Loud v. Federal Insurance

161 N.W. 928, 195 Mich. 60, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 654
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1917
DocketDocket No. 40
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 161 N.W. 928 (Loud v. Federal Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loud v. Federal Insurance, 161 N.W. 928, 195 Mich. 60, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 654 (Mich. 1917).

Opinion

Stone, J.

The bill of complaint herein was filed to set aside a compromise of a marine insurance loss on the alleged ground of false representations and fraudulent concealment, to reinstate the written abandonment of the steamer in question to the underwriters as a constructive total loss, and .to recover as damages the full amount of insurance.

On May 21, 1910, the plaintiff herein was the owner of a steamer known as the “J. B. Ketcham 2d.” On that day, while on a voyage from Brimley, Mich., near Sault Ste. Marie, to Niagara Falls, N. Y., laden with a cargo of 730 cords of pulp wood, the steamer stranded and sank by reason of a dense fog, at the entrance to the West Neebish channel in the St. Mary’s river. [62]*62The plaintiff was then the owner of various policies of hull insurance, issued and delivered to him by the several defendants in an aggregate amount of $48,500, on all of which the premiums had been paid. On margin of each policy in large type appeared the following:

“Any casualty to be immediately reported to R. Parry-Jones, Perry-Payne Building, Cleveland, Ohio.”

At the time of the wreck, the plaintiff was also the owner of $9,000 of so-called disbursement insurance which was payable to the owner in the event of an actual or constructive total loss of the steamer. Some of the defendant companies which issued hull policies on the steamer also issued disbursement policies. Each disbursement policy contained this clause, viz.:

“A total and/or constructive total loss paid by insurers on hull, to be a total loss under this policy.”

The hull policies in question stipulated that the agreed value of the boat was $48,500, and that in case of a wreck the boat might be abandoned to the underwriters as a constructive total loss, if the amount of the loss exceeded 75 per cent, of said $48,500, or $36,-375. It is the claim of the plaintiff that according to the conceded principles of marine insurance law, the amount of loss depended on what, in a high degree of probability, it would have cost to recover, salve, repair, and restore the boat to' its condition prior to the accident, free and clear of all claims, burdens, and liens against it for recovery, restoration, salvage, and repair, etc.; that the high probabilities of such cost were those in contemplation at the- time of the written abandonment of the wrecked boat by the owner to the insurance companies. The fraud complained of in the bill arose out of the claimed misrepresentations and concealment by the defendants of the amount of salv[63]*63age claims to which the boat became subject by reason of the wreck, and while in possession of the underwriters; that as a result of such fraud, plaintiff had been induced to withdraw his abandonment of his steamer as a constructive total loss, to compromise his claims for total recovery for a smaller amount, and to assume certain salvage burdens to which the boat became subject by reason of the wreck. .

The Ketcham was 212 feet long, and had a 40-foot beam-. At the point where the boat sank, the channel was about 300 feet wide, and the boat lay lengthwise, at ’right angles across 'it, thus preventing navigation of the channel. The boat lay on a rock, and her deck was about 8 feet below the surface of the water. At the time of the wreck, C. M. Townsend, colonel of engineers, was stationed by the United States War Department at Detroit. His assistant, L. C. Sabin, was stationed at the Soo. Colonel Townsend, through Mr. Sabin, immediately took charge of the wreck, throwing the deckload overboard, and endeavoring to straighten the boat in the channel so as to permit navigation. Colonel Townsend acted under the provisions of section 20 of the United States river and harbor act, approved March 3, 1899 (U. S. Comp. Stat. 1913, § 9925). That section provided for the removal of boats which had sunk in navigable waters so as to block interstate commerce. It gave the Secretary of War, or his agent, the right to take possession of the wreck, and remove it from the channel. The act stipulated “that the expense of the removal of any such obstruction as aforesaid shall be a charge against such craft and cargo,” and also provided that if the owner failed to reimburse the United States within 30 days after notice, the officer -or agent of the United States might sell the craft or cargo, or any part thereof not destroyed in removal, and cover the proceeds thereof into the treasury of the United States.

[64]*64Mr. Sabin ordered three tugs of the Great Lakes Towing Company to the wreck. These tugs tried to pull the boat straight in the channel, but failed to do so. Thereupon Colonel Townsend ordered the Reid Wrecking Company, Limited, of Sarnia, Ontario, to straighten the boat in the channel. That company sent four tugs and four pontoons with apparatus, divers, and crew, etc. They arrived at the wreck on May 24, 1910. The current at the place of the wreck was six miles or better an hour. The effect, of the 212-foot boat stranded across the 300-foot channel, was to increase the current. During the operations there were stiff northwesterly winds and gales which increased the current from 100 to 125 per cent., and at times knocking down the divers. It is the claim of the plaintiff that it was necessary to swing the boat around and straighten it in the channel in order to raise it; that during the operations the Reid Wrecking Company had in mind the ultimate raising and salvage of the boat. The men worked day and night, and finally, on June 4, 1910, the boat was swung straight in the channel. The bill of the Reid Wrecking Company, hereinafter referred to as the government bill was $18,459. During the subsequent negotiations for a compromise, this government bill was in dispute. Mr. Goulder, attorney for defendants, claimed that section 20 of the United States act, above referred to, was unconstitutional, which Mr. Oakes, attorney for plaintiff denied. Mr. Goulder, however, conceded that a portion of $18,459 expended in straightening the boat in the channel would have been incurred necessarily in straightening and raising the boat in the channel to take it to port. Upon the hearing Mr. Oakes testified that Mr. Goulder conceded $10,000 in this manner. Mr. Goulder testified that $8,000 were his figures. Mr. Oakes testified that in the negotiations he stated that he was prepared to show that between $12,000 and [65]*65$16,000 was a proper charge,- even if the law were unconstitutional.

On June 4, 1910, and after the completion of the government job, the defendants (through R. Parry-Jones, their agent duly authorized so to do) made a contract with the Reid Wrecking Company to salve the boat and take it to its destination, Tonawanda, N. Y., upon the terms expressed in the following communication :

“Cleveland, Ohio, June 4/10.
“Reid Wrecking Co.,
“Port Huron, Mich.
“Ketcham. We -accept your offer to salve Ketcham and cargo now in vessel and deliver at destination for $12,000, or 50% of salved value at underwriter’s option, no cure no pay, you clearing channel of wreckage to satisfaction of local authorities.
“R. Parry-Jones.”
Mr. Oakes testified:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

General Discount Corp. v. Schram
47 F. Supp. 845 (E.D. Michigan, 1942)
Miller v. McGinnis
280 N.W. 96 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1938)
Scholz v. Boening
270 N.W. 222 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 N.W. 928, 195 Mich. 60, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loud-v-federal-insurance-mich-1917.