Hernandez v. Sun Mut. Ins. Co.

12 F. Cas. 34, 6 Blatchf. 317, 1869 U.S. App. LEXIS 1315
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedMarch 19, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 12 F. Cas. 34 (Hernandez v. Sun Mut. Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hernandez v. Sun Mut. Ins. Co., 12 F. Cas. 34, 6 Blatchf. 317, 1869 U.S. App. LEXIS 1315 (circtsdny 1869).

Opinion

BLATCHFORD, District Judge.

No claim is made in this suit as to the raisins. The sole question is as to the 2,179 boxes of lemons. It is contended, on the part of the plaintiffs, that the body of the policy is not a single contract of insurance on 6,000 boxes of lemons, and that the endorsement is not a single contract of insurance on 260 boxes of lemons, but that the body of the policy contains a separate insurance on each box of the 6,000 boxes named in it, and that the endorsement contains a separate insurance on each box of the 250 boxes named in it Under the printed memorandum clause in the policy, these lemons, being fruits, and being warranted by the assured, by such clause, free from average, unless general, if the 6,000 boxes were insured in gross by the body of the policy, and the 260 boxes were insured in gross by the endorsement, the defendants would not be liable for the two several lots of 2,024 boxes and 165 boxes, physically totally lost, others of each of the two lots having been saved. But the plaintiffs rely on the written portions of the policy and of the endorsement, to take the case out of the general rule, of law, and to show that the insurance was not-of the 6,000 boxes in gross, and of the 250 boxes in gross. So much of the written portion of the body of the policy as describes the subject insured, and the amount of risk taken, states nothing except that $14,300 is insured on 6,000 boxes of lemons, with the words added, “free of particular average, but liable for loss of part by jettison.” So much of the written portion of the endorsement as .describes the subject insured, and the amount of risk taken, states nothing except that $1,-062 is insured on 250 boxes of lemons, with the words added, “free of particular average; otherwise, conditions as within.” These insurances can mean only, that 6,000 boxes of lemons are insured in one lot, and 250 boxes of lemons are insured in another lot, each lot free of particular average, except that if any part of either lot, that is, any number of boxes in either lot, is lost by jettison, the insurer is to be liable therefor. The words “free of particular average,” written in, in both the body of the policy and the endorsement, as to the lemons, mean the same thing, and are to the same effect as the words “free from average, unless general,” in the printed memorandum clause, in regard to the lemons, as fruits, and import that the contract is, that the insurer is to be liable for no loss of any part of. the 6,000 boxes less than the whole, or any part of the 250 boxes less than the whole. It is specially provided, however, that the insurer shall be liable for a loss by jettison of a less number of the 6,000 boxes than-the whole, and of a-less number of the 250 boxes than the whole. But for such special provision, the words, “free of particular average,” would apply as well to a loss by jettison as to any other loss. Thus far, then, there would seem to be no room for controversy as to the terms of the contract, and nothing to indicate an intention, by either party, to have an insurance made on any portion of the 6,000 boxes less than the whole, or any portion of the 250 boxes less than the whole, in regard to any loss, except a loss by jettison.

What, then, is there in any other part of the contract to indicate any different intention? The clause solely relied on' by the plaintiffs, to show- such different intention, is. the written valuation clause, in the body of the policy, and also in the endorsement, valuing the lemons at $4.25 pec box. They claim that such valuation clause indicates, that the insurance was distributive, and on each box of lemons, while they do not contend that the fact that the lemons were contained in separate boxes, was alone sufficient to create- a separate insurance on each box. Reasoning on principle, it would hardly answer to admit the valuation of each box in this case as conclusive evidence of an intention to insure each box separately; and that is what must be done if the claim of the plaintiffs is allowed. Other reasons occur why a valuation of each box of lemons, as well as a valuation of each box, each half box, and each quarter , box of raisins, and of each bale of almonds, may have been inserted. The property' was shipped on the 13th of September, at Malaga, the vessel sailed from Malaga on the 22d of September, and the insurances were effected on the 7th and 10th of October. The valuation of each separate package may very well have been inserted with a view to calculating the return premium in case it should turn out that less than 6,250 boxes of lemons, or less than, the specified number of packages of raisins- and almonds, had been shipped, or the return premium provided for .in case of the-existence of a prior insurance on the property, and which prior insurance, as appears from the evidence, in fact existed in this-case. So, also, in case of a loss by jettison of some of the boxes of lemons, the valuation of each box of lemons was important, to-fix the measure of the insurer’s liability. The valuation did not correspond with the sum insured, as to the body of the policy, in. respect to either of the articles insured; and, therefore, the valuation, per box, of the-lemons a'nd the raisins insured by the body of the policy, could not be arrived at by dividing the sum insured by the total number of boxes. The valuation of the 6,000 boxes, of lemons, at $4.25 per box, was $25,500, while the sum insured thereon was $14,300; and, if the sum so insured had been taken, as the valuation, in the absence of the valuation at $4.25 per box, it would have given a valuation of $2.38 per box. The valuation, of the 4,000 boxes of raisins, at $1.90 per box, was $7,600 while the sum insured thereon was $3,800, which sum, if taken as the valuation, would, in the absence of the valuation at $1.90 per box. have given a valuation of 93 cents per box.

[37]*37Moreover, the view urged on the part of the plaintiffs, leads to some results which it is impossible to believe could have been contemplated by the parties. The insurance, if •distributive, and on each package, must have been made on each quarter' box of raisins; that is, on each forty-seven and a half’ cents" worth of raisins. The insurance, on the raisins is made “subject to ten per cent, average.” By that, the insurer was not liable for any partial loss of any quantum of raisins insured, unless such loss should amount to ten per cent, of the value of such quantum, but the insurer was to be liable for such partial loss, if it should .amount to such ten per cent Now, if forty-seven and a half cents’ worth of raisins was separately insured the insurer was made liable for a loss amounting to as little as four cents and three-quarters. With a printed memorandum clause such as is found in this policy, it requires dear and definite language to make a contract which shall take these fruits so wholly out of that dause, and out of the freedom from particular average therein stipulated, as to require a separate average on each one of a quantity of small packages, each valued at not more than forty-seven and a half cents. In regard to a loss of lemons by jettison, where the entire package would be thrown overboard, and presumably lost as a totality, the contract is dear; and the expression of a liability for a loss of part by jettison, exdudes the idea that the insurer was to be liable for a loss of part by any other peril, especially in connection with the written clause, “free of particular average,” and the like dause in the printed memorandum, in regard to the lemons.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 F. Cas. 34, 6 Blatchf. 317, 1869 U.S. App. LEXIS 1315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hernandez-v-sun-mut-ins-co-circtsdny-1869.