Hathaway v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins.
This text of 1 F. 197 (Hathaway v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
(orally.) Concerning this case we have had very full conference, and I am now authorized by Brother Krekel to announce that we have reached the same conclusion — that the motion for a new trial must be sustained. The character of the action was this: Certain army officers,, being ordered from one post to another, proceeded, under an order from the war [198]*198department, and shipped their private effects on a government vessel, going up the river. They took out insurance on those effects, the agent of the underwriter knowing that the property was to be shipped on this government vessel. Hence the contention seems to have been, at an early stage of the trial, whether the rules and laws that require vessels to have licensed pilots are applicable to government vessels.
Testimony was received as to the unlicensed pilots navigating the vessel on which the disaster occurred, 'in order to ascertain whether the vessel was seaworthy, under the warranties of marine insurance. Judge Krekel originally held that the mere fact of the officers being unlicensed did not prima facie render the vessel unseaworthy, but it was a matter of fact to be determined by the jury. But in the .course of the trial and after various arguments the doctrine of contributory loss, and general and particular average, was urged to show that inasmuch as the government or a government vessel could not be compelled to contribute if there had been a jettison, for illustration, therefore the whole case was taken out of the body-of the law of insurance as to seaworthiness. But this was not a case involving any such propositions. Yet his instructions were based on that theory. This contract was not between the government and the shipper, nor between the government and the underwriter, but between the shipper and the underwriter ; and all the warranties that follow with regard to seaworthiness obtain. 'Whether the vessel was a government or any other vessel, yet the mere fact that the government vessel does not have a licensed pilot, and is not bound to have one, does not raise presumptions one way or another; it becomes a simple matter of fact, and must be left to the jury. I want to remark that under the motion for a new trial one of the grounds was newly discovered evidence, and that this new trial is not granted on that matter. If that ■had been all, the motion would have been overruled; but it simply rests upon the point already stated. I am instructed to say, by Judge Krekel, that for these reasons the motion must be sustained»
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1 F. 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hathaway-v-st-paul-fire-marine-ins-circtedmo-1880.