2 Cai. Cas. 280 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1805
Per curiam delivered by
This is a clear cafe for the plaintiffs. Their claim is founded on found principles, in the law of infurance. The defendants abandon, and the plaintiffs accept and pay. They were then fubftituted for the defendants, and fucceeded to the benefit of the acts of the agent abroad, in relation to the property in queftion. The mailer and merchants at Malaga, adted, nominally, as agents for the defendants, but, in reality, they were agents for the party having the ultimate claim to the property. What they did was, undoubtedly, founded on previous instructions from the defendants, and on the connexion that the defendants had with the property, as former proprietors, and exifting claimants. When the defendants abandoned the ihip and cargo, and received their indemnity from the plaintiffs, they renounced all concern in the interference of their agents, and transferred, to the infurer, the. refult of that interference. This is fettled doitrine in refpeft to abandonment. The prefent cafe is analogous to that of capture and fubfequent ranfom, where, upon an accepted abandonment, the whole benefit of the compofition, and the effects reclaimed, go to the infurer.
There is no ground for confidering the purchafe, by the. houfe of Grevigne, Sc Co. as made for the defendants, in '¡the character of ftrangers to the property. It was made for the. defendants as having an intereft in it, and with intent to mitigate the lofs. The law of abandonment, applies to fuch a cafe with the greateft juftice and good policy, in making the previous inftru&ions, and all acts of the agent, enure to the in-furer. To give to the infured a full indemnity on his policy, and aifo the advantages of thefe efforts of the agents to repair the lofs, would be doubly injurious to the infurer. It would deprive him of the benefits of his fubftitution, tend to ilacken the exertions of agents to recover the property, and invite them to refort to fraudulent fpeculations upon the lofs. It cannot be admitted, that the condemnation at Malaga, put an end to the intereft of the infured, fo as to rentier a purchafe, by him, thereafter, equivalent to a purchafe by a ftranger. In the cafe of MPMafiers v. Shoolbred, 1 Efp. Rep. 237, the veffel was condemned by the French coniul, fold by him as a prize, and the captain purchafed her at fuch fale, on account of the owners. But it was confidered as fo much property
In the cafe of Gofs v. Withers, 2 Burr. 694, the doctrine of capture underwent a very learned inveftiga'tion, and Lord Mansfield, in giving the opinion of the court, obferved that if after condemnation the owner recovers, or takes his captured ihip, the infurer can be in no other condition, than if ihe had been recovered or retaken before condemnation. The reafon is plain from the nature of the contract. The iniurer runs the riik of the infured, and undertakes to indemnify. He muft, therefore, bear the lofs aftually fuftain-ed, and can be liable to no more. So that, if after condemnation, the owner recovers the ihip in her complete condition, but has paid falvage, or been at any expenfe in getting her back, the insurer muft bear the lofs fo aftually fuf-tained. He obferves in another place, that no capture by an enemy, though condemned, can be fo total a lofs, as to leave no poffibility of recovery, page 696.
I agree that after a condemnation the property is changed, fo that a complete title can be transferred from the captor to a third perfon. But this rule does not apply between infurer and injured, fo as to authorize the infured to be that pur-chafer, at the very time of the lofs, and with the exprefs view of indemnifying himfelf againft a part of it. If he does, and ftill claims a total lofs from the infurer, he muft tender to him the benefit of that purchafe. This rule is founded on the cleared: juftice and is efiential to prevent fraud. As long as the property remains in the hands of the captor, although a condemnation has taken place, there is ftill the pofi-Ability of a recovery. There ftill exifts, as a rod over the captor* the right of appeal, and this, and other "circum-
The cafe of 'Saidler and. Craig i). Church, decided in this court, in July term, 1799, is an authority in point, and mult govern the prefent cafe. That was an infurance on a veiTel, •which was captured, condemned, and afterwards purchafed by the mailer, on account of the owners, of whom he was one. ■ As foon as the capture was known, and before the condemnation and purchafe, the infured abandoned, but after the purchafe the owners fitted out the veffel, and fent her on another voyage. The court held, that the allured by affirming the purchafe of the captain, as their agent, had waived the abandonment, and turned the total into an average lols. That if the infured liad intended to purfue their claim to a total lofs, they ought not to have ratified the a£l of their captain, but left the infurer to reap at his election, the benefit of that purchafe. This cafe cannot be feparated from the prefent one, by any folid diftinction, and I ihould be ferry to queftion, in any degree, the authority of that decifion. The cafe of Abbott v. Broome, 1 N. T. T. R.. 292, was not intended, in any refpedt, to ihake the force of it. I took no part, in the latter decifion, but it appears, from the report of the cafe, that it was clearly to be diftinguilhed
The more I reflect on the nature of this claim, the more extraordinary, not to fay extravagant, it appears. I am at a lofs to difeover any ground on which it can be fupported. Thofe relied on are, that the purchafe of the cargo being in trull for its ultimate owners, the plaintiffs muft be exclufivcly entitled to the profits, inafmuch as by the abandonment, and payment of a total lofs, they became, proprietors thereof. Thefe arguments proceed on the
From thefe terms it is evident, the authority of the affined and his fadtors, extends only to cafes in which, by their exertions, the property may be refeued from an impending peril. That is, they may ufe all diligence, and incur any ex-penfe, on the underwriter’s account, to prevent a condemnation. But never before was it urged, that he, or his confignees had a right to purchafe property for the account and riik of the underwriter. Mifchievous, indeed, would fuch an unlimited authority prove to the underwriters themfelves. They would become merchants, as well as underwriters, and be expofed to all the hazards to which the indiferetion or avarice of foreign agents, chofen by others, might expofe them. They would never know when their liability on a policy ceaf-
But this demand, it is faid, is not without precedent, and we are referred to a decifion in England, and to another of our own, as authorities in point. The cafe of M
It was faid, on the argument, that if the allured ranfom, the underwriter is bound by his aft, and muft pay, whether it be a good or bad bargain. This is true, for fuch aft being within his authority, lie may, to avoid the greater evil of condemnation, or entire lofs, pay a fair price for a reiteration of the property, which then belongs to himfelf and not to the underwriter, who is only held to make good the lofs occafíoned by the capture, which is the fum paid as a ranfom. The effeft of a ranfom is not to change the property, but to fettle the extent of the lofs. Upon the whole I am of opinion, that after a capture, a condemnation, an abandonment, and payment, as for a total lofs, the affurer cannot call on the merchant to account for the profits which he may have made, in confequence of his agent’s purchafing, with his funds, the cargo of the captors, fubfequent to a condemnation 3 but that fuch purchafe, being with the money of the aífured, muft be at his rifle, and for his exclufive benefit, and that the defendants muff of courfe have judgment.
Vide 1 Vol, 3°3‘
N. Y.T. R. ,292-