it is only worth the freight or a little more. While I agree, however, with Mr. Justice Lawrence (Parsons v. Scott, 2 Taunt. 363, 372), that the passage is in terms applied to goods only, I cannot admit that it is restrained to them, or is not in sense and reason equally applicable to the ship. And in point of fact we all know, that it has been applied in the common law authorities indifferently to each (Goss v. Withers, 2 Burrows, 683; Park. Ins. (6th Ed.) c. 9, p. 194; Oondy, Marsh. Ins. c. 13, § 1, pp. 568, 571; Hamilton v. Mendes, 2 Burrows, 1198; Gardiner v. Smith, 1 Johns. Cas. 141; Vandenlieuvel v. United Ins. Co., 1 Johns. 406; Abbott v. Broome, 1 Caines, 292; Hart v. Delaware Ins. Co. [Case No. 6,150]; Condy, Marsh. Ins. 281, note, 562, note; Peters v. Phœnix Ins. Co., 3 Serg. & R. 25; Ralston v. Union Ins. Co., 4 Bin. 386; Patrick v. Commercial Ins. Co., 11 Johns. 9-14; Wood v. Lincoln & K. Ins. Co., 6 Mass. 479; Coolidge v. Gloucester Mar. Ins. Co., 15 Mass. 341; Weskett, tit. “Abandonment,” § 23). Valin has recognised the rule itself in the most emphatic manner, and jc was probably his authority, that gave it a decisive currency in our jurisprudence. The French ordinance (article 46) having among other things declared, that abandonment should be lawful in case of a total loss of the effects (perte entiére des effets assurés), Valin in his Commentary does not hesitate to adopt the doctrine of Le Guidon, and to declare it is a total loss of the effects within the article, when the damage exceeds the moiety of their value. 2 Valin, Comm. lib. 3, tit. 6, des Assur. art. 46, p. 101. Emerigon (2 Emerig. c. 17, § 2, p. 176, etc.) has found great difficulty in reconciling this doctrine with the strong terms of the article; but it stands commended by the sober judgment of Pothier (Poth. Assur. note 118). I dwell upon the origin of the rule the more freely, because in the exposition and application of it, this circumstance may not be inconsequential. It might seem at first view, that the rule being agreed, nothing would remain on this point, but to inquire into the fact, whether the repairs and expenses are a moiety of the value of the Argonaut. But we are here met with two difficulties on points of law, which it is singular, considering the antiquity of the rule, should not have been long since definitively adjudged, as it is impossible that they should not often have arisen. The first difficulty is, as to the mode of ascertaining the value of the ship. The second is, as to the mode of ascertaining the quantum of expense or injury. Is it to be the actual cost of the repairs, or the actual cost, deducting one-third new for old? In other words, is it the supposed damage to the ship estimated in the ordinary way, or by the actual loss on cost to the owner.
Upon the first point, it is contended by the defendant’s counsel, that the valuation in the policy is conclusive, and affords the only just means of ascertaining the value, it being as between the parties the agreed value of the ship. The plaintiffs deny this doctrine, and insist upon the actual value at the time of the loss, as the true value. Nothing is more familiar, or more clearly settled, than the doctrine, that the valuation in the policy is conclusive in case of a total loss; but it is inapplicable for the purpose of ascertaining the quantum of injury (for it is quite another question as to the quantum of payment to be made by the underwriters) in case of a partial loss of goods. When the policy is on goods, the invariable rule is, to ascertain the quantum of injury by the difference between the price of the sound and damaged goods; and the reasons of the rule have been expounded with so much force and accuracy, that it would be a waste of time to repeat them. Johnson v. Sheddon, 2 East, 581; Marsh. Ins. c. 14, § 2. In what respect does the case of the ship differ from the case of the goods, as to the ascertainment of the damage? Gan the valuation in the policy be a more correct guide in the one case than in the other? The question in each case is necessarily the same; what is the present value of the property, compared with its value before the injury, and the purpose is the same, to fix the extent of damage sustained by the
Then, as to the other point, whether the actual cost of the repairs to the owners, or the cost, deducting one third new for old, is the rule, by which we are to ascertain the quantum of injury or loss. That is a point, upon which a great deal may be said on both sides. The propriety of thé allowance of one third new lor old, in cases where the ship is not abandoned, or, in other words, in cases of a partial loss, is not contested. That rule itself is somewhat arbitrary, and not founded upon any exact calculation with reference to the particular case. The ship may be almost or entirely new, and then the reason for the deduction would altogether cease. The ship may be very old, and then the. reason for a much greater allowance would apply. The general principle, upon which the rule is founded, is as stated by Hagens (1 Hagens, Ins. 52), that the underwriters ought to pay for the actual damage or injury, but not for the wear of the things lost or injured, and therefore proper allowance ought to be made, for the difference in value between the new and the old. But if this difference were to be ascertained in every particular case by actual inspection and estimates, there would be no end to controversies, and therefore, general usage, which the law follows, as founded on public convenience, has applied, a certain rule to all cases, not upon the notion of perfect justice, but as generally reaching, in substantial equity, the mass of them. It is true here, as was well observed by-Lord Mansfield on another occasion, that it is of less consequence, how the rule is settled, than that it should be settled. Still the rule is arbitrary, and therefore is to be confined to the cases, where the usage is clear, or to eases, which necessarily fall within their analogies. Does it then enter as an ingredient into the rule of abandonment, where there is a loss of the half value? This is to be ascertained by considering the nature and object of that rule, and the manner, in which it has been interpreted by the authorities. We have already seen, that it had its origin in foreign maritime jurisprudence; and in the terms, in which it is laid down in the ancient treatise in Cleirac’s collection (Le Gui-don, c. 7, § 1), there is strong reason to think, that it was the actual cost without any deduction, which was in contemplation of the author. The object of the rule is, to ascertain, whether the ship be worth repair, and by a principle somewhat arbitrary, yet as in the former case, justified by general con
In examining the authorities, it is beyond all doubt, that no case in England has ever recognised any such deduction of the one-third, except in cases of a partial loss. In all the cases, where the injury to the half value has been in question, not the slightest allusion is made to any such deduction by court or counsel. Yet some of these cases would seem to have called for some expression in its favour, if it existed. In Cazalet v. St. Barbe, 1 Term R. 187, where the jury found the injury forty-eight per cent, only, there is not the least hint, which could lead us to sup-lióse, that any such deduction was then made. It does not in fact appear, that any repairs had been made in that case, or were contemplated. In Da Costa v. Newnham, 2 Term R. 407, the deduction was held not to apply, except where the owner received back his ship, upon the plain ground, that he ought not to pay, where he received no benefit. In Thomson v. Royal Exch. Ins. Co., 1 Maule & S. 30, it is manifest, that Lord Ellenborough could not (as has been already intimated) have contemplated such a deduction. And Mr. Stevens, a gentleman of Lloyd’s of considerable experience, in stating the deduction, applies it in terms only to cases of a partial loss. Stev. Av. 159, and see Weskett, Stranding, § 5.
The question, however, has arisen in America. In Dupuy v. United Ins. Co., 3 Johns. Cas. 182, the point was directly in judgment, and indeed formed the turning point of the cause. And it was there held by the unanimous opinion of the supreme court, that the deduction was not to be made, and that it was the actual damage of expenditure, which was contemplated by the rule, without any reference to the distinction of new for old. That decision was subsequently acted upon by the court; and though it was finally overturned by the court of errors (Smith v. Bell, 2 Caines’ Cas. 153), it is impossible not to feel, with all due reverence for the latter tribunal, that upon questions of this nature, the learning and experience, and distinguished talents of the supreme court of New York, entitle their judgment to very great consideration. 1 have examined the reasons given by the court of errors for the reversal, and I am compelled to say, that they do not convince my judgment. Ego assentior sesevolse. The case of Coolidge v. Gloucester Ins. Co., 15 Mass. 341, appears to me to have contemplated the rule in the same light It is there said by the court, that to all legal purposes, after the constructive total loss, the ship, repaired and rebuilt at an expense exceeding half her value, must be considered as a new ship. And I take occasion to add. that if in that case, the deduction of one third had been made, and the valuation in the policy had been taken, there, would not have remained an expense of one half the value of the ship to justify an abandonment. My judgment upon the whole is, that the deduction of the one third cannot be legally made in cases of this nature. If indeed it could be made, I should have no doubt, that the like deduction must be taken from the whole value of the ship after the repairs, in order to bring her down to the standard of value existing at the time of the stranding.
There are some minor points connected with this general topic, which may-as well bé disposed of in this connexion. The first is, whether the repairs of rigging, etc., injured by wear and tear, and of decaying wood, is to be deducted from the gross amount of the expenditure I am to take it for true, from the whole of the argument, that no repairs have been made, which were not necessary to place the ship in her former predicament; and that the item of §372.22, now in controversy,
The principal defects relied on at the bar, are the substitution of maple in the keel, for the original oak; the increase of the number of pieces of the keel, from three to five, and the inartificial structure of the keel, by placing the scarf in the middle immediately under the scarf of the keelson; the omission to salt the ship after the repairs, she having been originally salted; the omission to take off the piauk; and make a thorough examination of the ship, to ascertain all the places in which she was strained, by lying on the rocks; the making new butts, by placing short plank instead of whole, in the bottom; the leaving the ship with a continual unknown leak, after the repairs were completed. It is not to be supposed, that the court can of itself undertake to judge of the extent and importance of these supposed defects and omissions. That duty may more properly be performed by experts, as I have already intimated. And if either party shall request it, as material to the ultimate decision, there will be no difficulty in granting a suitable commission. Upon one or two suggestions thrown out at the bar, it is however my duty to comment. It is said, that the plaintiffs had a right to have the repairs made of the same materials as the original, and therefore that the underwriters could not substitute maple for oak in the keel. In short, that if the keel had been of mahogany, the plaintiffs would have had a right to a new keel of the same wood. Certainly the owner is entitled to have his ship made as nearly as practicable, as good as she was before the accident, or to receive an equivalent compensation. But if the ship is made substantially as good, and if the substitution of other materials is not from choice, but necessity; it would be going great lengths to assert, that this was not a compliance with the law. Suppose a ship, built of teak wood in the East Indies, were to meet with an accident on our coast, and require repairs, would it be contended, that the underwriters must send to the Bast Indies for teak wood, or pay the expense, if other materials equally solid and useful could be found here? I incline to think not The true principle is, that the underwriter shall pay the owner such a compensation as shall make the ship substantially as good as before; or in other words, that he shall lose nothing by the peril. Matters of taste, fancy, or peculiar choice, can scarcely admit of appreciation in money, and the law can rarely reach them. It appears to me, that the plaintiffs were entitled to have had the reparation of the keel with oak, if it could be reasonably obtained. And the weight of evidence decidedly is, that the increase of the number of pieces of the keel, and the placing of the scarfs, made a material difference in the strength of the ship. Judging from that evidence alone, I should draw the conclusion, that the ship was in these respects imperfectly and inartificially repaired. But skilful artisans are far more competent judges, and to them I should cheerfully resign my own opinions. What would be the posture of the cause-upon the point, as to the injury to the half value of the ship, under the views already suggested, I am not at this moment quite prepared to declare. I incline to believe, however, that taking the value of the ship at $11,000, or even ¿812.000, it will be found, that the repairs will exceed, by a small excess, one half of the value of the
And this point is, whether there was an acceptance of the abandonment. This is part-id a question of fact, and partly of law. In considering this question, I understand myself, by the assent of the parties, to be at perfect liberty to deal with the subject in the same manner as if the controversies were between private persons. No question is made about the powers, rights, or modes of acting, of the corporations before the court, or as to the sufficiency of the authority, under which their presidents or other agents acted in the premises. Their acts are to bind, just as far as they might lawfully bind, if done under the fullest authority. There can be no doubt, that the acceptance of an abandonment need not be in any particular form, or by express words. It may be, and often is, inferred from circumstances; and I think it may be laid down, as a general proposition, that whenever the underwriter does any act in consequence of an abandonment, which can be justified only under a right derived from it, that act is of itself decisive evidence of an acceptance; and cases may even be put where the act of the underwriter will in law prevail over his express declarations. As if, after an abandonment, he should proceed to sell the vessel, with an express protest against the acceptance, and a declaration, that he did it for the benefit of the owner, his act would nevertheless conclusively bind him in point of law. This, to be sure, is a very strong case, but it is not the only case; and I put it to show, that it is a mistake (commonly entertained) to suppose, that declarations can overrule the legal operation of acts in reference to an abandonment.
In the present case, there is no pretence to say, that the underwriters have made any express declaration of acceptance. It is inferred by the plaintiffs from the silence of the underwriters at the time of the abandonment and their neglect to signify the contrary within a reasonable time. It appears to me however, that this inference cannot be supported. The underwriter is not bound to signify his acceptance within a reasonable time; nor can his silence, per se, be proof of his acceptance. If he says nothing, and does nothing, the proper conclusion is, that he does not mean to accept And this conclusion, so reasonable in ordinary cases, applies with still more force to corporations, because from their mode of doing business, deliberation of the hoard of directors is usually required; and silence in such a case is certainly less significant, than it might otherwise be presumed to be. If the case had stopped here, it would not have presented any difficulty. But the acts of the underwriters are also relied on, as conclusive of their acceptance. Immediately after the abandonment, the underwriters declined the farther agency of the owners; they appointed their own agent with authority to sell the ship if he thought fit, and with authority to get her off if he deemed it practicable. From this moment the underwriters took the sole possession and management of the ship. She was got off at their expense, and by their agents, and was subsequently repaired, and now remains under their care and custody. Do these acts, or any of them, amount to an acceptance of the abandonment V If they would do so ordinarily, can the secret intentions of the underwriters, not to accept, if the event should be favorable, or a mistake of law as to their rights, vary the legal conclusion? That these acts done by the underwriters were done under the full belief, that the case, if not utterly desperate, was nearly so; that the facts, which were truly represented to them, were so deeply marked with calamity, that a total loss seemed almost inevitable; and' that scarcely the faintest hope was entertained of changing it into a partial loss, unless by most unexpected good fortune, cannot be reasonably doubted. The very instructions to Mr. Blake, and indeed the whole conduct of the underwriters, demonstrate it It is as clear that the underwriters did contemplate that the abandonment clothed them with some new rights, for in their letter and memorandum to Mr. Blake, they expressly distinguished between their rights over the ship, which was abandoned, and over the cargo, which was not abandoned. They might be wrong in this conclusion, and certainly they are not bound by a misconstruction of the law, if it could be otherwise for their benefit On the other hand, it is clear, that the underwriters by the intimation in the memorandum, “that if the loss should prove to be less than fifty per cent on the ship, the abandonment will not take effect” did suppose, that they might act upon the abandonment and if in the event there was not a total loss, they were not bound by their acts to an acceptance. If this also was founded in a mistake of the law. the plaintiffs are entitled to the full benefit of the law, as it stands. It is however matter of observation, that this memorandum was never communicated to the owners, and therefore they could only act upon the fact, that their own agency was not required, but an agent was appointed by the underwriters; and no intimation was given that the underwriters meant to resist the abandonment
The question then turns upon this, whether the underwriters, as such, had a right to do these acts without the assent of the owners, or derived their authority virtually from the abandonment If the latter, then, as they cannot accept in part, and refuse in part, they are bound in the whole, and accepting the abandonment for one purpose is an acceptance of it for all purposes. They cannot treat it at one moment as a transfer
The question then comes to this, whether the underwriter has a right, in case of stranding, without the consent of the owners, to take the exclusive possession and management of the ship, and afterwards to retain and repair the ship on account of the owners. If he has not, then the exercise of such a right can stand only upon the acceptance of the abandonment as a transfer of property; and if so, the case falls within the principle already stated. It has been supposed, that the cases of Hart v. Delaware Ins. Co. [Case No. 6,150] Condy, Marsh. Ins. 281, a, and 562, a, note, and Ritchie v. United States Ins. Co., 5 Serg. & R. 501, 509, recognise the general right of the underwriter, independent of an abandonment. No such point however, was made in either case; and the true explanation of them is that, which has been already given of the case in 6 Mass. 479. I must confess, that this is the very first time, that I ever heard of any right of an underwriter, as such, to intermeddle with the property insured. There is not a dictum in any book, which admits him to possess any ownership in the ship, or gives him any right, or control over it. It has been very justly observed even in relation to repairs on account of perils insured against, his engagement is solvere, not facere, to pay the amount, and not to do the work. If the underwriter has a right to repair in one case, he has in all cases, and in his own maimer, and with his own materials. Has the law ever contemplated, that he can take the possession of the ship, and decide for the owner what shall be done with her ? Suppose in this very case, there had not been any abandonment, would the owners have been bound to suffer the ship to be repaired? I think the law, beyond all doubt, is otherwise; and the pretension now set up, in behalf of the underwriters, is truly alarming. The owners, if there had been no abandonment, would have had a right to claim remuneration in money for the injury sustained. They might have thought the ship not worth repairing; and if they did so, they had a right to break her up, and to claim from the underwriters an indemnity in money for the actual loss by the stranding. It would have been no answer on the part of the underwriters, that they were willing to repair the ship, or that the owners ought to repair her. It is true, that the actual cost of repairs is the best test of the actual injury, but the law does not insist on this. It gives the option to the owners, to take the reasonable estimated amount of loss, or the actual expenditure in repairs, with the usual deduction. Consider, for a moment,what would be the mischiefs and embarrassments attending this novel doctrine. At whose risk would the ship be, during the period of repairs? Could the owner sell her, so as to oust the right of the underwriter to repair, or must he sell her cum onere? If he did sell, the repairs might be just what the purchaser would choose to dispense with. Suppose an attachment on the property; in what manner are the conflicting rights to be settled? The ship in her damaged state might be well enough for all the purposes of the owner. Shall he then be compelled to give her a more complete repair? In short, does not the doctrine necessarily lead to consequences most injurious to the owner, laying open new scenes for doubt, strife, and litigation? For me it is sufficient, that no such doctrine has ever received the countenance of a court of justice; and if it should, the occurrence, looking to the present state of the law, would greatly surprise me. If, when a ship is abandoned, the underwriters do not choose to accept it, they have a right to lay by and wait the event. They are to act in this, as in all other cases, according to their
The subject at least as to myself, is exhausted, and must be left for the further consideration of wiser and abler minds. I deliver my judgment not without anxiety and diffidence, but it is, that the plaintiffs upon the merits ought to have a decree for remuneration, as for a total loss.