Goold v. Shaw

1 Johns. Cas. 293
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1800
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 Johns. Cas. 293 (Goold v. Shaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goold v. Shaw, 1 Johns. Cas. 293 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1800).

Opinion

Radcliff, J.

Notwithstanding the able discussion this case has received, I, cannot perceive any grounds on which to change the opinion that I entertained at the trial. Yt is expressly stated, that the injuries received by the ship, might have been repaired at Martinique, for less than half her value. The- plaintiffs, therefore, cannot recover for a total loss, on the principle that a moiety of the value of the ship was lost.. Their claim for a total loss must depend on the question, whether the defendant, being an ■ underwriter on the ship, shall be affected by the loss of the cargo, occasioned by the necessity of sale, in consequence of the perishable [356]*356nature of the articles, and not- in consequence of an actual-injury sustained, by means of any of the perils' insured against.

In general, it is ■ true, that the subjects of insurance are intimately connected, and the perils attending the one most commonly affect the other. The sources of danger are, in most instances, the same, and the policies' on each indiscriminately insure agárnst. .' the same, risks.. But [*295] although *the same dangers await them, they are considered as distinct and independent of each other, and liable to different ,"results. The same cause, or occasion of loss-may affect them in different degrees,- and entitle the insured on each to a different measure of compensation, as sometimes to recover on the one for a total, and on the other, for a partial loss .only. Thus the ship, in a technical sense, may be totally lost, and’the freight pro rata, for the greater part of the voyage- be saved. So :the ship, or both the ship and her freight may be lost, and the cargo saved, by being conveyed without delay, in another ship, to the port of destination. This,was the case in Plantamour Staples, (T. R. 611, n. a,) in. which the insured on the cargo, recovered for an average loss only. In like manner, the freight and cargo, or either, may be wholly lost, and the ship, saved, as in case of a capture, and a detention of the cargo, and the immediate release of the ship before an abandonment. ) . ' . ' "

These instances show, that'although liable to.the same perils, the consequences to each subject of insurance, maybe essentially different. , It is, therefore, .necessary in every case. of a loss,-in order to determine the insurer’sResponsibility, to inquire to what extent the subject insured -is affected. He is liable for that, and no. more. According to-the terms of the contract,- his responsibility can extend no farther. It was never imagined that an insurer upon either ship, freight, or cargo, could be held liable for a loss sustained by the siibjects which he did not insure, and if not directly liable, I think he cannot be, indirectly affected by any accident th at attends them.- If the subject insured be a ship, he undertakes, that [357]*357she shall be in a condition to perform the voyage, or in the words of Mr. Justice Buller, he insures the ship for the voyage. If the ship be disabled, he is liable, according to the circumstances, for a total or a partial loss, but he is liable in relation to the ship only, and he cannot be affected by the state of the cargo which he did not insure. On these principles, I'am of opinion, that the plaintiffs in this action are not entitled to recover *for a total loss. The [*296] ship was capable of being repaired at a reasonable expense, and within a reasonable time, and, therefore, in a capacity to perform the voyage.

Although the object of the voyage was defeated, it was not on account of the accidents which attended the ship, and, therefore, not by any peril assumed by the defendant. The rule that when a voyage is defeated, the insured may abandon and recover for a total loss is a sound one, when applied to the subject insured. The cases which have been cited, I think extend no farther. - .

In Hamilton v. Mendez, (2 Burr. 1198,) in which this rule was adopted, the insurance was on ship and cargo, and. Lord Mansfield, in delivering the opinion of the court, speaks indiscriminately of both ; it was unnecessary in that case, to distinguish between them, for the loss was the result of a capture and recapture, and the circumstances relative to the ship and cargo were in all respects the same.

In the case of Goss v. Withers, (2 Burr. 683,) there were two distinct policies on ship and cargo, and the injuries to each were distinctly considered.

The case of Cazelet v. Barbe, (1 T. R. 187,) also appears to have been governed by the'same distinction. That was an insurance on the ship only, and the question was, whether the insured could recover for a total or a partial loss. The principles on which that case was considered, and the determination of the court related wholly to the loss sustained by the ship, without the least reference to the cargo. None of the other cases that have been mentioned, contradict this rule, and although the question does not appear to have been di[358]*358rectly decided, I think the reason and justice of the case are decisively in favor of the defendant.

But in the present instance, it has been contended that the underwriter on the ship shall be affected not only by an injury to the cargo, occasioned by the accidents which attended-the ship, but shall also be answerable for the loss of the voyage resulting from the perishable nature of the goods [*297] which remained unhurt. If his responsibility can *be carried to this extent, it appears to me that a new course of proceeding ought to be adopted in the practice of insuring. If the underwriter on the ship can be affected by the nature of the cargo, he ought to be informed with respect to its quality, and it ought to be required of the insured, in every instance, to disclose to him the particular commodities to be laden on board the ship to be insured. It would certainly be material to the risk, and affect the amount of the premium, and without such disclosure the policy ought to be discharged. So in the case of articles commonly treated as perishable, it would be necessary that the underwriter on the ship should protect himself from the losses usually provided against, by the memorandum at the foot of cargo policies ; otherwisé, if a cargo of such articles, by a trifling accident to the ship, should happen to perish, the insurer on the ship, being affected by the state of the cargo, would be liable for a total loss, and at the same time, the insurer upon the cargo itself, might not be liable at all. Yet a memorandum of this kind to a policy on the ship alone, I believe was never known. Other difficulties of a similar nature may be easily conceived, and-the extent of them cannot be foreseen.' They seem to show that the doctrine- contended for, and the consequences which would flow from it, were never contemplated by the parties to an insurance. As far as I can trace those consequences, they present insuperable obstacles in almost every situation of the parties, and I can adopt no rule more simple in itself, and which appears to me more agreeable to the intent and just construction of the contract, than to consider the losses attending the different subjects of in[359]*359surance, as distinct and independent of each other, as the policies themselves are distinct.

I am, therefore, of opinion- in the • present case, that the ship being in a condition tojoe repaired, and in a capacity to-perform the voyage, the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover for a total, but for a partial loss only, and that a new trial ought, therefore, to be awarded.

*Lewis, J.

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