Clark v. Protection Ins.

5 F. Cas. 909, 1 Story 109
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedMay 15, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 5 F. Cas. 909 (Clark v. Protection Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Protection Ins., 5 F. Cas. 909, 1 Story 109 (circtdma 1840).

Opinion

STORY, Circuit Justice.

The present policy was underwritten for all the owners upon their joint account; and under such circumstances I agree, that if the policy at its inception, was founded in any illegality (in which one only of the owners (the master,) who is said to be the owner of one eighth, participated, it is utterly void as to all; for the policy is not divisible, so as to be good in part, and bad in part. It must then stand in toto, or not at all. The case of Parkin v. Dick, 2 Camp. 221, is not exactly like the present; but it may serve to illustrate the principle. The policy here is a joint contract for all the owners; and no recovery can be had, unless it is legal as to all of them; for whatever is recovered must go for the joint account. If all the plaintiffs had sued on the policy in their own names, we should see at once, that the objection would be fatal. It can make no difference, that the suit is brought in the name of their agents; for if the principals could not recover, by reason of any illegality, their agents cannot. In Parkin v. Dick, 2 Camp. 221, the policy was on different articles, each package of which was to pay the same average, as if it' were separately insured; and some of the articles specified on the back of the policy were naval stores, the exportation of which was prohibited, without a license from the crown. No such leave was obtained for the voyage; and Lord Ellenborough first, and afterwards the court of king’s bench, held the policy utterly void, as to all the other articles insured, as well as the naval stores. Lord Ellenbor-ough, in delivering the judgment in the court of king’s bench (11 East, 502, 503), said: “The policy is one entire contract on goods to be thereafter specified, to which the underwriters subscribed; and the subsequent specification, by the assured, cannot alter the nature of the contract with respect to the underwriters, so as to sever that, which was originally one entire contract. It has been decided a hundred times, that if a party insure goods altogether in one policy, and some of them are of a nature to make the voyage illegal, the whole contract is illegal and void.” Now, this language applies, a fortiori, to a joint contract, where one party, by reason of • his own illegality, is incapable of recovering See, also, De Begnis v. Armistead, 10 Bing. 107, 110, 111.

But the main questions in the present case are, first, whether there is any illegality in the transactions, which affected or could affect the owners personally, or could justify proceedings in rem against the vessel insured;, and secondly, if there was, whether that illegality was of a nature, which affected or could affect the present policy, or the voyages thereby insured. In respect to the first question, the material facts are, that before the ship sailed from Waidoborough, the master being, as before stated, a part owner, was employed by the other owners to procure the rigging and a part of the equipments of the ship. The master employed his brother, who was about to sail for Pietou in Nova Scotia, to procure there a chain cable for the ship, which was afterwards intended to be brought into the United States, and placed on board of the ship (as I think the subsequent circumstances show) without the payment of duties upon the importation thereof. The chain cable was accordingly bought and shipped on board of an American vessel, concealed under her cargo. The vessel afterwards arrived at New York without the cable’s being entered or landed there; and the cable was thence carried in the same vessel to New Orleans, where it was secretly and without any license, and without the payment of any duties, put on board of the Avon, then lying in that port, and kept concealed on board until her departure from the port, on the voyage for Liverpool, during which she was lost. The statement of facts further admits, that there is no evidence, that any of the owners, except the master, were privy to, or had any knowledge of these doings, or of the master’s intention.

The question, then, is, whether the taking on board of this chain cable, at New Orleans, under the above circumstances, was an illegal act, for which the owners were immediately liable by a suit in personam, or the vessel herself was subject to forfeiture. The argument for the insurance company is, that the transaction was within the provisions of the 27th and 28th sections of the duty collection act of 1700, c. 12S, and also against the provisions of the 50th and 60th sections of the same act It seems to me, that the twenty-seventh and twenty-eighth sections of the act may at once be laid out of the case. The former applies only to vessels, which unlade a part of their cargo within the limits of some district of the United States, or within four leagues of the coast thereof, and before such ship or vessel shall have come to the proper place for the discharge thereof. The 28th section applies only to the vessel, which shall have received the same goods so unladen. So that it is apparent, that the forfeitures and penalties do not cover a case, like the present, where the cable was unladen after the arrival of the vessel at her proper port of discharge, and there taken on board of the Avon. This construction has nothing new in it It was many years ago adopted [913]*913by this court in the case of The Industry [Oase No. 7,028].

The 50th section of the act is, however, directly in point. It prohibits the unlading of any goods brought in any vessel from a foreign place, without a special license or permit of the collector, or other proper officer of the customs; and if they are unladen without such a license or permit, and are of the value of four hundred dollars, the vessel, from which they are unladen, is forfeited. But this forfeiture attaches only to the un-lading vessel, and not to the receiving vessel. The Industry [supra]. So that under this section of the act the Avon was not subject to any forfeiture. But there is a clause in the same section, which imposes a pecuniary penalty of four hundred dollars upon the master, and any other persons, who shall knowingly be concerned or aiding in such unlading, or in removing, storing, or otherwise securing the goods. The master of the Avon was clearly within the reach of this prohibition and penalty; for he was knowingly concerned in the unlawful unlading of the iron cable. The sixty-nintli section of the same act, also, seems to me clearly to cover the present case, and to inflict a pecuniary penalty on the master of the Avon. It provides, that if any person shall conceal, or buy any goods, knowing them to be liable to seizure under the act, he shall forfeit and pay a sum double the amount in value of the goods so concealed or purchased. The state of facts shows a most studied concealment of the iron cable by the master of the Avon, and, therefore, brings him clearly within the reach of the penalty.. But then, there is no forfeiture inflicted upon the vessel, or other vehicle, or the store, in which the concealment takes place.

The result, therefore, is, that in the present case the Avon was not subjected to any forfeiture whatsoever in rem; but the act of smuggling and concealing the iron cable was illegal, and the master of the Avon was concerned in such smuggling and concealment, and personally liable to the pecuniary penalties prescribed therefor. I adopt the doctrine of Lord Holt, in Bartlett v. Vinor, Carth. 252, and of Lord Chief Justice Tindal, in De Begnis v. Armistead, 10 Bing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 F. Cas. 909, 1 Story 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-protection-ins-circtdma-1840.