Searles v. Western Assurance Co.

40 So. 866, 88 Miss. 260
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 40 So. 866 (Searles v. Western Assurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Searles v. Western Assurance Co., 40 So. 866, 88 Miss. 260 (Mich. 1906).

Opinion

Mayes, L,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 24th day of February, 1903, Searles insured a certain barge owned by him and used in transporting freight and merchandise on the Mississippi river. The insurance began at noon on the 24th day of February, 1903, and ended at noon on the 24th day of February, 1904, and was taken out in the Western Assurance Company, appellee. The amount insured for was not to exceed $2,000. The policy of insurance is made an exhibit [266]*266to the bill; but, as the suit is predicated of only one clause of the insurance policy, Ave do not deem it necessary to set out any clause but this. The clause referred to is clause 8, which is as follows, viz.:

“There shall be no abandonment as for a constructive total loss in consequence of any loss or damage, unless the cost of the necessary repairs required solely by the disaster, exclusive of cost of raising or rescuing the Aessel and taking her to the dock and any general average charges, be equivalent to seventy-five per cent of the agreed value of the Aressel as specified herein; nor shall there be any right to abandon on account of said Aessel grounding or being otherwise detained.”

This same clause also provides that, where the right to abandon exists, it shall not be held to be valid, or allowed as effectual, unless it be in writing, and signed by the assured, and delivered to the company or its authorized agent. In October, 1903, Searles filed a declaration in the circuit court of Warren county to recover the full amount of the insurance granted by the policy; that is to say, $2,000. The declaration alleges that on the 29th day of July, 1903, the barge Avas totally destroyed by the unavoidable dangers of the Mississippi river, and that by reason of violent winds, etc., though every effort was made to saA^e the vessel, she became thereby a constructive total loss within the terms of the policy under which it Avas insured. The declaration also alleges that the plaintiff performed all the conditions of the policy, and demanded payment of the company for the loss; but the insurance company declined and refused to pay, wherefore the plaintiff sues for the siun of $2,000 for the total constructive loss of the vessel. The declaration contains but one count, and is for the total constructive loss of the barge. There are quite a number of pleas filed by the defendant, but the single question presented to this court is, has the plaintiff made out such a case [267]*267as entitles him to recover the full amount of the policy as for a total constructive loss of the vessel ?

The testimony of Mr. Searles is that he placed the insurance with the Western Assurance Company on tbe 24th day of February, 1903, expiring on the 24th day of February, 1904, at noon; that the barge was sunk on the 29th day of July, 1903, by a violent windstorm; that the premium paid for the insurance was $180, $90 of which was paid soon after the policy was taken out, and the balance about one month after the accident to the barge. When the boat was sunk he was sick in bed, but came down the next day to see what could be done about it, and, finding that nothing cordd be done, notified E. C. Wilkerson, the agent of the company at Vicksburg, that he had abandoned the vessel. The notice was a written notice. A day or so after the vessel was sunk he went up and looked at the vessel, and about one-half of it was in the river, and the other end sticking up on the bank, with considerable water in the lower end; the water being up to the lower deck, or cargo box. He had no facilities for raising the vessel, and could not get any, though lie tried to do so, and there were no facilities available at Vicksburg, and he therefore abandoned the vessel, and notified E. O. Wilkerson, the agent of the assurance company, in writing. This notification was to Mr. Wilkerson at Vicksburg on the 31st day of July, and on the 2d day of August following the assurance company by telegram declined to accept the abandonment and notified him to raise the vessel. On the 3d day of August he telegraphed the assurance company that there were no facilities in Vicksburg for raising the vessel, and that the company ought to take charge of it. He afterwards wrote the company, again insisting that they take charge of the vessel; but they declined to do so, insisting that it was Searles’ duty to raise the vessel, and that they did not intend to take any further action in the matter. The agreed value of the boat was $3,000, and the full amount of insurance was for an amount not to exceed $2,000. In the then condition of the vessel he deemed it of no value to him, and after the notification [268]*268of abandonment to Mr. Wilkerson, paid no more attention to it. Tie spoke to six or a dozen men to go and raise it, but could not get them to do it, but did not have any one go and look at the barge to see what could be done, as all the men whom he spoke to knew all about the condition of the barge and the river. Dennis Scott said that he had been the night watchman on the boat, and, though it had been leaking a little before the storm came, the storm was what caused it to sink; that the water dashing against the boat during the storm washed out the chinking and caused the boat to sink; that the storm lasted about twenty-four hours, and the boat was sunk about eleven o’clock on the morning after the evening when the storm began.

On these facts the plaintiff rested his case, and the defense introduced T. C. Sweeney, steamboat inspector for the board of underwriter a in New Orleans. Mr. Sweeney stated that it was his duty to make examination of all vessels and crafts insured by the board of underwriters, and to make a report of their condition and value, and that he has been engaged in this occupation for the past eight years. That he Avas formerly engaged in superintending the building of vessels. Had inspected the boat in question some time in February, 1903, and recommended her acceptance as an insurance risk after certain repairs were made on the vessel, so that she would be put in a riverworthy condition. Three days before the vessel sunk he saw her in the river, and at the time he saAV her there was a man pumping water out of her; that a few days afterward he received notice that the vessel had sunk, and came up to Vicksburg, reaching there on the morning of the 31st day of July, 1903. The boat Avas lying with the head on the bank and the stern in the river, with about fourteen feet of water in rear end. More than two-thirds of the frame part of the boat was out of the water. The water Avas not very high, but he does not recollect what the 'stage of it was. Mr. Searles Avas at home sick, but he talked to his clerk and asked for a protest, which was foiuvarded in a day or so. He returned to New Orleans, and there received the protest. He examined the [269]*269boat, and she could have been raised. It would have required a pump, siphon, and steamboat. Captain Miller agreed to go up and make the effort to raise the boat for $100, and it could have been easily raised; that the Edna, owned by Captain Miller, could easily have raised the boat, and when raised it would only have been necessary to calk the seams to the -water line, if she did not leak below the water line, and if she did, then to dock her and put it in good condition. It would only have cost about $300 to repair her, and if it only cost $100 to raise her, then the total expense would not have exceeded $100.

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Bluebook (online)
40 So. 866, 88 Miss. 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/searles-v-western-assurance-co-miss-1906.