Murray v. Aetna Ins.

17 F. Cas. 1043, 4 Biss. 417
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois
DecidedOctober 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 F. Cas. 1043 (Murray v. Aetna Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murray v. Aetna Ins., 17 F. Cas. 1043, 4 Biss. 417 (circtndil 1864).

Opinion

DRUMMOND, District Judge.

I am of opinion as a matter of law that the plaintiff cannot recover in this case.

The contract the defendant made was that the vessel should earn or be entitled to freight, and in the case of loss of freight or if the plaintiff was not entitled to receive freight in consequence of some accident or misfortune within the terms of the policy, then the defendant agreed to become responsible. The question is whether, according to the terms of the contract, the defendant is liable.

Fifteen thousand bushels of com, in the fall of 1SG2, were shipped on board the schooner owned by plaintiff to be transported from Chicago to Kingston, and it was the freight list on this corn that was insured by defendant. A marine disaster happened to the vessel. She was dismasted and was towed into the port of Goderich, in Canada. The vessel lay there some time. The hatches were then taken off, and it was found that the corn was damaged more or less. Of course the schooner in the condition in which it then was could not proceed on her voyage without repairs. The corn was unloaded from the vessel, and placed in a warehouse, and the sound corn separated from the damaged com. Shortly after it was so placed, it being in different stories of the warehouse, the warehouse broke down and the com became again intermingled. There was a policy of insurance on the cargo by the Corn Exchange Company, and upon the receipt of intelligence of the disaster the agent of that company proceeded to ■ Goderich with a view of determining what was to be done for the best interests of all concerned. The proof shows that about thirteen thousand bushels of. the corn were in a sound condition when it was landed from the vessel, the remainder-being= more or less damaged. There is some conflict of evidence as to the manner and circumstances under which the com was -sold.' ; The captain of the .schooner claims that..the corn was sold by the agent of the Com Exchange Company. The latter, on the contrary, claims that the corn was sold by the captain. I do not think it is material which was; the fact, but we will assume, what is undoubtedly trae, that fit was sold by the common consent of both. The plaintiff retained'two thousand two hundred dollars, and the. balance of the proceeds was paid over to the agent of the Com Exchange Company. It is. immaterial what was the fact as to the manner in which this money was paid or received. Of course if it was paid and received as freight it could not again be recovered; but, according to the view the court takes, it is , immaterial whether it was or not. It seems to be conceded that there was no material -injury done to the hull of the schooner; that the chief injury was to the spars and rigging; \Ye have to assume, of course, under the' finding of the jury, that the vessel could not have been repaired in the port of Goderich that-.fall, and there is no -dispute but it could hav£ been repaired in the following spring or during the winter, and that the vessel would have been ready upon the opening of navigation to proceed on her voyage. The question is, whether, under the circumstances of the case, it was not the duty of the captain to go on and' complete his contract. which was to transport the corn, from Chicago to Kingston, . •

[1044]*1044When a vessel takes a cargo, as in this case, in the fall of the year to transport to a distant point, it is one of the incidents of the navigation that owing to variable weather or freezing up. she may not be able to reach her port of destination. The mere fact that the vessel is not able to do so does not relieve the carrier from completing his contract and thus becoming entitled to his compensation. Neither here does the fact that the vessel was dismasted and was obliged to make a port of safety and the corn had to be unloaded, relieve the carrier from the duty of completing his contract, provided by proper repairs the vessel could have proceeded in the spring of 18G3. The com was in such a condition that it could have been transported in whole or part in specie, and could have reached the port of destination.

This being so, then it follows as a conclusion of law that if the owner of the corn chose to take it or have it sold he could not deprive the plaintiff of the right to the freight.

There is no controversy but that the vessel could have been repaired in the winter of 3802 or the spring of 1803. There can be none under the proof but that the com could have been transported in specie, in whole or in part at least, to the port of Kingston, in the spring of 18G3. Those facts being admitted, upon well-settled principles of law I think the plaintiff cannot recover.

Among the numerous authorities which have been referred to, I will only advert to three. The first is the case of Anderson v. Wallis, reported in 2 Maule & S. 240. That was a ease of insurance upon a cargo and in that respect was different from this. The ship sailed from London on the 10th of September, 1811, bound for Quebec. Having encountered heavy gales, so that she made a great deal of water, the master was obliged to return (having proceeded a considerable distance on the voyage; to the port of Ivin-sale. Ireland, and arrived there October 25th. On the arrival of the ship it was found necessary to make repairs upon the vessel before she could proceed on her voyage. These repairs were not completed until the 25th of March following. On examination it was ascertained that the cargo was damaged, and it was sold as a damaged cargo. Prior to this time the insured abandoned the cargo to the underwriter. The underwriter refused to accept the abandonment, so that the question arose- whether there was a loss within the true construction of the policy. The court held there was” not. Why? Because the goods were not lost, and because the vessel could have been repaired and could have proceeded on her voyage in the spring of 1812 to Quebec. The time that elapsed was from October 25 until March following, when the' vessel should have so proceeded, and it was held — Lord Elleuborough delivering the opinion — that it was a mere retardation of the voyage. Now if in this case the cargo had been destroyed so that it lost its identity, and it did not in point of fact exist in specie, then, as a matter of course, it would have been a loss within the policy, and the court would have held that the insured was entitled to recover; but the cargo remaining in specie, although in a damaged state, the carrier having a right when the repairs were made to go on and complete the voyage, the property being sold as a damaged cargo, there was not a loss within the meaning of the policy.

The principle, although that was a case of insurance on the cargo and the case at bar is a policy on the freight, must necessarily be the same as to the question of loss. Here, as there, the agreement was to indemnify the plaintiff in case of loss — in one the loss of the cargo, in the other of freight — and in that case the court held that there was not a loss within the meaning of the policy, as we must hold here. The language, of-the court in that case has been cited with .approbation in subsequent cases, and- no court has ’ ever yet' decided that a temporary retardation is a total abandonment. Disappointment of arrival would be a new idea-of abandonment in insurance law.

Here the question is, whether, the loss of freight was in consequence of a peril of the sea or of the voluntary act of the master, and the answer is, it was the voluntary act of the master.

The next case to which I shall advert is the ease of Jordan v. Warren Ins. Co. [Case No. 7,524]. That was.

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Bluebook (online)
17 F. Cas. 1043, 4 Biss. 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-aetna-ins-circtndil-1864.