General Mutual Insurance v. Sherwood

55 U.S. 351, 14 L. Ed. 452, 14 How. 351, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 451
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 55 U.S. 351 (General Mutual Insurance v. Sherwood) 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 Mutual Insurance v. Sherwood, 55 U.S. 351, 14 L. Ed. 452, 14 How. 351, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 451 (1853).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CURTIS

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of -New York.

The action was assumpsit on a time policy of insurance, subscribed by 'the plaintiffs in error, upon the brig Emily, during one year from the seventeenth day of October, 1843, for the sum of eight thousand dollars, the vessel béing valued.at the sum of sixteen thousand dollars. The policy, described in the declaration, assumed to insure against the usual sea perils, among which is barratry of the master and mariners. The declaration avers, that during the prosecution of h voyage, within the policy, while on the high seas, and near thé entrance, of the harbor of the city of New York, by and through the want of a proper look-out, by the mate of the said brig, and, by and through the erroneous order of the chief mate, who was stationed on the top-gallant forecastle of the said brig, who saw the schooner, hereinafter named, and cried out to the man at the wheel, “helm hard down — luff”—whereas, he ought not to ha,ve given the said order; and, by and .through the negligence and fault of the said brig Emily, the said brig ran into a schooner called the Virginian, and so injured her that she Sank, whereby the said brig Emily became liable 'to the owners of the' said schooner and her cargo, to make good their damages; which liability was a charge and encumbrance On the said brig. The declaration then proceeds to aver, that the brig was libelled, by the owners' of the schooner and her cargo, in the District Court of the United States; that a decree was there made, whereby it was adjudged, “ Thatthe'collisionin the pleadings mentioned, and’ the damages and- loss incurred by. the libellants, in consequence thereof, occurred by the negligence or faiilt of the said brig, and that the libellants were entitled to recover their damages by them sustained thereby;”’ that the.same having been assessed, a decre.e therefor was made by the District Court, which, on appeal, was affirmed by the Circuit Court, which found, “ That the hands, on. board the Emily, failed to. keep a proper look-out, and, that the said brig might have avoided, the collision, by the use of proper caution, skill, and vigilante.” The declaration further avers, that the plaintiff has paid divers sums *362 of money, to satisfy this decree and the expenses of making the defence, amounting'to the sum of eight thousand dollars.

This statement of the substance of the declaration, presents the question which has been here argued, arid sufficiently shows how it arose; for, although there was a demurrer to. the first two counts in the declaration, and a trial upon the general issue .pleaded to the other counts, and a bill of exceptions taken to the ruling at the trial, yet the same question is presented by each mode of trial, and that, question is, whether, under a policy insuring against the usual perils, including barratry, the underwriters are liable to repay to th.e insured, damages paid by him to the owners of another vessel and cargo, suffered in a collision occasioned by the negligence of the master or mariners of the vessel insured.

The great and increasing internal navigation of the 'United States, carried on over long distances, through the channels of rivers and other comparatively narrow waters, where the dar ger of collisions,, and the frequency of their occurrence, are much ■greater than on maritime voyages, renders the respective rights of underwriters and insured, growing out of such occurrences, of more moment in this than in any other civilized country; and the court has considered the inquiry presented by this case, with the care which its difficulty and its importance demand.

.In examining, for the .first time, any question under a policy of insurance, it is necessary to ascertain whether the contract has received a practical construction, by merchants and underwriters; not through any partial or lo'cal usages, but by the general consent of the mercantile world. Such a practical construction, when. clearly apparent, is of great weight, not only because the parties to the policy may be presumed to have contracted in reference to it, but because such a practice is very high evidence of the general convenience ana substantial e'quity of it, as a rule... This is true of most commercial contracts; but it is especially true of a policy of insurance, which has been often declared to be' an “ obscure, incoherent, and very strange instrument,” and, “generally more informal than any other brought into a court of justice: ” (Per Buffer, J., 4 T. R. 210; Mansfield, C. J., 4 Taunt. 380; Marshal, C. J., 6 Cr. 45; Lord Mansfield, 1 Bur. 347); but which, notwithstanding the number Uhd variety of the interests which it embraces, and of the events by which it is affected, has been reduced to much certainty, by the long practice of. acute and well-informed' men in cpmmefcigd countries; by the decisions of courts in America arid in JEngland,.and by able writers on the subject, in this and other 'Countries. .

.Arid it should not be forgotten, that, not-only in the introduc-. *363 tion of this branch of law into England, by Lord Mansfield, but i ^ its progress since, both there and here, a constant reference has been had to the usage of merchants, and the science of insurance law has been made and kept a practical and convenient system, by ayoidihg subtle and refined reasoning, however logical it may seem to be, and looking, for safe practical rules.

Now, although cases like the present must have very frequently occurred, we are not aware of any evidence, that underwriters have paid such claims, or that, down to the time when one somewhat resembling it was rejected by the Court of King’s Bench, in De Vaux v. Salvador, (5 Ad. and Ellis,) decided in 1836, such a claim was ever made. And we believe that, if skilful' merchants, or underwriters, or lawyers, accustomed to the practice of the commercial law, had'been asked whether the insurers on one vessel were liable for damage doné to another vessel, not insured by the policy, by a collision occasioned by the negligence of those on board the vessel insured, they would, down to a very recent period, have answered, unhesitatingly, in the negative.-

As we shall presently show, such, for- a long time, was the opinion of the writers bn insurance, on the continent of Europe, and in England and America. And this, alone, would be strong proof of the general Understanding and practice of those connected with this subject.

Butj although this practical interpretation of the contract is entitled to much weight, we, do not consider it perfectly decisive. It may be, that, by applying to the case the settled principles of the law of insurance, the loss is within the policy; and, that it' has not heretofore been found, to be so, because an exact attention has not been given to the precise question. .Or, it may'be, that the weight of recent authority, and the propriety of rendering the commercial law as uniform as its necessities, should constrain us to adopt the rule contended for by the defendant in .error. And, therefore, we proceed to- examine the principles and authorities, bearing .on this question.

Upon principle, the true inquiries are, what was the loss, and what was its cause ? ■ •

The.

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Bluebook (online)
55 U.S. 351, 14 L. Ed. 452, 14 How. 351, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-mutual-insurance-v-sherwood-scotus-1853.