Boat Service Co. v. National Union Fire Ins. Co.

191 So. 707
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 30, 1939
DocketNo. 17032.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 191 So. 707 (Boat Service Co. v. National Union Fire Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boat Service Co. v. National Union Fire Ins. Co., 191 So. 707 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

This is a suit under a policy of marine insurance. Its object is the recovery of the amount expended in. repairing the damage sustained by the insured motor boat “Plaquemine” when the said vessel sank in the Mississippi River at Natchez on January, 19, 1937.

The petition alleges that defendant-insurer, in its policy, undertook to insure the vessel “against the adventures and perils of the Harbors, Bays, Sounds, Seas and Waters as above named,” and that the said vessel sank “as a result of excessive and unusual wave wash from a passing steamer”.

Defendant admitted the issuance of the policy'and it satisfactorily appears that the loss was sustained and that the amount claimed was expended in repairing the damage caused by the sinking of the vessel. Defendant asserts that the loss did not occur as a result of a peril of the river and maintains that there is, therefore, no liability under the policy.

There was judgment for defendant and plaintiff has appealed.

The record shows that the vessel was undergoing repairs • which the insurer had agreed to and that the engine, or motor, had been removed. It appears that the exhaust pipe, which provides an outlet through which exhaust gases escape from the motor and which exhaust pipe extended through the transom, or stern of the vessel, had been disconnected at the engine end and that that end had been blocked up above water level on a wood block, so that water from the river might not enter and find its way into the bilge of the boat. The outer end of the said exhaust pipe was partially submerged. At about six o’clock on the evening of the night during which the vessel sank, the caretaker had found some water in the vessel and had pumped it out and later, at about eleven o’clock, had looked at the vessel from the outside without attempting to determine, by examining the interior, whether any more water had entered. From this external examination he had concluded that the vessel was all right and was not making water. Early on the next morning it was found that the sinking had occurred. No positive cause is shown therefor.

Plaintiff, as we have said, alleged that the sinking was caused by extraordinarily high wave wash of a passing steamer, and contends that such wave wash is included within the perils insured against, and defendant maintains that only ordinary waves from passing vessels wei;e encountered during the night and that such ordinary waves are not to be classified as “perils” within the intendment of the policy.

Plaintiff, without having so alleged, now maintains that, even if it appears from the record that the sinking did not result from extraordinary wave wash, but was caused by water entering through the exhaust pipe after its inside end, in some manner, had become dislodged from its elevated position, and even if it does appear that the real cause of the sinking was negligence of the person who disconnected the exhaust in not firmly fixing the inside end so that it could not be dislodged and become lowered below the level of the water, still there should be recovery under the policy because of the provisions of what is known as the “Inchmaree clause”, which clause, among other things, insures the vessel against perils resulting from “the negligence of master, charterers, mariners, engineers, or pilots”.

Defendant attempts to meet this contention by showing, first, that the petition contains no allegation to the effect that the loss resulted from any such negligence, and, second, by pointing to a further provision in the said “Inchmaree clause” under which the negligence of such master, et cetera, cannot form the basis of recovery if the loss or damage is shown to have resulted “from want of due diligence by the owners of the vessel, or any of them, or by the Manager, Masters, Mates, Engineers, Pilots or crew”.

Plaintiff has signally failed to show that the vessel, during the night on which it sank, was subjected to any extraordinary or unusual wave wash from passing vessels. The most that can be said is that the record shows that certain vessels passed, but nothing resembling positive proof that any such extraordinary wave wash resulted is to be found.

It is a fundamental principle of marine insurance that the insured vessel is warranted to be seaworthy. This means *709 that it should he able to withstand ordinary stress of weather, wind and wave to which it may be expected to be subjected and with which it will ordinarily be confronted.

In Compania de Navegacion, Interior, S. A., v. Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company, 277 U.S. 66, 48 S.Ct. 459, 461, 72 L.Ed. 787, the Supreme Court of the United States, in considering what this warranty includes, said:

“ * * * What does ‘seaworthy’ mean in the implied or expressed warranty to which the insured is to be held?
“Arnould on Marine Insurance, vol. II (10th English Ed.) says:
“ ‘Sec. 710. It is obvious that there can be no fixed and positive standard of seaworthiness, but that it must vary, with the varying exigencies of mercantile enterprise. “The ship,” said Lord Cairns, “should be in a condition to encounter whatever perils of the sea a ship of that kind, and laden in that way, may be fairly expected to encounter”' on the voyage. Steel v. State Line S. S. Co. (1877) [L.R.] 3 App.Cas. 72, 77 [4 Eng.Rul.Cas. 697]. * * *
“ ‘Again the class of vessel may be such as will not admit of being put into that condition of seaworthiness requisite in ordinary cases for the contemplated voyage. The effect of this is not to dispense with the implied warranty of seaworthiness, but to accommodate the 'warranty to what is reasonably practicable in the particular case. * * * ’ ”

And in the same opinion is found a statement clearly showing that the peril of the sea, et cetera, against which such a policy affords indemnity, includes only extraordinary stress of weather, or unusual events not ordinarily to be encountered:

“The phrase ‘danger of the seas,’ whether understood in its most limited sense, as importing only a loss by the natural accidents peculiar to that element; or whether understood in its more extended sense, as including inevitable accidents upon that element, must still, in either case, be clearly understood to include only such losses as are of an extraordinary nature, or arise from some irresistible force, or some overwhelming power, which can not be guarded against by the ordinary exertions of human skill and prudence.”

In Western Assurance Company of Toronto, Canada, v. Shaw, 3 Cir., 11 F.2d 495, 496, the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit said:

“ * * * In an enlarged sense all losses from maritime adventures arise from perils of the sea, but such losses do not come under this phrase within the meaning of maritime insurance policies. ‘Perils of the sea’ against which underwriters insure are confined to extraordinary occurrences, such as stress of weather, winds and waves, lightning, tempests, rocks, etc. * * * The words are therefore used to describe abnormal causes and extraordinary circumstances. Coles v.

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191 So. 707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boat-service-co-v-national-union-fire-ins-co-lactapp-1939.