Orient Mutual Insurance v. Wright Ex Rel. Maxwell, Wright, & Co.

64 U.S. 401, 16 L. Ed. 524, 23 How. 401, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 781
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 23, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 64 U.S. 401 (Orient Mutual Insurance v. Wright Ex Rel. Maxwell, Wright, & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orient Mutual Insurance v. Wright Ex Rel. Maxwell, Wright, & Co., 64 U.S. 401, 16 L. Ed. 524, 23 How. 401, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 781 (1860).

Opinion

Mr. Justice NELSON

delivered the opinion of the court

This is a writ of error to the Circuit .Court' of the United States for the district of Maryland.

The suit was brought by the plaintiff below upon a .policy. of insurance covering a quantity of coffee laden or to be laden on board the “good vessel or vessels” from Rio de Janeiro to any port in the United States, “to add an additional premium, if by vessels lower than A 2, or by foreign vessels.”

The policy contained the following clause in respect to pre* *403 miums: “Having been paid the consideration for this insu ranee by the assured, or his assigns, at and after the rate of one and one-half per cent., the premiums on risks to be fixed at the 'time of endorsement, and such clauses to apply as the company may insert, as the risks aire successively reported.” The policy bears date 27th July, 1855. The company subscribed at the execution $22,500 as the amount insured.

On the 30th July, 1855, the policy was altered by agreement of parties by striking out the words, “ vessels not rating lower than A 2,” as it originally stood, and inserting the words now in the instrument, namely, “an additional premium, if by vessels lower than A 2, or by foreign vessels.”

On the 4th January, 1856, the company subscribed an additional sum of $15,000, and on the 19th April fallowing the sum of $25,000.

Premium notes were given at the time the different sums were subscribed, at the rate of premium mentioned in the body of the policy.

The agent of the company at Baltimore, who negotiated this insurance, the defendants being a New York company, states that when applications are made to enter risks on running policies, they are endorsed at once by him, and the report of such endorsement transmitted to the company in New York; which names the premium, and this is communicated to the assured; that the premiums specified in the body of the policies are nominal, and the true premiums to be charged are fixed by increasing or reducing the nominal premiums, when the risks are reported; and that the nominal premiums taken on the delivery of a running policy are returned, if no risks are reported. " ■ '

In the latter part of August,. 1856, the plaintiff applied to the agent at Baltimore for an endorsement on the' policy of the coffee in question, laden or to be laden on board a vessel called the Mary ~W., from Rio de Janeiro to New Orleans, which application was communicated to the company, in order that they might fix the premium. The company at first declined to acknowledge the vessel as coming within the description in the policy, on account of her alleged inferior character *404 and unfitness for the voyage; but the plaintiff insisting upon the seaworthiness of the vessel, and his right to ,the insurance within the terms of the policy, the company fixed the premium at ten per cent., subject to the conditions of the policy, or two and one-half per cent., as against a total loss. This rate of premium the plaintiff refused to pay.

The coffee was shipped on the Mary W. at Rio de Janeiro for New Orleans, on the 12th July, 1856, at which period she started on her voyage, and was lost on the 29th of the month upon rocks, the master being some seventy miles out of his reckoning at the time.

Evidence was given on the trial, on the part of the company, tending to prove that the Mary W. was rated below A 2, and even that she was unfit for a sea voyage, being originally intended, when built, in 1846, as a coasting vessel, and prayed the court to instruct the jury, that if they find from the evidence the vessel, at the time of the application for the endorsement of her cargo upon the policy, was rated in the office of the company and other offices of underwriters in New York lower than A 2, and being so rated, the company offered to make the endorsement at the premium fixed by them, and that on the premium being communicated to the plaintiff, he refused to pay it or assent thereto, then he is not entitled to recover, which prayer was refused; and the court thereupon instructed the jury, substantially, that the plaintiff was entitled to recover for the loss, so far as the rate of premium was concerned, upon deducting such additional premium to the one and one-half per cent., as in the opinion of underwriters may be deemed adequate to thejnereased risk of the coffee shipped in a vessel rating below A 2.

The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff.

The material question presented in the case is, whether or not the company were under a contract, within any of the terms and conditions of the policy, to insure this particular cargc of coffee on board of the vessel Mary W. at the time the loss occurred; for, unless the contract is found there, none existed between the parties, as it is admitted none was entered into at the time the vessel was reported and the risk declared. *405 The plaintiff has assumed the affirmative of this, question, and insists that the company was bound by.the terms of the policy to cover the coffee from the time it was laden on board the vessel at Rio as soon- as the risk was declared, and this whether the vessel rated below A. 2 or not. This is necessarily .the result of the position claimed, as it denies to the company the right to fix an additional premium, even if it should happen-that the vessel rated below A 2; that then, or in that event, it is contended, the additional premium becomes a question of mutual adjustment between the parties, and if they disagree, to be determined by the courts. ' On the part of the company,. it is insisted that, according to the- special provisions in the policy, in case the vessel reported rates below A 2, the contract is inchoate and incomplete until the payment or security by the assured of the additional premium to be fixed at thetime by the company.

The contract of insurance in this case arises out of an open or' running policy, which enables the merchant to insure his goods shipped at a distant port when it is impossible for him to be advised of the particular ship upon which the goods are . laden, and therefore cannot name it in the policy.

A relaxation in this respect has been permitted by the laws and practice of commercial countries; and the party effecting the insurance is allowed to insure the cargo “ on board ship or ships,” on condition of declaring the ship upon the policy and giving notice to the underwriter as soon as' known, and if possible before the loss on board of which the goods have been laden. The underwriter, who consents to ‘insure upon policies of this description, of course, has no opportunity to inquire into the character or condition • of' the vessel, aiid agrees that the policy shall attach, if she be seaworthy, however low may be her relative capacity to perform the voyage; and for the additional risks he may thus incur’, he finds his compensation in an increase of the premium. A higher premium is. always demanded where the vessels to which the insurance relates are not known.

The ship, indeed, must be seaworthy, or the policy will not attach; but the degrees of seaworthiness or of the capacity of *406

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Bluebook (online)
64 U.S. 401, 16 L. Ed. 524, 23 How. 401, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orient-mutual-insurance-v-wright-ex-rel-maxwell-wright-co-scotus-1860.