Merrill v. Boylston Fire & Marine Insurance

85 Mass. 247
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1861
StatusPublished

This text of 85 Mass. 247 (Merrill v. Boylston Fire & 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
Merrill v. Boylston Fire & Marine Insurance, 85 Mass. 247 (Mass. 1861).

Opinion

Dewey, J.

The question is, whether this loss happened in the course of the voyage insured, and while the same was covered by the policy.

Certain general principles will be found, we think, to have been settled in the adjudicated cases, which will reduce the question now before us to a narrow compass. A well settled distinction exists between the cases of a purposed deviation and an abandonment of the voyage. As respects an intention to deviate, if the loss occurs before an actual deviation, the underwriter is not discharged. An abandonment of the voyage, and the substitution of another and different voyage, at once defeats the policy.

The point of doubt, in reference to which there will be found a conflict of authorities to some extent, is, as to the [249]*249facts necessary to constitute an abandonment, or, in another form of stating the point, what class of cases range under the head of an intention to deviate merely, and thus retain the benefits of the policy if the loss occurs before the departure from the route common to both the port described in the policy and the port intended to be reached by a deviation.

All the authorities agree that an intention, formed after the commencement of the voyage, to make merely a temporary deviation, without changing the final port of destination, will not affect the policy. The weight of authority seems also very clearly to show that a purpose existing at the commencement of the voyage to put into an intermediate port out of the course of the voyage described in the policy, the original termini of the voyage being still pursued, is not the substitution of a different voyage, but only an intention to deviate. Foster v. Wilmer, 2 Stra. 1248. Marine Ins. Co. v. Tucker, 3 Cranch, 357. Hobart v. Norton, 8 Pick. 159. Hare v. Travis, 7 B. & C. 14. 2 Parsons Mar. Law, 307.

It will be observed that in the above cases there was at no period any intention to change the termini of the voyage, and the proposed departure from the direct course was only to be temporary, after which the vessel was to resume and perfect the voyage to the port named in the policy.

As to an abandonment of the voyage described in the policy and the substitution of a new one, all agree that when an actual abandonment of the voyage and substitution of a distinct voyage have occurred before the commencement of the voyage, the policy does not attach, or cover any loss, in whatever parts of the voyage it may have happened. But the question as to what facts will constitute an abandonment of the .voyage, and at what period of time in reference to the voyage such abandonment takes place, has been the subject of much discussion and conflict of opinion.

On the one hand, it is insisted that there can be no application of the principles applicable to abandonment, if the alteration of the voyage and substitution of a new one occur at any point of time subsequently to the commencement of the voyage; [250]*250and that all changes of purpose as to the course of the voyage are to be treated as deviations or intended deviations, and therefore if the vessel is lost before the actual deviation, such purpose, however fully settled, does not defeat the policy. On the other hand, it is urged that if the ship either originally sails on a different voyage from that described in the policy, or if after commencing her voyage she entirely abandons all intention of prosecuting it, this is in either case a change and abandonment of the voyage which will avoid the policy from the moment the intention of so abandoning is definitively formed.

To sustain the present defence, it is not necessary to adopt • the latter position in the broad terms above stated; but it is necessary to hold that such purpose to abandon may be formed and settled after the commencement of the voyage, and after the vessel has arrived at one port of destination which is included in the policy, and before taking her departure therefrom. This question was very much considered in the case of Lawrence v. Ocean Ins. Co. 11 Johns. 241, and again in New York Firemen Ins. Co. v. Lawrence, 14 Johns. 46, upon a policy very similar. The question arose upon a policy of insurance “ at amd from New York to Gottenburg, and at and from thence to one port in the Baltic, or Black Sea, not south of the river Eyder.” The vessel sailed from New York and arrived at Gottenburg, the port for the voyage there selected was St. Petersburg, for which she sailed, and while on her voyage thither was detained by various causes at Carlsham, and while there changed her purpose and sailed for Stockholm. While pursuing however the direct route to St. Petersburg, and before she came to the point of departure for Stockholm, she sustained a loss by capture by the French. It was held by a majority of the supreme court, and confirmed by a majority of the court of errors, that it was the case of an intended deviation only; and the vessel having been lost before she had arrived at the dividing point, the insurers were liable. The conflicting opinions held by the eminent jurists who heard that case leave it, as respects other tribunals, valuable for its fulness of examination and elucidation, rather than as an authority to guide them. Thompson, C. J., in giving [251]*251his reasons for thus holding, says: “ There is, I am persuaded, no case to be found where a change of voyage, after the commencement of the one described in the policy has attached, has been held to be a substitution of a new voyage.” p. 262. .All the judges treat the case as a policy for a voyage to St. Peters-burg, that port being fixed by the selection made by the assured, and taking her departure from Gottenburg with that purpose.

Mr. Justice Thompson did not deem it material whether the voyage was to be considered as one entire voyage commencing at New York, or as a voyage commencing at Gottenburg; his position being that, if commenced at either place, it was a commencement of the voyage insured, and that such after proposed and settled purpose to change the port of destination would, until an actual deviation had occurred, be treated as a mere intention to deviate, and would not discharge the policy.

Mr. Justice Van Ness, while he fully concedes that, when the termini of the voyage are preserved, an unexecuted intention to deviate does not affect the policy, affirms that when the termini are abandoned, and a new and independent voyage is determined upon and commenced, the policy ceases to have any effect. Here the termini were not preserved, and it must, in his opinion, be treated as an abandonment of the old voyage. He further adds, however : “ In every case, (and I affirm it without exception,) where such an unexecuted intention has been held not to vitiate the policy, it will be found that the terminus ad quern mentioned in the policy was not abandoned, but the vessel intended ultimately to proceed to it.” p. 266. And he held that it was not material, as to an abandonment, whether such change in the voyage was decided and acted upon before or after the voyage commenced.

Chancellor Kent, sitting in the court of errors upon this question, arising in the case of New York Firemen Ins. Co. v. Lawence, held similar views. He said that “if the original place of destination be abandoned, in order to go to another port of discharge, the voyage itself becomes changed, because one of the termini of the original voyage is changed. The identity

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Related

Ma. In. Co. of Alexandria v. J. and Jh Tucker
7 U.S. 357 (Supreme Court, 1806)
Lawrence v. Ocean Insurance
11 Johns. 241 (New York Supreme Court, 1814)
New-York Firemen Insurance v. Lawrence
14 Johns. 46 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1816)
Stocker v. Harris
3 Mass. 409 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1807)

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Bluebook (online)
85 Mass. 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merrill-v-boylston-fire-marine-insurance-mass-1861.