Alexander v. Baltimore Insurance

8 U.S. 370, 2 L. Ed. 650, 4 Cranch 370, 1807 U.S. LEXIS 395
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 11, 1808
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 8 U.S. 370 (Alexander v. Baltimore Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Baltimore Insurance, 8 U.S. 370, 2 L. Ed. 650, 4 Cranch 370, 1807 U.S. LEXIS 395 (1808).

Opinion

Marshall, Ch. J.,

after stating the facts of the case, delivered the opinion of the court, as follows, viz:—

It has been decided in this court, that during the existence of such a detention as amounts to a technical total loss, the assured may abandon ; but it has also been decided, that the state of the fact must concur with the state of information, to make this abandonment effectual. The technical total loss, therefore, occasioned by the capture and detention at Mole St. Nicholas, must have existed in point of fact, in December, when this abandonment was tendered, or the plaintiff cannot succeed in this action. Previous to that time, the vessel had been restored to the master ; all actual restraint had been taken off; and it does not appear that her ability to prosecute her voyage was in any degree impaired. But her cargo had been taken by Monsieur de Noailles, the commandant at Mole St. Nicholas, and had not been paid for. The restoration of the vessel, without the cargo, is said not to terminate the technical total loss of the vessel.

The policy is upon the vessel alone, and contains no allusion to the cargo. Had she sailed in ballast, that circumstance would not have affected the policy. The *underwriters insure against the loss or any damage to the vessel, not against the loss or any damage to the cargo. They *- insure her ability to perform her voyage, not that she shall perform it. If in such a case, a partial damage had been sustained by the cargo, no person would have considered the underwriters as liable for that partial damage ; why, then, are they responsible for the total destruction of the cargo ? It is said, that by taking out the cargo, the voyage is broken up. But the voyage of the vessel is not broken up ; nor is the mercantile adventure destroyed, from any default in the vessel. By this construction, the underwriter of the vessel, who undertakes for the vessel only, is connected with the cai’go, and made to undertake that the cargo shall reach the port of destination, in a condition to answer the purposes of the assured. Yet, of the cargo, he knows nothing, nor does he make any inquiry respecting it.

If it be true, that the technical total loss was not terminated, until the cargo was paid for, because the voyage was broken up, then the underwriters would have been compellable to pay the amount of the policy, although the vessel had returned in safety to the United States. To prosecute the voyage, it is said, had become useless, and therefore, the engagement of the underwriters was forfeited, although this state of things was not produced by any fault of the vessel. If this be true, it would not be less true, if, instead of proceeding to Cape Frangois, the Henry and John had returned from Mole St. Nicholas to the port of Charleston. The contract, then, instead of being an insurance on the ability of the ship to perform her voyage, an insurance against the loss of the ship upon the voyage, would be a contract to purchase the vessel at the sum mentioned in the policy, if circumstances, not produced by any fault or disability in the vessel, should induce the master or the assured to discontinue the voyage, after it had been undertaken.

This is termed pushing a principle to an absurdity, and therefore, no test of the truth of the principle. But if it be a case which would occur as fre *224 M quently as that which has occurred, and if the result which has been ^stated flows inevitably from the principle insisted on, the ease supposed merely presents that principle in its true point of view, deprived of the advantages it derives from its being adapted to the particular and single case under argument. Either the technical total loss of the ship did, or did not, terminate, when she was restored to the master uninjured, and as capable of prosecuting her voyage as when she sailed from the port of Charleston. If it was then terminated, this action cannot be sustained. If it was not then terminated, on what circumstance did its continuance depend ? At one time it is said to depend on the ability or inability of the owner to employ her to advantage. But this position requires a very slight examination, to be discarded entirely. So far as respected the vessel herself, and her crew, she was as capable of being employed to advantage as she had ever been. Only the funds were wanted to enable her to purchase a return-cargo on the spot, or to proceed to her port of destination, and there purchase one. Or she might have have returned immediately to the United States, and if any direct loss to the vessel was sustained, by being turned out of her way, that, after restoration, would be a partial, not a total loss. Besides, what dictum in the books will authorize this position ? And what rule is afforded to ascertain the degree of inconvenience which, when, in point of fact, the vessel is in safety, in full possession of the master, and capable of prosecuting her voyage, shall warrant an abandonment ?

No total loss of the vessel, then, existed, after her restoration, so far as that total loss depended on the incapacity of the owner to employ his vessel to advantage. If the total loss continued, after the restoration, that continuance was produced singly by the non-payment for the cargo, which is said to have broken up the voyage. If, then, the vessel had returned to a port in the United States, the voyage would still have been broken up, and the right to abandon would have been the same, as it was while she was on the ocean, in full possession of her master.

*But it is apparent, that the master had terminated the voyage on which the vessel was insured. Had his contract with De Noailles been complied with, at Mole St. Nicholas, or at Cape Frangois, he would not have proceeded to the Bite of Leogane. Had it not been complied with, he would have had no more inducement to go to a port in the Bite of Leogane from Cape Frangois, than from Mole St. Nicholas. The voyage to Port Republican, then, which was the voyage insured, was completely terminated at Mole St. Nicholas ; the voyage to Cape Frangois, in making which she was captured, was a new voyage, undertaken, not for the benefit of the underwriters of the vessel, but for the benefit of the owners and underwriters of the cargo. Consequently, so far as respects the underwriters of the vessel, who insured only the voyage to the Bite of Leogane, the capture at Cape Frangois is an immaterial circumstance, and the technical total loss produced by carrying the vessel into Mole St. Nicholas, was either terminated when she was restored, without her cargo, or would have continued, had she returned to an American port, without her cargo.

Upon principle, then, independent of authority, it is very clear, that the underwriter of the vessel does not undertake for the cargo, but engages only for the ability of the vessel to perform her voyage, and to bear any damage which the vessel may sustain in making that voyage.

*225 But it is contended, that adjudged cases have settled this question otherwise. The case has frequently occurred, and a direct decision might be expected on it, if a construction so foreign from the contract had really been made. It often happens, that the cargo of a neutral vessel is condemned as enemy property, and the vessel itself is discharged. Not an instance is recollected, in which the right to abandon in such a case, after the vessel was restored, has been claimed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 U.S. 370, 2 L. Ed. 650, 4 Cranch 370, 1807 U.S. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-baltimore-insurance-scotus-1808.