3 Mass. 409 | Mass. | 1807
The cause stood continued for advisement, until this term, and now the opinion of the Court (the Chief Justice, having been of counsel for the plaintiffs, did not sit in the cause) was delivered as follows, by
(After stating the facts.) The defendant objects against the demand in this action.
1. That the policy is wholly void, for its uncertainty in not speci fying what part of the gross sum insured is applicable to each of the distinct subjects to be protected by the insurance.
2. That the loss did not happen in the course of the voyage insured, or while the ship was under the protection of this policy.
It is not necessary to decide upon the first objection, and, indeed, we are not all agreed in opinion upon it, but we are all agreed upon the second objection in a manner decisive of the action.
In deciding upon the second question, arising in this case, whether the loss happened in the voyage insured, and while the ship was under the protection of this policy, it seems essential to ascertain the construction of this policy, as to some of the termini of the voyage insured. The words in this instrument describe a voyage, which at the first view seems to be interminable, unless at the will of the assured. A voyage from the Canaries to any port or ports in Spanish America *may, by a possible construe- [ * 416 ] tian, be understood to authorize an unlimited employment of the ship in the ports of Spanish America, at the will of the insured, under the protection of this policy. But this construction is too unreasonable to be admitted.
In France, where insurance is usually made to the French West Indies generally, the risk is construed to continue on the goods until they are landed, and on the ship until the outward cargo is dis
In the case before us, one part of the voyage insured is to commence at the Canaries, and to terminate outwards at a port or ports in Spanish America; but no voyage commencing at a port in Spanish America to another port in Spanish America, is within this description; and the reasonable construction, according to the opinions and decisions cited, there being no notorious usage to control this case, must be, that the outward voyage terminated at the discharge of the outward cargo of this ship carried from the Canaries, and the destination of the ship was to Vera Cruz. There the whole of the outward cargo was discharged, and there the outward voyage must be considered to have terminated.
[ * 417 J * Then a further inquiry will be, whether the stay at Vera Cruz, occasioned by the seizure of the outward cargo, was a deviation from the voyage insured, or a voluntary change of the risk.
The captain (Walsh) swears that the sole occasion*of his stay was the seizure and detention of the outward cargo. There is nothing in the case which contradicts this representation of his conduct. With his owners, and all interested in the cargo which had been seized, the hope of recovering .it,and the advantages of the captain’s agency, in soliciting their .claim, would sufficiently justify his stay at Vera Cruz, and the consequent detention of the ship. It may be understood that the insurers, by this policy, were not interested in the outward cargo, after it had been safely landed from the ship. But the captain is the common agent of the concerned, and it is his duty to manage their distinct and separate, as well as their joint
And if the stay at Vera Cruz was not, then was the voyage commenced from Vera Cruz for the Havanna, in the course of which the loss happened, which is now demanded, a deviation from the voyage insured, or the engaging in a distinct and unconnected risk ?
Upon the ground that the outward voyage terminated at Vera Cruz, the words of the policy covered only the necessary stay there, and a voyage from that place to a port of discharge in the United States. According to the testimony of the captain, his object was to bring the ship back to the United States, and he had her cleared out for the Havanna, as being the most safe and expeditious route to the United States; and because, as one of the house of Madan Brothers lived at the Havanna, the captain could there make the ship an American bottom, and sail from thence directly to the United States. This is the general representation of his intentions in his own words; and admitting his intentions to have been as he seems to represent them, the passage to * the [*418] Havanna is not covered by the words of the policy, even if it was to have been taken in the course of the voyage to the United States
To maintain the demand in this action for the loss of freight, upon the goods shipped at Vera Cruz for the Havanna, the supposed necessity must be understood as an extension of the contract,
But the necessity supposed in this case appears to me not to t« of the kind which justifies a deviation. Nothing will justify a deviation, but a real and imperious necessity
And upon the whole it is the opinion of the Court, that no part of the loss demanded in this action happened in the course of the voyage insured, and, therefore, that the defendant is not liable.
According to the terms of the rule, bringing the case before the whole Court, the verdict for the plaintiffs must be set aside, and a verdict entered for the defendant.
Marshall, 179, cites Emerigon, tom. 1, p. 72.—tom. 2, p. 73.
Marshall, 183.—3 Burr. 1707.
Doug. 271
Vide Park, 295.—Fox vs. Black.—Townson vs. Guyon.
Marshall, 408, 409
Marshall, 413.—[Kettell vs. Wiggin, 13 Mass. 68 —Ed.]