Peeks v. Merchants' Ins. Co.

19 F. Cas. 98, 3 Mason C.C. 27
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 15, 1822
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 19 F. Cas. 98 (Peeks v. Merchants' Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peeks v. Merchants' Ins. Co., 19 F. Cas. 98, 3 Mason C.C. 27 (circtdma 1822).

Opinion

STORY, Circuit Justice.

This cause has been here heard upon the merits, the respondents having appeared under a protest to the jurisdiction, and meaning to insist upon that objection, if there should be an appeal to the supreme court, they have filed a general denial, putting the material facts in issue, and thus brought the entire law as well as facts before the court for consideration. Upon the subject of jurisdiction I have no more to say, than that I have seen no reason to change the opinion which I expressed several years since, that originally and of right the jurisdiction did belong to the admiralty. Whether it is become obsolete by disuse, or by the preponderating authority of the common law courts, so that it cannot and ought not now to be exerted by our courts of admiralty, is a question upon which I have no right even to conjecture what will be the judgment of the appellate court I have, indeed, hitherto supposed the point rather of theoretical than practical Importance, presuming that from private convenience, the benefit of a trial by jury, and the confidence that is so justly placed in our state tribunals, the insured would almost universally elect a domestic forum. I shall most cheerfully acquiesce in any judgment which may be ultimately pronounced on the point of jurisdiction; but entertaining, as I do most sincerely, the opinion, that this court is rightfully possessed of it, 1 feel myself compelled by a sense of duty to entertain the suit, and to give my deliberate judgment, however unavailing it may be, upon the great and interesting points which have been presented at the bar. I cannot, Indeed, but express my deep regret, that the cause has come before this court at all, and especially under circumstances of so much embarrassment and difficulty. My own situation in relation to it is somewhat delicate and perplexing. But every consideration of this sort becomes trivial, when put in comparison with the serious thought, that a veiy small sum only was originally in controversy; and that there is an almost moral certainty that the whole property will perish before the suit is finally terminated, so that a total loss, with all the expenses and charges of litigation, must be borne by the unsuccessful party. I may add too, that the case appears to be contested upon principle; that the conduct of the parties is perfectly fair; and that there is not the least reason to impute to either, any desire to avail themselves of any rule of law, which is not founded in general justice and equity, and which may not consist-with the most liberal good faith in matters of insurance.

The policy on which the suit is brought, bears date on the 6th of December, 1S20, and insures for the plaintiffs “thirty thousand dollars on the ship Argonaut, valued at $12,000, and on property on board — viz, $4,000 on the vessel, 826,000 on the property on board, at and from Leghorn to her port of discharge in the United States.” The loss is alleged to have been total, by reason of the perils of the sea, stranding and shipwreck. The material facts, as disclosed in the testimony (for there [100]*100is some contradiction upon collateral matters) appear to me to be these: The ship sailed from Leghorn on the 2d of February, 1821, in perfectly good order, on her voyage to the United States, having on board a cargo consisting of specie dollars, bags of rags, tile. &c. &c. Nothing material occurred until Saturday the 24th of March, when the vessel, about three o’clock in the morning, went ashore upon Gerrish’s Island, near Portsmouth, in New Hampshire. The accident was not in the slightest degree attributable to any fault or negligence of the master or crew, but was occasioned entirely by mistaking the light on the Isle of Shoals for Boston light (both being revolving lights, and the former having been erected since the departure of the ship on her voyage), and also by mistaking Portsmouth light for Baker’s Island light, .and Boon Island light for Cape Ann light. The place where the ship went on shore was surrounded by breakers, and there being a heavy swell, and the ship having gone head upon the rocks, she strained very much, and thumped very hard, so that it was very difficult to stand upon deck. Every effort was made to get the vessel off, by the crew; and guns being fired for assistance, in the morning they procured it, and landed the specie. About noon the same day, the weather moderated, and lighters were got alongside, and they began to discharge the cargo. In the afternoon of the same day the vessel bilged, some of the planks of the bottom were broken, and large holes made in them, and the tide ebbed and flowed into her within four or five feet of the deck. During the night, on the' ebb tide, they got out as much of the cargo as they could. On Sunday a storm commenced about 10 o’clock a. m., and the impression of the master and other persons on board being that the ship would go to pieces, every effort was made to save as much as possible. There were at this time eighty or ninety people on board; and they cut away the running rigging without un-reeving it, and cut the sails from the yards in any manner they could for the purpose of saving, them, the ship being then considered in imminent danger. About one o’clock that day, the master and all the crew quitted the vessel, deeming it very hazardous to their lives . to remain on board, and leaving there a part of the cargo. In the afternoon of the. same,day the weather moderated, but no attempt was made to get out any more of the cargo on that day. On Monday morning, the 20th of March, they went on board again, and continued to discharge the cargo. During all this period no hopes were entertained of saving the vessel, and her situation was generally deemed one of extreme hazard. The situation where she lay was very much exposed to the sea, and if the wind had blown heavily from any quarter between southwest and northeast, she must inevitably have • gone to pieees. Different estimates were formed of her value at this time, but the opinion of the best judges was, that she was worth little more than her materials; and the chance of being gotten off was considered very small, so much so that the premium to insure it was by none valued at less than fifty per cent, and by many intelligent and skilful witnesses was valued at from seventy-five to ninety per cent Capt. Ramage, of the United States schooner Porpoise, who went on board of the ship on Saturday, in a letter addressed to the owners on the 25th of March (Sunday), and which reached them the same evening, described her situation as follows:. “I left her about 7 o’clock last evening, bilged, with eight feet of water in her hold, about a mile and a half to the eastward of the light, and lying on a ledge of rocks, thirty or forty yards from the shore. It is very doubtful whether she can be saved.” The substance of this information was communicated to the underwriters the next day, soon after the abandonment On Monday morning about 10 o’clock, with the knowledge of her previous situation, the plaintiffs, as owners, abandoned the ship to the various underwriters by whom she was insured, and among others, to the respondents; to the Suffolk Insurance Company; and to the New England Marine-Insurance Company. The cause assigned in the letter of abandonment was, that the ship was shipwrecked on Gerrish’s Island. The-abandonment was first- handed by Capt. Silver, one of the owners, to Mr. Baleh, president of the Merchants’ Insurance Company, with a statement of the fact that he had come to abandon the ship. Mr. .Baleh made-no definite reply, opened and jjerused the letter, and then inquired of Capt Silver about the situation of the ship, and the cause of the disaster. Capt Silver, among other-tilings, stated, that Capt.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. Cas. 98, 3 Mason C.C. 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peeks-v-merchants-ins-co-circtdma-1822.