General Interest Insurance v. Ruggles

25 U.S. 408, 6 L. Ed. 674, 12 Wheat. 408, 1827 U.S. LEXIS 397
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 12, 1827
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 25 U.S. 408 (General Interest Insurance v. Ruggles) 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
General Interest Insurance v. Ruggles, 25 U.S. 408, 6 L. Ed. 674, 12 Wheat. 408, 1827 U.S. LEXIS 397 (1827).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion o£ the Court.

This is an action on a policy of insurance, bearing date the 9th of February, 1824, for 3,000 dollars, on the sloop . Harriet, lost or not lost, at and from Newport, Rhode Island, to, at, and from, all ports and places to which she may proceed in the United States, during the term of six months, beginning on the 12th of January, 1824. And also. 600 dollars property on board said sloop, at and from Newport to Charleston, or Savannah, or both. The sloop, whilst proceeding on her voyage, and within, the term of six months, to wit, on the 19th of January, was wrecked on Cape -Hatteras, and both vessel and cargo wholly lost. An abandonment was,indue nine, made.,'and a total loss claimed

The case comes before mis Court upon a bill of exceptions taken tp the directions given by the Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts, to the jury, upon the law of the case.

The loss, it will be seen, happened on the 19th of January, and the policy was not effected until the 9th of February. And the question upon the trial íurnéd upon the legal effect and operation of the misconduct of the master after the loss occurred. It was proved that the master, immediately after the loss, for the purpose, and with the desigu. that the owner, not hearing of the loss of the vessel, might effect insurance thereon, did express his intention not to write to the owner, and took measures to prevent the fact of the loss being known; and that, by the conduct of the master in this particular, and in consequence of the measures adopted by him to suppress intelligence of the loss, knowledge thereof had not reached the parties at the time the policy was underwritten.

*410 Upon these facts the Court instructed the jury, that at-though it was the duty of the master to give information of tlle loss to his owner as soon as he reasonably could, yet that, in the present case, when there had been an abandonment in due time fora loss really total, if the owner, at the time of, procuring the insurance, had no knowledge of the loss, but acted with entire good faith, he was not precluded from a recovery. Nor was the policy void by the omission of the master to communicate the information ; or by his acts, in suppressing intelligence of the loss, although such hmissionand acts were wilful, and resulted from the fraudu - lent design to enable the owner to make insurance after the loss; the owner himself not being conusant of such acts and design at the time of procuring the insurance.

And, under this- direction, a verdict was found for the plaintiff for a total loss.

The statement of the case admits fraudulent misconduct on the part of the master, by reason whereof the policy was effected before any knowledge of the loss reached the assured, or the underwriters ; but that the assured was entirely ignorant of this misconduct in the master ; and that, on his part, there was the most perfect good faith in procuring the policy. Here, then, is a loss thrown upon one of two innocent parties 5 and the question is, by which is it to be borne. The determination of this question must depend, in a great measure, if not entirely, upon the relation in which the master stood to the respective parties when this misconduct occurred. If the loss of the vessel had been occasioned by any misconduct of the master short of barratry, whilst in the prosecution of the voyage, and before the loss happened, or if, at the time this misconduct is alleged against him, he was thé exclusive agent of the. owner for any purposes connected with procuring the insurance, the owner must bear the loss. But if, after the loss, the agency of the master ceased, and was at an end, or if he, in judgment of law, became the agent of the underwriters, his misconduct cannot be chargeable to the assured.

The researches of counsel have not furnished the Court with any adjudged cases either in the English or American Courts, which- seem to have decided this question. Some *411 have been referred to, which have been urged as having'a strong bearing upon the point, but which, on examination, will be found distinguishable in some material facts and cireumstances.

The precise point, therefore, now before the Court, may be considered new, but we apprehend is to be governed by the application of principles understood to be well settled in the law of insurance.

It is important to understand with precision and accuracy, the relation in which the master stood to the owner of the vessel, at the time when he was guilty of the fraud and misconduct imputed to him. It was after the loss occurred, and at a time when there had been a total destruction of the subject insured, over which the master’s agency had extended.

The case has been argued on the part of the underwriters, as if the agency growing out of the relation of master and owner of- the vessel, existed at this time; and that the assured was responsible for all consequences arising from the misconduct of the master-,'and that the law would presume, that whatever was known to the master, must be considered as impliedly known to the owner. These propositions may be true, when applied to a state of facts properly admitting of such application; but cannot be true to the extent, to which they have been urged in the present case. If the owner is presumed to know whatever is known to the master, there could be no valid policy effected upon a vessel, after shé was, in point of fact, lost. Such loss must be known to the master; and if it follows, as a legal conclusion, that it is known to the owner, the policy would he void. Nor upon this doctrine, could there ever be any insurance against barratry or any other misconduct of the master; for his own acts must necessarily be known to himself. And, indeed, the principle pressed thus tar would render it impracticable ever to have any guaranty whatever against the fraud or misconduct of an agent, any more than against that of the principal himself.' The knowledge of. the agent, therefore, with respect to the fact of loss, -cannot affect the insurance; nor could the knowledge of the owner himself, with respect to suchjoss, affect the insurance in all *412 ‘-asea. Suppose the owner should himself be the master, or be on board, having left orders with an agent to procure *nsurance *n a 8*ven time, unless he should hear from him, or have information of the arrival of the vessel at her port 0f destination; and the vessel should be lost the day before the policy was underw ritten, and at a distance that rendered it impossible that information thereof could reach the agent, would such a policy he void ? No one could certainly main-lain such a proposition. And it is by no means an unfrequent practice to obtain insurance in this way. It is not, therefore, true as a universal rule, that either the fact of loss, or the knowledge of such fact by the agent or the principal, at the time the policy is procured, will vacate it. But such knowledge must be bought home to some of the parties or agents connected with the business of procuring the insurance ; and then the rule properly applies, which puts the principal in place of the agent, and makes him responsible for his acts. There is, then, the relation of principal and agent in the subject matter of the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
25 U.S. 408, 6 L. Ed. 674, 12 Wheat. 408, 1827 U.S. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-interest-insurance-v-ruggles-scotus-1827.