Calhoun ex rel. Fitzimmons v. Insurance Co. of Pennsylvania

1 Binn. 293
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 26, 1808
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1 Binn. 293 (Calhoun ex rel. Fitzimmons v. Insurance Co. of Pennsylvania) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Calhoun ex rel. Fitzimmons v. Insurance Co. of Pennsylvania, 1 Binn. 293 (Pa. 1808).

Opinion

Tilghman C. J.

This cause arises on a policy of insurance on the cargo of the brig John, Richard Barker master, at and from Charleston, South Carolina, to Cadiz, for 15,000 dollars, premium 15 per cent. At the foot of the policy is the following agreement: “ This insurance is declared to be made on sugars, “ not discharged from on board the above vessel at Charleston, “ where she brought them from Havanna, warranted by as- ■“ sured to be American property, to be proved, if required, in. “ this city, and not elsewhere.” The vessel was taken on her voyage by a British squadron blockading Cadiz, sent to Gibraltar, and condemned, together with the cargo, for breach of the blockade of Cadiz.

The cause was tried at Nisi Prius before Judge Smith last July, when a verdict was found for the plaintiffs for 20,267 dollars and 60 cents, subject to the opinion of this Court, on the three following points.

[303]*3031. Whether the decree of the court of Vice Admiralty at Gibraltar, is or is not conclusive evidence of the facts set forth in it; and if conclusive, whether it discharges the underwriters.

2. Whether the conduct of Captain Barker in the Bay of Cadiz, in relation to the blockade, did or did not amount to a breach of the warranty in the policy.

3. Whether the Captain’s conduct amounted to barratry. With liberty to move for a new trial, on the ground of the verdict being against law and evidence. Under this liberty a motion for a new trial has been made.

It will be necessary to state the material facts which were given in evidence. On the 8th June 1800 the brig sailed from Charleston, where the blockade of Cadiz was not then known; nor does it appear that the Captain knew of it until he received notice in the Bay of Cadiz, in the manner which I shall hereafter mention. On the morning of the 15th or 16th July, steering for Cadiz, and not many leagues distant from the shore, Captain Barker descried two large ships, one of which fired a gun at him; he stood on his course with all sails set. In about an hour he was overtaken by the Hector, one of the squadron forming the blockade of Cadiz under Admiral Sir Richard Bickerton; he then received notice not to enter Cadiz, which was blockaded, and was taken out of his vessel, and carried on board the Hector, with his papers and letters. The same day he was carried on board the Admiral’s ship; the mate and four hands were taken out of the brig, and an officer and eight men put into her, with orders to detain her and stay with the fleet. The Captain was detained as a prisoner on board the brig; and thus things remained until the' 27th July, when he was carried on board the Admiral’s ship. The Admiral said to him, “We have thoughts of setting you at liberty: “ in that case what course will you steer? or what port will you “ go to?” The Captain answered,' “ In case I receive no new “ order, of in case I receive no new instructions;” for in that respect the Captain’s protest and his answer, when examined on interrogatories in the Court of Admiralty, differ: “ I shall fol- “ low my old ones.” The Admiral replied, “ that will be, I “ suppose, for Cadiz>•” to which the Captain answered, “ cer- “ tainly, unless I have new orders.” Whereupon the Admiral said, “ that is sufficient; I shall send you to Gibraltar for adj[304]*304udication.” Here again the examination of the Captain differs something from his protest: in the former it is thus expressed: “ The Captain said that in case he got no new instructions, he “ should proceed by his old ones, and go to Cadiz;" and the Admiral then told him, he must send him into Gibraltar for adjudication.

On the 26th July 1800, an indorsement, as follows, was made on some of Captain Barker’s papers: “ Warned not to “ enter Cadiz, or St. Lucar, as they are blockaded; but has “ permission to go to any other port.” But it does not appear that the papers were ever returned to Captain Barker after they were taken from him on the 16th July, or that he ever saw them again, till they were exhibited by the captors in the Court of Admiralty at Gibraltar. Christopher Bennet, the mate of the brig, declared on his examination, that after they had been in possession of the Hector about ten days, the papers were offered to the master, and the command of his vessel, which he refused, because he thought the captors had unjustifiably detained him, and removed four men from the brig, on board the Hector and Incendiary.

On the 26th August 1800, the judge of the Court of Vice Admiralty at Gibraltar pronounced his decree of condemnation. After declaring the said brig to have been cleared out for Cadiz, a port actually blockaded, and that the master persisted in his intention of entering, after warning from the blockading force not to do so, in direct breach and violation of the blockade thereby notified, he pronounced the said brig and her cargo, and the master’s private adventure, by virtue thereof or otherwise subject to confiscation, and condemned the same as good and lawful prize.

Upon the first question, whether the decree of the Court of Vice Admiralty is conclusive, I shall give an opinion founded on the special circumstances of this case, without entering into the general question of the conclusiveness of the sentences of foreign Courts of Admiralty. It is now well understood, that a warranty of American property, “ to be proved if required in “ the city of Philadelphia and not elsewhere,” is to be so construed, that in case' any dispute arises whether the property was American, and as such entitled to protection, or whether in the circumstances under which it stood at the time it was captured, it was tp be considered as the property of an enemy, [305]*305such dispute is to be decided by proof in the city of Philadelphia. A warranty of American property is a contract not only that it was American property at the time it was shipped, but that it should not lose that character by any act or omission of the insured or his agents, during the voyage. Now a question has arisen, whether the property has not lost its American character, by an attempt to break a blockade. It is a question springing out of the warranty. By what proof then is it to be decided? The answer is plain: by proof satisfactory to a court and jury in this city, and not elsewhere; not by the opinion of any foreign court, which it was the very object of this warranty to exclude. In this case, therefore, the decree of the Court of Vice Admiralty at Gibraltar, cannot be received as conclusive evidence that the property was not American.

2. But was the conduct of Captain Barker in the Bay of Cadiz, such as to throw off the American character, and forfeit the protection due to American property? Did he act in violation of the law of nations, or of the treaty between the United States and Great BritainP It is unnecessary to speak particularly of the Law of Nations, because the treaty is in exact conformity to it. One of the passages in the 18th article of the treaty, is as follows: “ Whereas it frequently happens that

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Bluebook (online)
1 Binn. 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calhoun-ex-rel-fitzimmons-v-insurance-co-of-pennsylvania-pa-1808.