66 N.Y.S. 638 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1900
This motion for a new trial, and to set aside the verdict for plaintiff in an action upon a marine policy on a cargo of merchandise shipped from Vera Cruz and Tecolutla, Mexico, is the sixth motion of the kind after trials in actions upon similar policies against this and other companies, there having been six trials and four reversals of judgments. by the General Term or the Appellate Division; and the inquiry here is, whether the present verdict shall meet a similar fate, or prove to be so far the sole exception.
The defenses to the policy are conspiracy and fraud on the part of the master, William Brooks, and Antonio Hoffman, of Mexico, of the firm of Hoffman Hermanos, to wreck and destroy the vessel and cargo for the purpose of defrauding the insurers, unseaworthiness of the vessel, and unjustifiable deviation at Tecolutla by unnecessary detention and prolonged exposure to the brackish and worm-infected waters of the Gulf of Mexico.
The defense of conspiracy and fraud is the only one necessary to be considered on this motion, as the evidence as to ordinary seaworthiness and the causes for detention at Tecolutla, considering those defenses separately from the more serious one, was suffi
The bark selected at Vera Cruz to carry the cargo was the sailing vessel L. E. Cann, which arrived at Vera Cruz in January, 1882, after a voyage from Cardiff, Wales. After discharging cargo at Vera Cruz, the master, William Brooks, looked around for a freight cargo to New York or elsewhere, and was brought in contact with Antonio Granes, brother-in-law of Malpica, who did the lightering of Hoffman’s cargo from the shore to the vessel. He was also brought in contact with Campos, the brother-in-law of Hoffman. The result of this intimacy was an agreement by which Brooks was to wreck the vessel at some place in the Gulf of Mexico or the Atlantic ocean, between the last port of departure in Mexico and the city of New York, and was to receive therefor the sum of $6,500, which was paid to him in installments. On the 24th of January, 1882, three of the bills of lading were made out, and signed by Brooks, of zinc, brass, bones and rags in one bill of lading, rice root in a second, and duck feathers, goat skins and coffee in a third. In the first bill of lading it was stated that the merchandise was insured on policies
According, to the testimony of the master, Brooks, only from forty to fifty per cent, of the assumed cargo was actually placed on board. The evidence is very meagre as to the actual extent or value of the cargo shipped at Vera Cruz. Nor is this deficiency of evidence remedied by the books of Hoffman Hermanos, they refusing to exhibit their books to the representative of the insurance companies a few months after the wrecking of the vessel. In the latter part of January, 1882, the L. E. Cann sailed for Tecolutla, about 50 miles away, occupying about a week in this voyage, where she remained until about the 30th of March, 1882, excuse being made for the detention that her clearance papers were not right and that with a small cargo taken on board at Tecolutla the lighterage over the bar at that hamlet was imperfect. Two hundred bags of sand were thrown overboard at Tecolutla and still the vessel sailed too light for a voyage to New York. April twenty-seventh she became unfit to carry human
Were Hoffman Brothers the plaintiffs in an action to recover upon a policy of insurance on a cargo insured in New York against legitimate perils of the sea, even including the barratry of the master committed against the interest of the freighters, and they produced, to rebut the inferences to be drawn from the facts proven here, no satisfactory evidence of good faith, honest shipment, willingness to produce books showing their purchases of the articles freighted and their shipment,— books which could not be compelled to be produced in the distant and foreign Republic of Mexico,— they or their consignee being the only persons, so far as the evidence displays, who had an interest in hiring the master to wreck the vessel to. defraud the insurers, I should have little hesitation in setting aside a verdict which asserted that either the shipment or the insurance was honest. They chose a sailing vessel, already impaired by worms and liable to further depreciation of security for want of sheathing protection, to transport to New York merchandise which was valuable, if genuinely described, and part of which was perishable, instead of one of the regular line of steamers plying between Vera Cruz and New York; a slow voyage was made to Tecolutla and a long detention had' there for reasons not sufficiently explained; this vessel was doomed,, before the bills of lading were given or she sailed from Vera Cruz,, to destruction at sea by an evil conspiracy between the master and some one interested in obtaining insurance money upon the cargo; they refrained from personal participation in the delivery at the wharf at Vera Cruz of the cargo they shipped, but selected some broker, whose name they cannot, give and whom research cannot find, for a cargo alleged to be of large value; and when soon confronted with the indubitable fact that a great crime had been committed, to the possible hazard of the lives of an innocent crew, and asked to show from their books by fair business.methods the record of the purchase and the shipment of the articles described in the bills of lading to obtain an honorable and satisfactory cash adjustment for insurances in which the witness Antonio Hoffman confesses they were at least interested to the extent of $10,000 aside
The evidence in this case, and the strong presumptions, required Hoffman Hermanos, by fairly satisfactory proof, to separate themselves from the conspiracy. Wylde v. Northern R. R. Co., 53 N. Y. 156; Ramsay v. Ryerson, 24 Abb. N. C. 114.
And where a conspiracy is established by prima facie evidence, the acts and declarations of each conspirator in furtherance of the scheme are admissible. Cuyler v. McCartney, 40 N. Y. 221; N. Y. Guaranty & Indemnity Co. v. Gleason, 78 id. 503. See also collection of authorities, Place v. Minster, 65 id. 89.
These acts and declarations, in consummating the contemplated result, which was the receipt of money, until that result is reached, are material. Starkie Ev. 401, 403; American Fur Co. v. United States, 2 Pet. 344, 345; Page v. Parker, 40 N. H. 47-62.
It is strongly urged by the counsel for the plaintiff that all of the proof to connect Antonio Hoffman or Hoffman Hermanos
This verdict would be set aside even in an action where Voisin, the consignee and the assignee of the bills of lading, is the plaintiff, were the rule of law adopted by the court upon the trial, and upon which the case was submitted to the jury, still to. be accepted as correct. The case was presented to the jury upon the question as to whether Hoffman was a party to the fraud, and by their specific verdict they answered he was not. It was under the same direction of law that their general verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for $7,132.99, the amount of the policy and interest.
This rule was adopted by the trial justice because he believed it had been so far settled in these litigations that it was not left open for him to rule otherwise. In all of the previous trials, the courts have assumed that Voisin did not insure his interest as consignee, assignee or factor against the fraud of the consignors or principals Hoffman Hermanos in forwarding him a cargo shipped purposely for destruction, and that, as against the innocence of an insurance company ignorant of such felonious scheme, he should be rather the one to be charged with a loss produced by the evil designs of his associates. The initial decision of the late General Term in this case has served as a guide for the acceptance of this principle by the trial courts. The judgment for the plaintiff Voisin was reversed by the General Term, Daniels, J., writing the opinion, and, although the reversal was upon errors committed in the reception of evidence, one of the main grounds would have seemed futile had not the court accepted as an understood proposition of law the principle that Voisin could not. recover if Hermanos Brothers could not. Ho allusion was made to the possible right of Voisin to recover in part, and the reception of testimony given by Malpica, the lighterman of Hoffman, and by Antonio Hoffman, on the issue of conspiracy and fraud as to the goods
The Appellate Division, however, has recently in one of these oases met this question in a direct manner, and held that Voisin can recover from the insurance companies to the extent of his advances, or at least to the value of the goods actually shipped, in the absence of direct or presumptive proof that he participated in the fraud. Voisin v. Providence-Washington Ins. Co., 51 App. Div. 553. The motion for a reargument was also denied.
Thus has been established in this case the conclusion that the trial courts have previously erred in assuming the defendant had a right to an absolute verdict, if the jury found that the consignors, Hermanos Brothers, were participants in the fraud by which the vessel was wrecked. Has not then the plaintiff here the right to retain his verdict for the full amount of the policy, the jury finding that Hermanos Brothers were not parties to this fraud, and has the defendant the right to complain because the case was presented to the jury in a more favorable way than defendant was entitled to under the law as now ascertained? Theoretically, perhaps, the plaintiff’s position is the more consistent with logical reasoning in the application of rules of law to trials in courts of justice. Logically, it seems an anomaly to overturn a verdict which has been rendered in favor of plaintiff who had to sustain the burden of a harsher rule of law, as applied against his cause, than' should have been imposed upon him. Practically, the acceptance of this rule by the jury may have operated in plaintiff’s favor.
Neither party should suffer by the error of the court. It is a burden to spend a week or ten days more in the retrial of this case, but it is a heavier burden, as it is a wrong, to suffer a verdict to stand without farther investigation where it is highly probable the misconceptions the jury innocently or sympathetically made prevented substantial justice, and caused a more severe verdict than would have been the case if the jury had been rightly guided by the court in which they had the right to have the utmost confidence. As the case was submitted to the jurors they were required to say that an innocent consignee and holder of bills of lading, who had insured the goods covered, must either recover
The order asked for is not to give to one party or the other final judgment which takes or withholds the amount in controversy, but to give to both parties a fair opportunity in the light of the law as settled to have a jury say what that judgment shall be.
Nor can the court, in view of the doubtful evidence of value of the cargo, fix an amount which it may compel the plaintiff to take or suffer a new trial- The only effective way of fairly determining the controversy is to throw all the questions of fact open to the scrutiny of the jury and the farther review of the courts. New trial awarded upon payment of the trial fee and trial disbursements.
New trial ordered upon payment of trial fee and trial disbursements.