Barnewall v. Church

1 Cai. Cas. 217
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1803
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1 Cai. Cas. 217 (Barnewall v. Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnewall v. Church, 1 Cai. Cas. 217 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1803).

Opinion

*Thompson, J.

The two questions arising [*232 233] out of this case for decision are,

1. Whether the verdict was against evidence, on the question of seaworthiness ; and,

*2. Whether the plaintiff ought not to have [*234] disclosed to the defendant that the vessel would have a clearance for Falmouth.

There is, in every insurance, an implied warranty that [302]*302the ship shall be seaworthy when the risk commences; that she shall be tight, strong, and in all respects, fit for the intended voyage. ¿.The insurer undertakes only to indemnify against the extraordinary and unforeseen perils of the sea, and not against the ordinary perils to which every ship must be exposed in the usual course of the voyage proposed. If a vessel become incapable of proceeding on the voyage insured, the presumption prima faeie is, that it arises from unseaworthiness, unless some adequate cause be shown to occasion the damageT/ But, if any such cause be shown, so that the loss may be fairly attributed to sea damage, and the underwriters mean to rely on the ship’s not being seaworthy at her departure, the onus probandi will then lie on them. To test the present case by these rules, we find the only testimony, as to the immediate cause of the disaster, is that contained in the two protests. From the first, made by the master, chief mate, and one seaman, it appears that the vessel left Honduras the 27th of January. That on the 28th January, she met with strong gales, so that they were obliged to close reef the fore-topsail, and close reef the main-topsail. That on the 29 th, strong gales, and a heavy sea'from the noth ward, still under reefed sails, the vessel making much water. On the 30th the wind abated; and nothing remarkable occurred until the 2nd of February, when they found the leak increased to that degree that they could not keep her free from water with the pumps. They then bore away for Swan’s Island, which being unable to reach, they determined to return to Honduras, where they arrived the 18th of February. During the above time, they encountered, at various periods, stiff gales and heavy squalls. Thus we find the ship, from the 28th of January until the 13th of Februarjr, a very considerable part of the time laboring under stiff gales and heavy weather, far beyond the ordinary perils of the sea. The master swears • that shortly after leaving Honduras, he met with excessive hard winds; that the navigation was difficult and dangerous, [303]*303and *he was obliged to carry a very heavy press [*235] of sail, in order to avoid the reefs and keys; and that after he had met with considerable injury, and it was determined again to return to Honduras, he experienced heavy gales, and various changes of weather. This I think sufficient to show that the loss may be fairly attributed to sea damage, and throw the onus probandi of unseaworthiness on the defendant. On this subject, the testimony is certainly very contradictory, and, in my opinion, irreconcilable. The implied warranty on the part of the assured is, that the vessel was seaworthy at the commencement of the risk; this was on the 21st of November, 1799, while she lay at Kingston. The testimony on the part of the plaintiff is, substantially, that in April, 1799, when he had it in contemplation to purchase this vessel, he procured ship-carpenters to examine her, and ascertain her situation, previous to completing the bargain; no possible inducement, therefore, to a fraud, on the part of the plaintiff. They examined her accurately, bored in places most liable to rot, and found her sound; stripped off her sheathing; found her bottom English elm, and perfectly sound; her naval hoods and head knees sound; took off the plank, so as to examine her top timbers, and found them sound and good. The testimony of Captain Dorgan, likewise, who arrived in March preceding from the West Indies, in this ship, with a cargo of 500 hogsheads of sugar and molasses, tends to show that she was a very tight, strong vessel, and only ten years old. This, it is said, however, was seven months before the commencement of the present insurance. But if she was in the situation represented by these witnesses in April, it is inconceivable that she could be in the rotten and decayed state represented by the defendant’s witnesses in November thereafter. The examination made by the defendant’s witnesses was in February, 1800, three months after the commencement of the risk. All the progressive decay, therefore, from the November preceding, was at the risk of the underwriter But it appears incred[304]*304ible that all this decay could have taken place in that period. for the defendant’s witnesses represent that when she was surveyed by them, two thirds of her timbers [*236] were rotten, many *of her plank started and rotten; her bends so rotten and loose that with a crow bar they might have been ript up for twenty feet; her upper works in a very bad state; and, in short, that there was a general decay of her timbers, bends, and plank. The master of the ship, however, swears, that had she arrived in any port on the continent of America, she might have been repaired, fit for the voyage, for fifteen hundred, or two thousand dollars; but if she had been in the situation represented by the defendant’s witnesses, she must have been irreparable. On the whole, the testimony is so directly and palpably contradictory that it is impossible to ■reconcile it. It thus becomes a question of credibility of witnesses, and this is peculiarly within the province of a jury to determine. Whether the vessel was seaworthy or not, is also matter of fact, to be submitted to a jury. These points have been decided by a respectable jury of merchants; and in such case, where the question is doubtful, and the testimony contradictory, I think, the court ought not to interfere by granting a new trial, unless it appears that injustice has been done, or that further light may be thrown on the subject on another examination.

In the case of Ashley v. Ashley, 2 Strange, 1142, the judge who tried the cause (which was upon a promissory note for 5,0001 which the defendant insisted was forged) certified, that the weight of the evidence was with the plaintiff, and he thought the jury would have found for the plaintiff, but they found a verdict for the defendant. And on an application for a new trial, the court said, as there was evidence on the part of the defendant, the jury‘were proper judges to determine which scale preponderated; that it could not be said to be a verdict against evidence, and so refused to grant a new trial. The same rule was adopted in the case of Smith v. Huggins, 2 Strange, 1142, and a new trial de> [305]*305nied, although the evidence -was weak on the part of the plaintiff, and the judge who tried the cause strongly inclined against the verdict.

I am, therefore, of opinion, on the first point, that a new trial ought not to be granted.

With respect to the second question, I think there can be but little difficulty. There is no doubt but the real destination *of this vessel was for New York, [*237] as described in the policy, and not for Falmouth, as the clearance purported. There is no contradictory testimony on that subject, except, that in the first protest it is said, as in the clearance, she sailed for Falmouth and a market, but as to the actual place of destination of a vessel, I think the captain, unless his testimony is impeached, is entitled to full credit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Cai. Cas. 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnewall-v-church-nysupct-1803.