Callaghan v. Atlantic Insurance

1 Edw. Ch. 64
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedJuly 27, 1831
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Edw. Ch. 64 (Callaghan v. Atlantic Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Callaghan v. Atlantic Insurance, 1 Edw. Ch. 64 (N.Y. 1831).

Opinion

The Vice-Chancellor.

Upon the facts in this case it will be perceived, that the dispute is not whether there was a contract of insurance entered into between the owner and underwriters, (for it is conceded there is enough to constitute a valid and binding contract) but, what are the terms of it; so that, if they were to be embodied in the form of a policy of insurance, what ought the policy to contain ?

The great point in determining this question is, the force and operation of a few simple words contained within a parenthesis in the application for insurance ; which states the ship then to be at the port of Gibraltar. If these words amount to a[74]*74Warrailty of the vessel’s being then in safety at Gibraltar or' physically existing there, they must necessarily have a place jn ^g ag forming a part of the contract. But if they are merely words of representation, they do not enter into the contract or form any part of it and are to be considered only as inducement to the contract; and their influence upon it will then depend upon the materiality of the fact which they represent, should it pro* to be untrue, and upon the good faith in which such representation was made.

The distinction in the law of insurance, between an express warranty and a representation, is generally well understood. The former is the affirmance of some fact always inserted in a policy and forming a condition which must be strictly.complied with by the assured; while the latter is a statement of some collateral circumstances not embodied in the policy, although made before the contract is completed. In' order to determine whether the words in question amount to a warranty, and were so intended, (for, as in every other case, they must be construed according to the intent of the parties, to be gathered from the whole instrument,) we must look at all the circumstances, the occasion of using the words, and the object of them.

The owner had sent his ship with a cargo to Gibraltar and from thence she was to proceed on a trading voyage to the Pacific—first going up the straits, not further than Marseilles, for the purpose of obtaining a change of cargo or for some other object necessary to'the success of the voyage—and from the result of which he anticipated large profits. Under these circumstances he applied for insurance, not upon the vessel or any particular cargo which she had or might take on board or earnings under the denomination of freight, but upon the profits which he expected would result to him from the goods and merchandize which might be taken on board and be sold, bartered, or disposed of in the course of the intended voyage. So far, therefore, as the insurance was concerned, it was a voyage to commence at Gibraltar; it was at that port the policy was to attach ;' and there the risk which the defendants agreed to assume was to begin.- It was unnecessary; in shewing the [75]*75■commencement of the voyage, to say more than that the insurance was to be “ at and from the port of Gibraltarbut if the policy contained the usual words “ lost or not lost,” the risk would extend to a time previous to the date of the policy, and the underwriter would be rendered liable for a loss previously accrued. The consequence to an underwriter, from the use of these general words in a policy, may be a reason for enhancing the premium or perhaps for his declining the risk; and, therefore, in order to induce him to underwrite a policy at a less premium, the insured might be willing to exempt the underwriter from the chance of any antecedent loss. Hence, in a variety of cases, words amounting to a warranty of the vessel’s safety on a particular day, or at a certain 'place, or that she would sail on a day mentioned, have been introduced into policies for the purpose of obtaining the insurance upon more favorable terms, by narrowing the risk and restricting the liability of the underwriter: Reade v. Commercial Ins. Co. 3 J. R. 360.; Dougl. 12. n, (4.); Hughes, 307, 308; 3 Kent's Com. 236. And hence, in the present case, the object of inserting the words “ where she now is,” may have been to limit the operation of the contract to a prospective loss -and thereby induce the defendants to assume the risk at a less rate of premium than they otherwise would perhaps have charged.

But whatever was the object, we find these words inserted; and they amount to an averment of the vessel’s being at Gibraltar on the 12th of November. I think the defendants were’ entitled, in making out the policy, to insert these words as a part of the contract. There can be no doubt they would have amounted to a warranty in case they had been inserted. Hughes, in his excellent treatise on the law of Insurance p. 307, lays it down as a settled rule, that any “ positive avermentlor “ allegation on the face of the instrument, and making a part of the written contract, whether inserted in the body of it, 61 or written in the margin transversely or otherwise, amounts to a warranty or condition.” He is fully supported in this position by authority; I must, therefore, consider it as amounting to a warranty.

It is strongly urged against this conclusion, that, as there is [76]*76one warranty in terms contained in the application—namely, “ property warranted American, to be proved in Philadelphia „ onjy» therefore, it is not to be supposed any other express warranty was intended. This argument is not well founded. founded upon separate and distinct facts; and it is immaterial in There certainly may be several warranties in the same policy, %vhat part of the policy they are inserted; one may be in the body of the policy, and another in the margin by way of memorandum merely; and although the one or the other may not be in the formal words of a warranty, still, if the words contain a direct or even an incidental allegation of a fact relating to the risk, they will be considered as amounting to a warranty: Phillips on Insurance, 25. I can, therefore, see no reason for saying, because one formal technical warranty is expressed in the writing, constituting the basis of the agreement, that the other statement contained in it may not also be considered a warranty. The maxim, “ expressio unius, est “ exclusio alterus” can have no application to such a case.

But, suppose I am wrong in my cbnclusions, and that the words in dispute are not to be taken as a warranty, but are to be looked upon as a representation merely:—The question then arises as to their eifoct upon the contract, although not forming a part of,it? From the view which I have already taken of the subject, it is unnecessary for me to undertake the settlement of this question.- Yet, as it has been discussed by the counsel, I am unwilling to pass it by without a brief examination. It must be admitted that the words .used by the owner, in his application, convey a positive and unequivocal assertion of the ship’s being then at Gibraltar, There is no qualification of the terms to leave the mind in doubt or uncertainty on the subject of the vessel’s safety. It is true he could not have known the fact of the vessel’s safety: and yet from the unqualified manner in which it is stated, the defendants had a right to repose upon it as a truth. It could make no difference to them whether he knew it to be true or not. He states it to be so, and thereby takes upon himself exclusively the chance of it, being otherwise. If he wished to throw a portion of that chance upon the defendants, he should have qualified [77]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Edw. Ch. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/callaghan-v-atlantic-insurance-nychanct-1831.