Louisville Marine & Fire Insurance v. Bland

39 Ky. 143, 9 Dana 143, 1839 Ky. LEXIS 106
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 27, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 39 Ky. 143 (Louisville Marine & Fire Insurance v. Bland) 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 Marine & Fire Insurance v. Bland, 39 Ky. 143, 9 Dana 143, 1839 Ky. LEXIS 106 (Ky. Ct. App. 1839).

Opinion

Judge Marshall

delivered the Opinion of the Court in this case, at the last Spring Term; but the decision was afterwards suspended, and the Opinion having been since re-considered and somewhat modified, is now made final, as follows:—

This action of covenant was brought to recover for a partial loss, upon a policy of insurance, executed by the Louisville Marine and Fire Insurance Company.

The policy purports to insure Messrs. Bland and Coleman, in the sum of one thousand eight hundred and sixty five dollars and forty-nine cents, upon sundries (stated in the margin) lost or not lost, shipped or to be shipped, from New Orleans to Louisville, on board of one or more steam boats, with the privilege of transhipping the whole or any part on other small steam boat or boats, and on one or more keel boats, to be towed or not towed. The insurance to attach immediately upon the shipment of the articles at New Orleans, and to continue until they should be safely landed at Louisville; covering the perils of the river and other enumerated hazards usually incident to the voyage.

It was stipulated that, in case of loss or misfortune, it should be the right and duty of the assured to sue, travel, labor, &c. for the defence, safeguard and recovery of the goods, to the charges for which, the Company should contribute.

And it was agreed that certain specific articles were warranted by the assured, free from all and every kind of average, unless general; that other specified articles were warranted free from average under fifteen per cent. unless general; that others, also specified, were free from average, under ten per cent. unless general, and that certain other [144]*144enumerated articles and all other goods were warranted free from average under seven and a half per cent. unless general.

The declaration. Facts agreed or admitted.

It was further agreed that, in case of loss, the assured should abate two per cent. on the amount insured, and the loss should be paid in sixty days after proof of loss and interest. Other stipulations contained in the policy, need not be adverted to.

The declaration avers, in substance, that 100 sets of counter weights, 10 bundles sheet iron, 15 bundles wire, and 40 lbs. tinned rivets, of the cost of $500 50—part of the goods insured, were separately shipped, at New Orleans, on the steam boat Jefferson, and at the mouth of the Tennessee river, reshipped on the keel boat Pennsylvania, towed by the steam boat Conveyance, for Louisville; that, “ on their passage from the mouth of the Tennessee “to Louisville, said goods were much wet and “damaged, to the amount of $260, and the charges “$7 50, and the general average of the goods on board “the keel boat Pennsylvania, was $8 70—making the “plaintiffs’ claim for loss and charges, &c. $276 78; “and the plaintiffs aver, the defendants were notified of “the loss and damages sustained, on the—day of—“1833, and proof made to their satisfaction, of the loss “and plaintiffs’ interest in the goods.”

By agreement of the counsel on both sides, it was admitted that the value of the whole sum ensured and shipped under the policy, was one thousand eight hundred and sixty-five dollars and forty-nine cents, of which Bland and Coleman were the sole proprietors: that 100 sets of counter weights, 10 bundles sheet iron, 15 bundles wire, and 40 lbs. tinned rivets, and some block tin, of the goods ensured, of the cost and value of $500 50, were shipped at New Orleans, separately, on the steam boat Jefferson, and, at the mouth of the Tennessee, re-shipped on the keel boat Pennsylvania, towed by the steam boat Conveyance, for Louisville; that about seven miles above the town of Rome, on the Ohio, the said keel boat struck a sunken rock, and was wrecked, and the cargo wet and damaged; that the goods, covered by this policy, were then transhipped on board a flat boat, which [145]*145was towed by the steam boat Conveyance, to Portland; and that, on their arrival at Portland, the goods were damaged $260 28—that the cost and charges occasioned by the damage, were $7 50, and the general average incurred and paid by Bland and Coleman, on said goods occasioned by the damage to the said keel boat, was $8 70: making the plaintiff's claim for damage, charges and average, $276 78. It was also admitted, that the defendants had been notified of the claim of the plaintiffs, as above stated, and furnished with the preliminary proof, and payment required and refused, on the 11th of September, 1833.

Judgment of the court below. A declaration on a policy of insurance, for a partial loss by damage to the goods, should state—& the proof must show—the cause of the damage, specifically, or, at least so far as to show that it arose from one of the perils insured against. And where, by a ‘memorandum’ attached to the policy (as there generally is) certain articles are warranted free of any average, or free of any under a certain rate per cent., unless general, the declaration must show that the goods, and amount of loss, are such, that the insurers are not exempt from liability by the warranty.

A protest made before a Notary Public, by the captain and crew and two passengers of the steam boat Conveyance, and an additional statement of the Notary, were admitted as a part of the agreed facts; from which it appears that, the keel boat Pennsylvania was wrecked on the 6th of September, 1833, and that the damage to the goods was occasioned by that disaster.

It was submitted to the Circuit Court, upon the declaration, policy and agreed facts, to determine whether the plaintiffs were entitled to recover; and if they so entitled, the Court was to assess the damages, and give judgment for the amount; otherwise to give judgement for the defendants. Upon this submission, a judgement was rendered against the Insurance Company, for three hundred and thirty four dollars and fifty cents, for the reversal of which this appeal is prosecuted.

Objections are now taken, and, as we think, good grounds, to the sufficiency both of the declaration and the agreed facts to sustain the judgment rendered. The declaration does not state the particular cause of the damage for which it seeks indemnity; nor does it even state in general terms, that the loss arose from one of the perils insured against. It is also defective, in not showing that the loss arising from the damage to the goods, even if it were occasioned by one of the perils ensured against, is one for which, under the several agreements of warranty, the insurers are liable to make payment.

A defective declaration may be cured by an agreed case; but a judgt. not warranted by the declaration, nor by the facts agreed, nor both, cannot be sustained. Further details of facts in the case: the terms of the contract of insurance; defects of proof &c.

But, from the manner in which the case was submitted, as above stated, we should not be inclined to reverse the judgment on these grounds, if the agreed facts had supplied the defects in the declaration, and had made out a case on which the judgment, as rendered, could be supported. This has been done so far as to show that the loss or damage on the goods, was occasioned by one of the perils ensured against, and also, so far as to show that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover the two small sums claimed as charges and general average.

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Bluebook (online)
39 Ky. 143, 9 Dana 143, 1839 Ky. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-marine-fire-insurance-v-bland-kyctapp-1839.