Standard Marine Insurance v. Scottish Metropolitan Assurance Co.

283 U.S. 284, 51 S. Ct. 371, 75 L. Ed. 1037, 1931 U.S. LEXIS 846
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 13, 1931
Docket261
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 283 U.S. 284 (Standard Marine Insurance v. Scottish Metropolitan Assurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Marine Insurance v. Scottish Metropolitan Assurance Co., 283 U.S. 284, 51 S. Ct. 371, 75 L. Ed. 1037, 1931 U.S. LEXIS 846 (1931).

Opinion

*285 Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the Court.

^Dreyfus & Co. purchased wheat at $1.38% a bushel, c. i. f. Montreal. The wheat was shipped on the S. S. “ Glenorchy ” from Port Arthur to Montreal by the seller, who had insured it, with respondent, for buyer’s account, at a valuation of $1.42 a bushel, the risk to begin immediately after the loading of the vessel. Dreyfus also effected insurance, with petitioner, covering “ increased value ” of the grain above its c. i. f. cost. That value was stipulated to be the difference between c. i. f. cost and the highest market value per bushel between the day of sailing and the day on which cargo would have arrived at destination if the loss had not occurred, plus 5‡. The applicable clause of the policy, so far as material, is printed in the margin. *

A collision of the Glenorchy with the S. S. “ Leonard B. Miller ” resulted in a total loss of the cargo. In a proceeding for limitation of liability, brought by the owner of the Miller, in the District Court for Northern Ohio, both vessels were held at fault, and the cargo owner recovered $309,500 for the insured wheat, with interest from *286 the date of collision. That was its value, at $1.54% a bushel, at the time and place of shipment, which is the valué recoverable for loss of cargo by maritime tort. The Vaughan & Telegraph, 14 Wall. 258, 267, 268.

Respondent paid Dreyfus $284,000, the full amount of its policy. Petitioner paid $62,500, stipulated to be the amount due on its policy at the rate of 31%$ per bushel, the difference between $1.38%, the c. i. f. price, and $1.69%, the highest market value, within the ten days after departure required for the voyage, plus Both insurers intervened in the limitation proceeding, each asserting its right to be subrogated to the cargo owner’s right of recovery. The special commissioner to whom the matter was submitted reported that petitioner and respondent were co-insurers of cargo, and that they should share pro rata, in proportion to their policy liabilities, in the cargo owner’s recovery, after payment of his expenses in litigating the claim.

The District Court decreed payment to respondent of $284,000, the full amount of its insurance liability, with interest from the date of loss, and payment to petitioner of the balance, after deducting the commissioner’s fees. 28 F. (2d) 540. The Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit affirmed. 39 F. (2d) 436. Both courts thought that as the insurer, on payment of the loss, is subrogated only to such right of recovery as the insured had, Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Erie & W. Trans. Co., 117 U. S. 312, and as the latter had no right to recover for any increase in value beyond that at the time and place of shipment, petitioner, so far as it had insured such an increase in value, was not entitled to participate in the recovery, since participation would amount to the assertion of a right of recovery which the insured did not possess.

This Court granted certiorari, 282 U. S. 822, on a petition setting up, as grounds for the writ, the importance of the question and an alleged conflict between the decision *287 below and that of the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Brown v. Merchants Marine Ins. Co., 152 Fed. 411.

Co-insurers, on payment of the loss insured against, are subrogated to the right of the insured to recover from one who causes the loss, and participate pro rata in the recovery. As the policy liabilities of the present insurers were occasioned by the destruction of the same cargo by the same peril, and as the insured has recovered for its destruction by that peril, the question precisely stated is not whether petitioner may assert, by way of subrogation, a right of recovery which the insured did not possess, but the extent to which petitioner is entitled to be subrogated to the right which the insured did possess and assert against the colliding vessels. Hence the disposition of the present case turns upon the question whether petitioner and respondent were co-insurers against the same risk, or independent insurers against different risks.

We think it clear, and it seems to be conceded, that since respondent is an insurer against loss of cargo, petitioner, if its policy be regarded as insuring against loss of profits of the venture, is not a co-insurer with respondent, even though the liability of both accrued by reason of the destruction of the cargo by the same peril. The very purpose of insurance of profits is to protect the insured against risk of loss which is not covered by insurance upon the cargo itself. See Canada Sugar Refining Co. v. Insurance Co. of North America, 175 U. S. 609; Patapsco Insurance Co. v. Coulter, 3 Pet. 222; 1 Arnould on Marine Insurance (11th ed.) §§ 236, 287, 288; cf. O’Brien v. North River Ins. Co., 212 Fed. 102.

When the insured thus separates and separately insures two distinct elements of risk—value of cargo and profits which may be earned on it—both insurers cannot share by subrogation in his right to recover against wrongdoers for cargo damage alone. For, while destruction of the cargo has in a sense occasioned both losses, the wrong *288 doer is liable for one and not the other; and hence there is no right of recovery by the insured for loss of profits to which the insurer against that loss may be subrogated'. The object of subrogation is to make indemnity to the insured, up to the amount of the policy, the measure of the liability of the insurer, and that is its justification. But the liability would be less than such indemnity if the insurer could be subrogated to a right of recovery by the insured for a loss other than that insured against.

Petitioner insists that its insurance was not of anticipated profits, but of increased value of the property, not differing from any other insurance on property, with respect to which the insurer when called upon to contribute to loss of its value becomes entitled to share pro rata with other insurers of the property in any recovery by the insured against third' persons causing the loss. Brown v. Merchants’ Marine Ins. Co., supra. But this argument leaves out of account the peculiar nature of insurance on increased value of cargo over its value at the port of departure, which, for present purposes, is to be distinguished from insurance on hull or any other property, increase in value of which may be embraced in, and recovered under policies insuring against a loss of the property.

It has long been the accepted rule, in the law of maritime torts and of maritime insurance, that the recoverable value of cargo lost or damaged at sea is that at time and place of shipment, without allowance for increase of value or anticipated profits. Smith v. Condry, 1 How. 28, 35;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
283 U.S. 284, 51 S. Ct. 371, 75 L. Ed. 1037, 1931 U.S. LEXIS 846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-marine-insurance-v-scottish-metropolitan-assurance-co-scotus-1931.