Parkhurst v. Gloucester Mutual Fishing Insurance

100 Mass. 301
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 100 Mass. 301 (Parkhurst v. Gloucester Mutual Fishing 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
Parkhurst v. Gloucester Mutual Fishing Insurance, 100 Mass. 301 (Mass. 1868).

Opinion

Gray, J.

This is an action upon a policy of insurance by which the Gloucester Mutual Fishing Insurance Company “ cause David Parkhurst, for whom it may concern, to be insured, lost or not lost,” a certain sum for one year on seven eighths of the schooner James Sayward, “ to be insured in the manner prescribed by the by-laws, to be subject to all the restraints and liabilities therein set forth.” The. extracts from the by-laws, which are printed on the third page of the policy, show that it is intended to insure a fishing vessel on a fishing voyage. But neither the policy nor the by-laws contain any particular enumeration of the risks to be assumed by the underwriters. On the face of the policy is printed this clause: “And the insurers are not in any case to be held to pay for any loss or damage in consequence of restraint, seizure or detention, by any legal or illegal power whatsoever, or for any damage, accident or loss which may happen or occur to any vessel while she may be under such restraint, detention or seizure.” The amount of premium is stated in the margin.

At the trial, it appeared that the vessel was lost in returning from a fishing voyage within the term of the policy. There was conflicting evidence upon the question whether she accidentally struck upon a rock, or was scuttled and sunk by the master. The jury found that she was lost by barratry of the master. The only question reserved is, whether by this policy, as applied to the facts, the plaintiff was insured against such-a loss; and according to our opinion upon that question judgment is to be entered for the plaintiff or the defendants.

It is doubtless necessary that a policy of insurance, read in the light of those facts of which courts must take judicial notice, or which are within the common knowledge of mankind, should express the risks assumed by the underwriters. But such expression may as well be by general terms as by the usual mode of particular enumeration. A policy of insurance against all marine risks, or against all the risks which underwriters usually take, is just as binding and effectual as if the risks are specified in detail. As Chief Justice Marshall said in Yeaton v Fry, 5 Cranch, 335, 342, “ Policies of insurance are generally [303]*303the most informal instruments which are brought into courts of justice; and there are no instruments which are more liberally construed, in order to effect the real intention of the parties, if that intention can be clearly ascertained.” In that case a recovery was had upon a policy “ against all risks, blockaded ports and Hispaniola excepted.” And in Levy v. Merrill, 4 Greenl. 180, an insurance against “the risks contained in all regular policies of insurance ” was held to cover a loss by capture. Even a mere agreement to insure a certain sum on a certain vessel at a certain valuation for a certain voyage is sufficient to bind the insurers to make out a policy in the usual form and containing the usual clauses. Oliver v. Mutual Commercial Insurance Co. 2 Curtis C. C. 290, 291.

The policy before us declares that the defendants cause the plaintiff to be insured a certain sum on a definite interest in a seagoing vessel, “ lost or not lost.” The contract is in terms a policy of insurance, and of marine insurance, which is as much as to say, a policy of insurance against the usual marine risks.

Those risks, according to the common and almost universal enumeration in English and American policies of insurance, include not only perils of the seas, fire, enemies, pirates, thieves, arrests, restraints and detainments of kings, princes and people, but barratry of the master and mariners. A substantially similar form, expressed in almost the same words, has been used in England for more than two centuries. 1 West’s Simboleography, § 663. Malynes, 108. In Jefferies v. Legendra, decided in the second or third year of William and Mary, the policy in which is described in Garth. 216, and 3 Lev. 320, as “ in the usual form,” and in 2 Salk. 443, as against “ perils of the sea, pirates, enemies, &c.,” Lord Holt remarked, by way of illustration, “ Sup pose the master had committed barratry, the insurers are liable.” 1 Show. 326; S. C. Holt, 466. Many English cases of insurance against barratry, decided before the American Revolution, are collected in the fifth chapter of Mr. Justice Park’s treatise. And in Earle v. Rowcroft, 8 East, 134, Lord Ellenborough said, “ Barratry has from the earliest times held its place as a subject of indemnity in British policies of insurance.”

[304]*304By Vaucher’s Guide to Marine Insurances, published in Lon* don in 1834, and containing the policies of the principal commercial towns in the world,” it appears that barratry of the master and mariners” is one of the risks specified in the ordinary form of policy not only throughout the British dominions and the United States, but in France, (limited indeed in the port of Marseilles to French vessels,) Germany and the North of Europe, and that the only ports in which it is omitted are those of Italy, Spain and Portugal, and Alexandria.

In France, in early times, a specific enumeration of risks was not an essential part of the policy, and insurers were responsible ipso jure for barratry. Cleirae, Emerigon and other jurists were of opinion that upon general principles insurers were so liable, if not discharged by some particular enactment, such as the French Ordinance of 1681, which provided that they should not be responsible for loss or damage to vessels and goods by the fault of masters and mariners, unless expressly charged in the policy with the barratry of the master. Other commentators were of opinion that insurers could not be held liable for barratry, without an express stipulation to that effect. Guidon, c. 1, art. 1; c. 2, art. 1; c. 5, art. 6; c. 9, art. 1; c. 17, art. 1. Cleirac, 217, 231, 254, 290, 291, 329, 451. Emerigon des Assurances, c. 2, sect. 7; c. 12, sects. 3, 7, and authors cited. 2 Valin, 79, 80. But it would be superfluous to enter upon a critical examination and comparison of their conflicting statements, and of 'he local laws and usages by which they were more or less influenced. It is sufficient for this case that barratry is and long has been a usual marine risk wherever our law prevails.

In Waters v. Merchants’ Louisville Insurance Co. 11 Pet. 213, cited for the defendants, the policy which was held not to cover a loss by barratry impliedly excluded that risk, by enumerating the risks assumed as those of “ rivers, fire, enemies, pirates, assailing thieves, and all other losses and misfortunes which shall come to the hurt or detriment of the steamboat, her engines, tackle and furniture, according to the true intent and meaning of the policy.” Even in that case a loss by fire arising from negligence of the master and crew was held to be within the policy ; and [305]*305the court cited with approval the words of Mr. Justice Bayley, in delivering the opinion of the court of queen’s bench, holding that insurers against fire and barratry were not exempt from loss by fire occasioned by such negligence : “ The object of the assured certainly was to protect himself against all the risks incident to a marine adventure. The underwriter being therefore liable primd facie by the express terms of the policy, it lies upon him to discharge himself.” Busk v. Royal Exchange Assurance Co. 2 B. & Ald. 73, 79.

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Bluebook (online)
100 Mass. 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parkhurst-v-gloucester-mutual-fishing-insurance-mass-1868.