Cassa Marittima v. . P. Ins. Co.

29 N.E. 962, 129 N.Y. 490, 42 N.Y. St. Rep. 258, 84 Sickels 490, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 896
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 20, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 29 N.E. 962 (Cassa Marittima v. . P. Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cassa Marittima v. . P. Ins. Co., 29 N.E. 962, 129 N.Y. 490, 42 N.Y. St. Rep. 258, 84 Sickels 490, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 896 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

*492 O’Brien, J.

The plaintiff recovered a sum, the equivalent •of £400 English money, loaned by the plaintiff, through its agent at Pensacola, Florida, to the master of the ship Buoni Amici upon a pledge of the vessel and the freight she was expected to earn on a voyage, then about to be made, from Pensacola to South America, which was insured by the defendant. It appears that the plaintiff is a foreign corporation organized under the laws of the kingdom of Italy having its principal office at Maples, with branch offices in various other places including the city of Mew York. It was engaged in making maritime loans and insured with the defendant a maritime risk evidenced by the following paper:

“£400 Pensacola, Fla.,' August 31, 1886.

“Fifteen days after arrival.at the port of destination, Eiver Plata or other intermediate port, at which shall end the voyage of my vessel denominated Buoni Amici I promise to pay to the order of the Cassa Marittima of Maples the sum of four hundred pounds sterling value received in cash as a loan on freight for the last expenses necessary to the undertaking of the voyage from Pensacola to Eiver Plata and I hereby assign therefor, to the .said Cassa Marittima, enough of the present freight to cover the sum of the above loan, with power to collect when due, and I hereby hypothecate ship and freight, for a payment of said loan with priority over every other credit, and in case of total loss, the amount received as loan shall not be paid back, and I accept all the conditions set down in the regulations of the Cassa Marittima relating to loans on freight of which I received a copy.

“ B. QARTINO.”

On the back of this instrument was printed the following. “The loans which the Cassa Marittima agrees to make on freight must be subject to the following rules.” Here follow sixteen separate and distinct rules none of which need be referred to except the fifteenth which is as follows: 15th. The owner or captain shall not take any other advances upon the same freight at the port of loading or in such case *493 hold themselves hound to return the present loan even though the vessel be lost.” It was admitted on the trial that the owner or captain did, without the knowledge, privity or consent of the plaintiff, unless such consent ivas given by the execution and delivery of the instrument above set forth subject to the rules and regulations indorsed thereon, take other advances amounting to $1,100 upon the same freight at the port of loading. On the 18th of September, 1886, the plaintiff’s Hew York agent procured from the defendant upon payment of the required premium, a policy of insurance to said agent, on account of whom it may concern, for $2,000 whereby the defendant insured lost or not lost, at and from Pensacola to Montevideo and (or) Buenos Ayres, on advances against captain’s drafts upon the freight of all kinds of lawful goods and merchandize, laden or to be laden on board the good bark JBuoni Amici whereof is master for the present voyage.” The vessel sailed from her port of loading but was lost by perils of the sea and of course did not earn her freight which was pledged fof the payment of the loan, and the plaintiff sought indemnity from the defendant under its policy. The defendant resists the claim on a single ground only, and that is that by force of rule fifteen, endorsed upon the draft, to the effect that if the owner or master of the vessel took other advances upon the same freight, at the port of loading, they should hold themselves bound to return the loan, even though the vessel be lost, and that as the master did take a - further loan upon such freight at the port of loading, though it was without the knowledge, privity or consent of the plaintiff or its agents, this act of the master created a personal obligation and destroyed the maritime character of the plaintiff’s loan, and its insurable interest, and thus defeated its right to recover on the policy. The defendant argues that a marine risk and not a personal obligation or promise is the subject of insurance. That when a loan is made upon pledge of the ship and freight a maritime lien is thereby created which is the subject of insurance, by the person in whose favor it is created. It is no doubt, true that it is an essential feature of such a loan that if the ship be *494 lost the loan is not to be repaid. What is strictly known as a maritime lien is created by making the advances, without any security for repayment except the chance that the ship will arrive safely at her port of destination, deliver her freight and thus earn the fund pledged to pay the loan. The defendant urges that the recovery cannot be upheld unless at the time of the loss of the ship the plaintiff had an insurable interest that is to say a maritime lien, and that the act of the master in taking subsequent advances created a personal obligation and destroyed the maritime character of the risk. The vessel was an Italian craft and it is found by the trial court that under the clauses in the policy authorizing and requiring the plaintiff to sue and labor, with respect to the property so insured, the plaintiff brought suit against the owner of the vessel in the courts of Italy, upon the draft made by the master above set forth, but was defeated in such action. It was further found that the plaintiff has not made any attempt or taken any proceedings to collect the loan from the master for the reason that since the loss under the policy, he Avas insolvent and nothing could be collected from him by execution. If the instrument is read Avithout reference to the printed rule endorsed thereon it is admitted that it is evidence of a loan made by the plaintiff upon the security of a maritime lien. It expresses upon its face, what the law Avould imply from the nature of the transaction, that the loan was subject to the perils of the sea and contingent upon the arrival of the ship at her port of destination as it is expressly stipulated that, in case of total loss, the amount received as a loan shall not be paid back. So far the transaction vested an interest in the plaintiff in the freight and ship that Avas the subject of insurance. But it is contended in behalf of the defendant that the printed rule on the back of the instrument folloAved by the act of the master in taking further advances has changed all this and has left the plaintiff Avitli nothing but a piece of commercial paper as security for the loan which was not such an interest as could be insured.

To this point the plaintiff’s counsel answers, first, that under the statute of this state proA’iding for the incorporation of *495 marine insurance companies (Ch. 308, Laws 1849), under which statute the defendant was created and exists as a corporation, authority is given “ To make insurance upon vessels, freight, goods, wares, merchandize, specie, bullion, jewels, profits, commissions, bank notes, hills of exchange, and other evidence of debt, bottomry and respondentia interests, and to make all and every insurance appertaining to or connected with marine risks and risks ctf transportation and navigation,” and that, therefore, the defendant is liable upon its policy in this case, whether the plaintiff had, at the time of the loss, a maritime lien or not.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.E. 962, 129 N.Y. 490, 42 N.Y. St. Rep. 258, 84 Sickels 490, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cassa-marittima-v-p-ins-co-ny-1892.