Rogers v. Sun Mutual Insurance

14 Jones & S. 65
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedFebruary 2, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 Jones & S. 65 (Rogers v. Sun Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogers v. Sun Mutual Insurance, 14 Jones & S. 65 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1880).

Opinion

By the Court.—Freedman, J.

Ina marine insurance, whether it be on the ship, freight, or cargo, or the commissions or profits to accrue upon the cargo, the assured is understood impliedly to warrant, hy the mere fact of effecting the insurance, independently of the particular terms used, that the ship is at the commencement of the voyage seaworthy ; namely, that the materials of which the ship is made, its construction, the qualifications of the captain, the number and description of the crew, the tackle, sails, and rigging, stores, equipment, and outfit, generally, are such as to [70]*70render it in every respect fit for the proposed voyage or service (1 Phillips on Ins. § 695, and cases cited).

This warranty extends to the qualities and defects of the vessel, unknown, and that could not have been known, no less than those known, to the assured (Ib.).

The warranty is a condition precedent to the policy attaching, and the burden is upon the plaintiff to prove seaworthiness, whether the loss or injury proceed from a want of it in any particular or not (Hazard v. New England Ins. Co., 8 Pet. 581).

The standard of seaworthiness varies at different places, and, in general, that must be taken which rules at the place where the vessel belongs. So, too, this standard varies according to the character of the vessel, her location, the voyage she is to undertake, or the service she is to perform. Thus, if she is in port, she may be seaworthy for that place, although not for sea. If on the ways for repair, she may be fit and sufficient for that condition, although she would not be fit to be waterborne. So, too, the insurance may be for a mere .temporary purpose, as the going from one harbor to another, or even across a harbor or a strait, or a brief navigation upon inland waters, or while being safely launched ; and, if the ship be sufficient for this purpose, it will not be necessary that she should be in a condition to go to sea (1 Parsons on Marine Ins. 886, 387, and cases cited).

Thus, in Cobb v. New England Mutual Marine Ins. Co. (6 Gray, 192), insurance was effected on a vessel when waterborne, at and from Perry, with permission to go to Eastport and thence to a southern place ; and it was held that it was sufficient if the vessel was in a fit condition to go to Eastport while she sailed for that place, although she was not fit for sea.

The obligation may also be lessened, enlarged, superseded, or waived, by the parties. A vessel may be offered for insurance and insured that will not admit of [71]*71being put into that condition of seaworthiness for the intended voyage which is ustial and requisite in ordinary cases.

But any such change or waiver must be clearly established. A survey of the ship by surveyors acting for the underwriters, preliminary to the agreement to insure, even when done in pursuance of an express standing regulation of the insurance company, is not a waiver on their part of their right to insist on the implied warranty of seaworthiness (1 Phillips on Ins. § 753, and cases cited).

Myers v. Girard Ins. Co. (26 Penn. St. 192), was an action on a policy of insurance on the iron hull stern-wheel steamboat Governor Moorhead, for one trip from Philadelphia to Port Washington, N. C. The boat was new, built in Philadelphia, and was to be taken to North Carolina to run on the Tar river as a passenger and mailboat. She proceeded down the Delaware river, but the steam got down, the furnace- refused to draw, and she put in at Leedsburg, Morris river, and after an ineffectual attempt to make her machinery work properly, the captain took her back to Philadelphia, and, while at her berth at the wharf, during the same night, she sunk, and considerable damage was doné. The witnesses all testified that she was not built for ocean navigation, but was adapted for river navigation, but were of the opinion that she could, with care, in favorable weather, be taken from Philadelphia to Port Washington. The company knew she was a river boat. One witness testified that he had surveyed her and communicated the facts as to the character of the boat and the trade she was intended for, to the secretary of the company, before the insurance. A nonsuit having been granted on the ground t,hat she was unseaworthy, the supreme court, on appeal, held as follows, viz:

“We see no evidence from which an inference could [72]*72be drawn that the insurance was to stand good without reference to the ability of the steamboat to make the trip. It may be conceded that the insurance company knew that the boat was built for the river trade, and that it had been examined by the agent of the company before the insurance, but a Avaiver of the implied covenant of seaworthiness for the particular voyage insured does not follow from either of these circumstances, or both combined. All the authorities establish that a waiver of seaworthiness, when not expressed in the contract of insurance, is only to be inferred upon clear evidence that the insurer knew that the vessel was unfit to perform the voyage insured, or that a full representation was made by the assured of the defects of the ship before the completion of the contract.
‘ ‘ The assured is not bound to make any representation as to the condition of the vessel at the inception of the risk, for this is cured by the implied warranty of seaworthiness; but if he wishes to avoid the implied warranty by a disclosure of the defects, he must take care that the disclosure is full and complete. A mere statement that a vessel is intended for a particular trade, although that trade may be less hazardous than the voyage insured, will not cast the risk of seaworthiness upon the insurer ; nor does it follow from ah examination, that defects in the machinery of a steamboat were discovered and considered in the contract of insurance.”

The rule clearly deducible from all the authorities is

1. That it is competent for the underwriter to say, in effect, to the applicant for insurance : “ You are or represent the owner of the vessel, who is bound to know all about her. For my own protection I shall look as far as I deem it expedient, but, after all, I shall rely upon the warranty of the seaworthiness of the ves[73]*73sel to encounter with safety the ordinary perils of the voyage upon which you propose to send her; ” and

2. That the burden of establishing a different contract rests upon the assured.

This rule may in some instances operate as a harsh one, but it is a reasonable and salutary one, and public policy is against its relaxation in favor of the owner, because upon its enforcement depends in a great degree the safety of the crew and passengers.

By the policy in question, dated November 21, 1876, and issued to the Newark Transportation Company, the defendant insured the steamboat Novelty at and from Newark, N. J., to the St. Johns River, Florida, with privilege of port or ports on the way. One of the clauses of the policy further provided that it should be lawful for the said vessel, in her voyage, to proceed and sail to, touch and stay at; any ports or places, if thereunto obliged by stress of weather, or other unavoidable accident, without prejudice to the insurance.

Upon the trial the vessel was shown to have been built in 1869, at Philadelphia, to run by way of experiment, as a fast river boat.

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14 Daly 496 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1888)

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Bluebook (online)
14 Jones & S. 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-sun-mutual-insurance-nysuperctnyc-1880.