Louisville Insurance v. Monarch

36 S.W. 563, 99 Ky. 578, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 24, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 36 S.W. 563 (Louisville Insurance v. Monarch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville Insurance v. Monarch, 36 S.W. 563, 99 Ky. 578, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 118 (Ky. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

JUDGE PAYNTER

delivered the opinion or the court.

Monarch & Cate owned certain woolen mill machinery, wool and other goods, and desired to transport it from Rumsey, Ky., on the Creen river, to Owensboro, on the Ohio river. Their purpose was to ship it by water, and to do so it would have to be placed upon a boat, carried down Creen river to its mouth; thence up the Ohio river to Owensboro.

On the 5th day of March, 1892, the Louisville Insurance Co. issued to them on the property a marine insurance policy to the amount of $5,000. The adventures and perils which the company agreed to bear and take upon itself were the “unavoidable dangers of the . . . rivers.” . . .

The property was valued at $15.000, and here it may be added that that amount is the conceded value of it. The steamboat Ceorge Rtrecker, under a contract which Monarch & Cate made with her owner, Capt. Crammond, was to carry the property from Rumsey to Owensboro. The policy covered the property during the voyage.

[586]*586The property was received on board of the boat. On the morning- of the 8th day of March, 1892, the boat started on the voyage, and at a point between ten and eleven miles below Rumsey she sank in the middle of the river, where the water was forty feet deep, entirely submerging her, except the chimneys and the top of the pilot house. After her peril was discovered by the crew she sank so rapidly that it was impossible to get her to the shore. There was a rise in the river soon after she sank, and she remained submerged for several months.

This action was brought by Monarch & Cate to recover of the company the amount of the policy because of the alleged total loss of the property.

The answer denies that there was a total loss of the property ; that the sinking of the boat was a peril against which it insured; that there was an abandonment of the property or any part of it. The company alleged the loss was occasioned by the willful, fraudulent and gross misconduct, negligence and carelessness of the owners, officers, agents,, servants and seamen in charge of the boat.

There are other matters pleaded in the answer which at. this point are not necessary to mention. The trial resulted in a judgment for the plaintiffs for $5,000.

Many errors, the appellant claims, were committed on the-trial of the case which entitles it to a reversal and a new trial. We will consider some of the questions thus raised,, somewhat in the order in which counsel discuss them in their briefs.

Immediately or soon after the boat sank the company was notified of it. It sent its agent, Captain Harpham, to the wreck to see its condition, with the view of recovering the property under “sue and labor” clause of the policy* [587]*587which fixed the proportion of expense that should be borne respectively by the insured and company.

It is insisted that the court erred in permitting Cate to tell, upon his redirect examination, what Harpham had said to him about the wreck after he had left it. Harpham was sent by the company to act for it in an effort to recover the property. Cate’s redirect examination related to what Harpham said as to the meaning of the policy, as to the expense of recovering the property, and the interest each party would have in such as was recovered.

While what Harpham said as to the meaning of the policy was immaterial, as both parties conceded their rights were to be determined by its provisions, yet the court told the jury substantially that, if plaintiffs were entitled to recovery at all, they were entitled to recover the full amount, $5,000; and also that the company was not entitled +o be allowed the expense it incurred before it determined to deny its liability for the loss, and abandoned its purpose to recover the property.

In view of the conclusions of the court the evidence of Cate in his redirect examination could not have and did not prejudice the rights of the company.

It is complained that the court erred in permitting Monarch to tell, when recalled, what Captain Harpham had said to Shallcros's. Shallcross was the agent of the company; he was in its office looking after its affairs; talked with Monarch about the settlement of the claim; directed the movements of Harpham in his preparation to recover the property; ordered Harpham to discontinue his preparation to recover the property; looked after the payment of the expense Harpham had incurred; he appeared m court aiding in this case; made an affidavit for a continuance. aDd verified pleadings therein.

[588]*588There, is no proof in the record showing he was an agent with limited powers. Under these circumstances, it fully appeared that he was authorized to speak for the company in the adjustment of the claim in controversy. If he chose to tell Monarch in a conversation about the adjustment of the claim that he had certain information from another agent of the company, it was not error to permit Monarch tc prove the entire conversation which they had. Besides if Shal'lcross was the agent of the company without limited powers, as. he appears to have been, then this testimony was competent as tending to prove that Harpham was authorized by the company to adjust the loss with Cate.

There was an investigation made in the office of hull inspectors at Evansville, Ind., as to the facts attending the disaster; the testimony, of certain witnesses was taken and reduced to writing. The defendant offered as evidence the so-called' duplicates of this evidence. Monarch and Cate were no parties to that proceeding, and were not even present when it took place.

A mere statement of the facts shows that the court did not err in refusing to admit them as evidence.

Captain Crammond testified that the boat had a sufficient number of officers and men to make the trip. It was proper to admit this because it appears that the boat was to make the trip in daylight, and that, therefore, an additional crew was not needed. This testimony would tend to rebut any presumption that might be indulged that the boat was unseaworthy because the crew was not equal to the number required by the certificate of inspection and license. It could not be said that the company could defeat a recovery when there was a sufficient crew on the boat to properly handle her, although not the number designated in the [589]*589license, especially when there is no evidence even tending to prove that the sinking of the boat resulted from an insufficient crew.

It was likewise proper to allow Crammond to testify that the boat might strike an obstruction, and che contact not be perceivable to those on board. His own experience as steamboatman enabled him- to have a knowledge of such matters. This testimony was relevant because the effort was being made by the company to show or to create a presumption that she was unseaworthy because .of the defective condition of the hull.

The answer charges that the boat was sunk because of the willful and fraudulent misconduct of the owners and officers, etc., of the boat. Crammond was allowed to testify that the boat was m-ot insured, and that she was worth $5,000.

This evidence was properly admitted to show the owners and officers could have no desire or -motive to destroy the boat. If this evidence was not relevant it was not misleading to the jury, and we can not, from any point of "dew, see how it was prejudicial to the rights of the company.

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

Related

Davis v. Kimberlain
221 S.W. 226 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1920)
Clarke v. Mannheim Ins. Co.
210 S.W. 528 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1919)
Lowry v. City of Lexington
68 S.W. 1109 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 S.W. 563, 99 Ky. 578, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-insurance-v-monarch-kyctapp-1896.