Leavenworth v. Delafield

1 Cai. Cas. 573
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1804
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1 Cai. Cas. 573 (Leavenworth v. Delafield) 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
Leavenworth v. Delafield, 1 Cai. Cas. 573 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1804).

Opinion

Livingston, J.

delivered the opinion of the court. It is matter of surprise that questions, which must frequently have occurred in so commercial a country as Great Britain, and where so large a capital is employed in insurance, have not been decided in any of her courts. We must therefore, endeavor to discover what is reasonable and most conformable to the ancient laws and usages of other commercial nations; for, where precedents are not to be found, the practice of such countries may be deemed the best guide on the subject of maritime law.

We are, then, first, to determine whether wages and provisions, during a detention after capture, form a general average, or fall on the freight only ?

When it is considered that capture is a disaster which generally happens without fault of the owner of goods or vessel, but by superior force, against which no human precaution can always provide, and that the expenses, here in dispute, are incurred in consequence of this vis major, or casus fortuities, and for the common benefit of all, it is not easy to assign a reason why they should be borne by one of the' parties in misfortune rather another. Of little advantage would it be to claim a valuable property, [723]*723after ^capture, unless the mariners remained for [*576] the purpose of proceeding to the port of discharge in case of liberation. It would otherwise, if acquitted, be exposed to perish, or be sold at great disadvantage. It was said on the argument, that the master was not obliged to detain his - crew. Whether it be compulsory on him. to Eo so or not, is of no moment. It is sufficient that he has done it in the present ease; that he has acted with good faith, and that such detention was manifestly for the general weal. It may well be doubted, however, whether it be not obligatory on him to keep them, at least, a reasonable time; for, idle would it be, in many cases, to labor for a recovery of the property unless it could afterwards be conveyed to its intended port. The cargo, in this case, might have been sacrificed in England, if the crew had been immediately discharged. Nor is it just, as it- respects this useful class of men, instantly to dismiss them in a foreign country after an accident of this kind, without affording them an opportunity of knowing the fate of the property, and a chance of defending and receiving their wages. At any rate, the objection comes awkwardly from any of those who have arrived a certain benefit from the detention of this crew, without which there would probably have been a total instead of a partial loss. But without recurring to first principles, or searching for precedents, it is not matter of contract between the different classes of underwriters to regard expenses of this kind as a subject of general contribution ? • Every policy contains a clause that in case of loss or misfortune, if it shall be necessary for the assured, his factors, servants or assigns, to sue, labor and travel for, in and about the safeguard and recovery of the property,” the several underwriters “ promise to contribute to the charge thereof, according to the quantity of the sum by them insured.” Now, if a charge for exiru wages and provisions be one, as it certainly is, which accrues in', consequence of the labor and travel thus enjoined, and be' absolutely necessary to give [724]*724effect to such pursuit, the parties to the differ en tinsurances have consented to its being apportioned among them.

In conformity with this_ stipulation is the practice of most of the commercial nations whose usages are known to us.

*Bicard, who treats of the commerce of Amsterdam, and after him Beawes, in his Lex Mercatoria, says, If a ship be taken by force and carried into some port, and the men remain on board to take care of and reclaim her, the wages and expenses of the ship’s company, during the arrest, shall be brought into general average.” Page 150. For this rule the author just cited assigns this very obvious reason: “ As the crew,” says he, “ remained on board, during an endeavor to reclaim her, these expenses were occasioned with the sole view of preserving the ship and cargo for their proprietors.”

In England it is settled, that if a ship be obliged to put into port to repair, and this be necessary for the safety of all, the charges of unloading, reloading and taking care of the cargo, and also the wages and provisions of the workmen hired to repair her, become a general average. Da Costa v. Newman, 2 D. & E. 407. The accident in the case of Da Casta v. Newman had happened to the ship alone, and might, ;n some measure, have been owing to her feeble or impaired condition. It would have been more reasonable, therefore, that her owner, or underwriter, should have defrayed all these expenses himself, than in cases where the peril falls at once, as well on the goods as on the vessel, without room to impute fault or neglect to the owner of either. In such a case, then, it can hardly be doubted that the court of king’s bench, to be consistent, would consider every consequential expense for the preservation of the whole, a general average. In Da Costa and Newman, the crew having been dismissed before the vessel was repaired, it became unnecessary to decide by whom a charge for seamen’s wages and provisons was to be borne.

In France the extra wages of a crew, when a vessel puts [725]*725into port and remains there to avoid an enemy, are a gross average. 1 Bmerig. 556. The same author informs us that all bona fide expenses, to obtain the release of a vessel, become a general average, (Vandenheuvel v. United, Ins. Co., 1 Johns. Rep. 406,) if the property be released ; and, after quoting the same passage from Ricard, which has been cited from Beawes, he observes that in ^France, [*578] the question has • uniformly been thus decided whenever it occurred. Ibid. 631.'

As we are of opinion, therefore, that the sums expended in this way, during a detention which follows a capture, are to be reimbursed ratably by all,

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Bluebook (online)
1 Cai. Cas. 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leavenworth-v-delafield-nysupct-1804.