Canada Sugar Refining Co. v. Insurance Co. of North America

175 U.S. 609, 20 S. Ct. 239, 44 L. Ed. 292, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1709
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 8, 1900
Docket69
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 175 U.S. 609 (Canada Sugar Refining Co. v. Insurance Co. of North America) 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
Canada Sugar Refining Co. v. Insurance Co. of North America, 175 U.S. 609, 20 S. Ct. 239, 44 L. Ed. 292, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1709 (1900).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shuras,

after making the above statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The District Court held that, by the stranding of the vessel John E. Sayre, there had been caused, under the provisions of the contract of insurance between the Canada Sugar Refining Company and the Insurance Company of North America, a total loss of profits, and accordingly entered a decree in favor of the libellant for the full amount of the insurance, with interests and costs. 82 Fed. Rep. 757.

The Circuit Court of Appeals, being of the opinion that there had not been a total loss of profits within the meaning of the contract, reversed the decree of the District Court, with directions to dismiss the libel. 58 U. S. App. 22.

This difference of opinion arose from opposite views of the legal conclusion to be drawn from the evidence of the facts *613 attending the loss of the vessel and its cargo. Did those facts disclose a total loss of the cargo, and, consequently, a total loss of profits ? Or did they disclose that, within the meaning of the contract, a portion of the cargo was delivered to and received by the insured at the port of destination, and that, therefore, there was not a total loss of profits?

On February 10, 1893, the ship John E. Sayre, having on board a cargo of sugar belonging to the Canada Sugar Refining Company, sailed from Iloilo for Montreal. By several contracts of insurance between the refining company and the Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company the latter had insured the former against the loss of the cargo in the sum of $166,145. On April 29, 1893, the ship being still on her voyage, the refining company entered into a contract with the Insurance Company of North America, of which the material terms were as follows:

“ This to certify that, on the 29th day of April, 1893, this company insured under policy 117,407, made for Robert Ilampson, fifteen thousand and dollars on profits on cargo sugar against total loss only, valued at sum insured, shipped on board of the Br. ship John E. Sayre at and from Iloilo to Montreal, and the loss, if any, subject to the terms and conditions of the policy, has been made payable to the order of Canada Sugar Refg. Co. Ltd. on surrender of this certificate.”

It was provided in the policy referred to in the certificate that “the acts of the insured or assurers, or of their joint or respective agents, in preserving, securing or saving the property insured, in case of damage or disaster, shall not be considered or held to be a waiver or acceptance of abandonment;” and likewise, “it is further agreed that if the said assured shall have made any other insurance upon the premises aforesaid, prior in date to this policy, then this insurance company shall be answerable only for so much of the amount as such prior insurance may be deficient towards fully covering the premises hereby insured,' without any deduction for the insolvency of all or any of the underwriters, and shall return the premium upon so much of the sum by them insured as they shall be by such prior insurance exonerated from.”

*614 It is admitted that notice of the prior insurance was given to the Insurance Company of North America at the time when it entered into its contract with the refining company ; nor does it appear that the insurance company, before the libel was filed, claimed that it was exonerated from any portion of its liability by reason of such prior insurance, or ever tendered a return of any part of the premium by reason of any such alleged exoneration.

On July 6, 1893, the ship stranded on the coast of Newfoundland, and ultimately became a total wreck. The crew left the vessel, but the master remained, and, in the discharge of his duty as agent of all whom it might concern, made an arrangement with the local fishermen for the saving of cargo by them at one half of what was saved. This resulted in removal from the wreck of a portion of the cargo until July 8, when the work was finally abandoned. On that day an agent of the Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company arrived in the interest of that company. He at once took charge, and relieved the master, who, under instructions of the owner of the vessel, turned over the rescued portion of the cargo to the agent. The previous disbursements made by the master, amounting to $200, were paid to him by the agent of the Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company.

The agent thereupon -adjusted the claims of the salvors, in pursuance of the agreement made by the master. The portion saved from the wreck weighed about 320 tons, of which about one half was apportioned and set off to the salvors; but nearly all of the sugars so assigned to the salvors were subsequently purchased from them by the agent.

The agent likewise paid to the shipowner his ocean freight, and reconditioned the sugars saved from the wreck, placed them in new bags, and then shipped them to Montreal on the coasting steamer Tiber. The total expenditures of the Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company, in respect of the-salvage, the care, reconditioning and forwarding of the sugars, amounted to upwards of ten thousand dollars — not including the ocean, freight, nor the freight from Newfoundland to Montreal.

Thus far, in the history of the transactions, there seems to *615 be a substantial agreement between the statements of the courts below of the facts upon which, they based their respective .judgments. But we here meet with a difference, which, in the view we take of the case, is of controlling importance.

The District Court, in the opinion by Judge Brown, states that the agent of the Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company,. after having settled with the master and with the salvors, “ shipped all the sugar saved, to the order of the insurers to Montreal; ” and that “ none of the sugar ever came to the libellant in the ordinary course of the voyage, or through any delivery to the libellant as consignee by the.carrier; but only through a delivery by the- insurer of cargo, after a 'practical abandonment to the latter, .and through a settlement by the insurer as upon a total loss, in which the sugar was received by the libellant upon an equitable basis in part payment, and as the equivalent of its value in cash, as any othér property might have been received.”

The Circuit Court of Appeals, in its narration of events, states that “ the master was about to arrange for the trans-. portation to Montreal of the part not going to the salvors, when the Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company, which meantime had been informed of the disaster, intervened and took entire -control. That company carried out the agreement made by the master with the salvors, paying them an equivalent in lieu of one half of the sugar saved, and caused the sugar saved to be reconditioned and shipped to Montreal on the steamer Tiber, and delivered upon arrival there to .the libellant.”

Referring to the pleadings,, we find it averred in the libel that the sugar, after having been brought to Montreal by the Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company,

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175 U.S. 609, 20 S. Ct. 239, 44 L. Ed. 292, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/canada-sugar-refining-co-v-insurance-co-of-north-america-scotus-1900.