Lovering v. Mercantile Marine Insurance

29 Mass. 348
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1832
StatusPublished

This text of 29 Mass. 348 (Lovering v. Mercantile Marine Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lovering v. Mercantile Marine Insurance, 29 Mass. 348 (Mass. 1832).

Opinion

Shaw C. J.

delivered the opinion of the Court. This is [361]*361an action upon a policy of insurance, in which the plaintiff claims to recover for a total loss. It is not the intention of the Court now to give a final and definitive opinion upon the whole case, the facts reported not being sufficiently full and complete for that purpose ; but having formed opinions upon several of the questions raised in the report and discussed in the argument, on those points the Court will now state the result.

The main question is upon the plaintiff’s right to recover for a total loss. The policy was on the brig Leonidas, to and from all ports and places, during the term of twelve months from the 29th of December 1825, and until her arrival at a port of discharge in the United States. At the time this policy attached, the brig Leonidas was prosecuting a voyage from Buenos Ayres to China and back, the same having commenced the June preceding. On her return to the river La Plata in June 1826, war in the mean time having broken out between the governments of Brazil and Buenos Ayres, the port of Buenos Ayres was blockaded by a squadron of Brazilian vessels, by which the brig was captured on the 13th of June. The facts of the commencement of war and the establishment of a blockade of Buenos Ayres, were not known to the master of the Leonidas, till the time of her capture. The vessel was sent by the captors first to Monte Video, where the master and most of the crew were taken out, and thence,' under a prize crew, to Rio Janeiro, where she arrived about the 10th of July, and where prize proceedings were instituted by the captors. The mate of the vessel, Robert S. Pulsifer, having been left on board, soon after the arrival of the vessel at Rio Janeiro, on the 18th of July 1826, addressed a letter to the owner, stating the facts, which was received about the time of the notice of abandonment given by the plaintiff to the defendants. At the time of the capture the vessel, having been chartered for the China voyage by merchants, residents and citizens of Buenos Ayres, had on board a cargo, the property of those merchants. At Rio Janeiro, the vessel was proceeded against as prize of war, in the admiralty court, for the condemnation of the brig, as well as the cargo. A decree of restoration was obtained in the lower court, on February 5, 1827, from which an appeal was taken

[362]*362by the captors, and a final decree of restoration in the court ot aPPeaL, was made July 9, 1827. By an interlocutory order, at the instance of the agents of the owner, the vessel was appraised and delivered on bond, conditioned to pay the amount of the appraised value in case of the condemnation of the vessel. Thereupon the vessel was delivered to the agents, who had given this bond, September 14, 1826. Notice of abandonment was given by the plaintiff to the defendants, September 11, 1826, and they refused to accept the abandonment. These are the material facts and dates.

Several clauses in the policy are particularly relied upon and give rise to some of the questions discussed. They are these.

“ It is also agreed, that in case of capture or detention, the assured shall not have the right to abandon therefor, until proof is exhibited of condemnation, or of the continuance of the detention (by capture or other arrest), for at least ninety days.” —“ It is also agreed, that the assurers shall not be answerable for any charge, damage or loss, which may arise in consequence of seizure or detention for or on account of illicit or prohibited trade, or trade in articles contraband of war.”

Several letters which passed between the parties, in December 1826, are referred to.

The vessel having been captured within the time covered by the insurance, several objections are taken to the plaintiff’s right to recover.

First, that the loss did not happen by any one of the perils insured against, because the seizure and detention took place in consequence of illicit trade or trade in articles contraband of war, which were perils excepted from the risk by the terms of the policy. But there are no facts shown, upon which to found this objection. There is no intimation that the vessel sailed from or returned to Buenos Ayres, in violation of any of the laws of trade of that country ; and the objection is founded only upon the assumption that she was seized and detained for some supposed violation of the belligerent rights of Brazil. But this position cannot be maintained. When this vessel sailed from Buenos Ayres the preceding year, that [363]*363country was in a state of peace with Brazil; when she sailed from China on her return voyage, it is found that the master had no knowledge of the commencement of the war, of course none of the blockade of his port of destination, and that he spoke nothing and received no such notice, until he was actually captured by the squadron. There was manifestly therefore no violation of the belligerent rights of Brazil, in proceeding towards a blockaded port, without actual or constructive notice of the blockade. As little ground is there in point of fact, for charging that the loss was occasioned by trading in articles contraband of war.

Had this vessel been detained for the purpose only of taking out the cargo, which as the property of citizens of Buenos Ayres the forces of Brazil had a right, by the general laws of war, to make prize of, as enemy’s property, and had the brig only been sent to the nearest port under the dominion of Brazil, for the purpose of taking out such property, and then discharged, it might perhaps be successfully maintained, that under this policy, such a detention would not have been hostile, or one of the perils insured against, inasmuch as articles of merchandise, being enemy’s property, bound to a blockaded port, are to many purposes deemed articles contraband of war. But the facts will not warrant us in considering the seizure of this vessel as a detention for the sole purpose of taking out and discharging the cargo as enemy’s property. It is attended with all the characteristics of a hostile capture. After arriving at Monte Video, a port under the dominion of the government of the captors, the master is taken out and the vessel sent under a prize crew to Rio Janeiro, and there immediately libelled as prize ; and even after a decree of the court of first instance, for a restoration of the vessel, the captors, insisting with unwonted perseverance upon the condemnation of this vessel as prize, appeal from the decree to a higher court; and it is only upon a final decree of restoration by the appellate court that the owner obtains the discharge of his vessel from hostile detention. It seems impossible therefore not to consider this detention as a hostile capture. It seems very clear, as far as the facts appear, that there was ■no reasonable or probable cause for this capture and claim for [364]*364condemna-ion, it being a well established right of the neutral ship-owner, that his vessel is not liable to condemnation or detention for proceeding towards a blockaded port, until an attempt to enter, after notice of the blockade.1 Here there having been no such notice, and there being no other ground to bring the case wifhin the excepted perils of illicit trade, or trade in articles contraband of war, and it appearing to have been manifestly a hostile capture, it is a loss within the risk taken by the policy.

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Bluebook (online)
29 Mass. 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovering-v-mercantile-marine-insurance-mass-1832.