Sherwood v. General Mut. Ins. Co.

21 F. Cas. 1290, 1 Blatchf. 251, 5 N.Y. Leg. Obs. 406, 1847 U.S. App. LEXIS 550
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedDecember 4, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 F. Cas. 1290 (Sherwood v. General Mut. Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherwood v. General Mut. Ins. Co., 21 F. Cas. 1290, 1 Blatchf. 251, 5 N.Y. Leg. Obs. 406, 1847 U.S. App. LEXIS 550 (circtsdny 1847).

Opinion

BETTS, District Judge.

The declaration in this case is very special, setting forth all the facts upon which the action is grounded, or which might probably be brought out on the defence. The brig Emily, owned by the plaintiff, was underwritten by the defendants, amongst other risks, against “the perils of the sea.” Before the termination of the voyage, and at sea off the port of New-York, she came in collision with , the schooner Virginian, by which the latter vessel was sunk, and, with her cargo, totally lost. A suit in rem was prosecuted, in the district court for this district, by the owners of the Virginian against the Emily, to recover the damages sustained by occasion of the collision. The court held, that there was negligence and misconduct in the management and navigation of the Emily, and decreed against her 86,000 for damages sustained by the Virginian, besides costs of suit. This deeree was affirmed on appeal to the circuit court, and the present action on the policy of insurance seeks to recover from the defendants the amount so decreed against the Emily, and which the plaintiff avers he has paid and satisfied.

The defendants demur to the first and second counts of the declaration, which detail these facts, and the issues at law presented upon the pleadings are: 1. Whether a policy against “the perils of the sea” comprehends the damages paid by the insured vessel to another in consequence of a collision between them at sea; 2. Whether the underwriters on such policy are liable, when the collision is produced through negligence and misconduct on the part of the insured vessel.

These points have been argued with great fulness and ability, and with a critical examination of the principles recognized in the American and English courts, and the maritime codes of Europe, on the subjeet-We think both questions are embraced within decisions rendered by the supreme court, and that they are not now open for consideration by this court on general principles, and accordingly we shall restrict the discussion in this opinion, to a very concise statement of our views of the effect and bearing of the cases decided by the supreme court.

In the first place, we understand it to be explicitly settled in the case of Peters v. Warren Ins. Co., 14 Pet. [39 U. S.] 99, that a vessel insured against the perils of the sea is entitled to be remunerated Tinder the policy, to the extent of the contributions she has been obliged to make for injuries to another vessel in consequence of a collision at sea between the two. That is the general-doctrine. . The court also determined that the policy covered not only the immediate damages occasioned by the collision, but the costs and expenses incurred in enforcing the contribution.

That case disposed of another point supposed on the part of the defendants in this case to merit great consideration. It was emphatically declared that the proximate cause of loss was the collision, and not the adjudication of the tribunal attaching the loss to the insured vessel, or the lex loci establishing her liability. The objection raised on the argument before us, that the loss-was not within the perils insured against, because it was imposed upon the Emily immediately by the decrees of the district and circuit courts, condemning her in damages- and costs, and that her exposure to litigation could not, in the event of such litigation, be deemed a peril of the sea, is, therefore, precisely met and answered by that case. We accordingly regard the first proposition raised by the demurrers as fully covered by the decision of the supreme court, and no longer a subject of discussion.

The point, however, most relied upon by the defendants is, that by the commercial law of the United States and of the continental states of Europe, underwriters on a marine policy are not liable for a loss pro-[1291]*1291dueed by the carelessness, ignorance or misconduct of the assured; and that the later English cases which have declared a different rule are in opposition to the better settled principles of the law of that kingdom also. It is conceded that the case of Hale v. Washington Ins. Co. [Case No. 5,916] is in consonance with the recent decisions in England, and applies the ease of Peters v. Warren Ins. Co. [supra] to a class of facts entirely analogous to those stated in the declaration in this case and, by the demurrers, admitted to be true. But it has been most strenuously insisted, that the decision of the supreme court <in no way sanctions the principles adopted by Judge Story and claimed by the plaintiff in this suit. It is true the case before the supreme court arose out of a collision which happened through accident or mutual fault. That circumstance was recognized by the Hamburg tribunal as the ground for compelling a mutual contribution by the colliding vessels. But the judgment of the supreme court was in no respect governed by that circumstance. It is placed upon a broader consideration; one which may be fairly regarded as embracing every loss not barratrous. It adjudged the damages sustained by the injured vessel to be the direct and immediate consequence of the collision, and no less so in being imposed by judgment of law on the insured vessel, than if they had accrued to her bodily by the collision.

The case did not demand the judgment of the court upon the particular point here relied upon by the defence, and no direct opinion was expressed in respect to the influence or effect of proving negligent or blamable conduct in those managing the insured vessel. But it is manifest that the fact, if it existed, would in no way have influenced the decision; because the court express their dissatisfaction, in toto, with the decision of the queen's bench in England, in De Vaux v. Salvador, 4 Adol. & E. 420, and a prominent ingredient in that case was one of fault on both sides. The distinction would not have escaped notice, had the supreme court considered the absence or presence of negligence or fault tending to produce the loss, as varying at all the principle adopted and adjudged in the case. We accordingly think the spirit of the decision in Peters v. Warren Ins. Co. [supra] well warranted the conclusion drawn from it and applied in Hale v. Washington Ins. Co. [supra], and that full authority is furnished by these cases to support the present action.

But, furthermore, we regard the point as in effect determined by the supreme court, by repeated decisions antecedent to the ease of Peters v. Warren Ins. Co., and that, accordingly. that case proceeded upon a principle which had become the settled law of the court. The rule, after the most ample examination of American and European authorities, had been deliberately declared and established, that underwriters are liable for a loss arising directly out of a peril insured against, although the negligence or misconduct of persons in charge of the property insured, may have occasioned the loss. Patapsco Ins. Co. v. Coulter, 3 Pet. [28 U. S.] 222. That was a marine policy. The same doctrine was reiterated in Columbia Ins. Co. v. Lawrence, 10 Pet. [35 U. S.] 507, which was a fire policy on real property. The principle is repeated with increased emphasis in Waters v. Merchants’ Louisville Ins. Co., 13 Pet. [36 U. S.] 213.

These principles have now been incorporated into the jurisprudence of many of the individual states. Henderson v. Western Marine & Fire Ins. Co., 10 Rob. (La.) 164; Copeland v. New England Marine Ins. Co., 2 Metc. [Mass.] 432; Perrin v. Protection Ins. Co., 11 Ohio, 147.

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Related

Sherwood v. Mutual Ins. Co.
21 F. Cas. 1298 (D. Maine, 1826)

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Bluebook (online)
21 F. Cas. 1290, 1 Blatchf. 251, 5 N.Y. Leg. Obs. 406, 1847 U.S. App. LEXIS 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherwood-v-general-mut-ins-co-circtsdny-1847.