Stetson v. Insurance Co. of North America

215 F. 186, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1689
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 1, 1914
DocketNo. 10
StatusPublished

This text of 215 F. 186 (Stetson v. Insurance Co. of North America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stetson v. Insurance Co. of North America, 215 F. 186, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1689 (E.D. Pa. 1914).

Opinion

THOMPSON, District Judge.

The libelant sues to recover the sum of $1,700 as insurance upon freight on board or not on board the schooner John R. Penrose on a voyage from Philadelphia to Charleston, S. C., and Belfast, Ga., and return to Philadelphia for account of whom it'may concern, loss if any payable to D. S. Stetson & Co., the libelant.

The Penrose sailed from Philadelphia for Charleston January 21, 1909, having loaded a cargo of 694 tons of gas coal, the freight upon which amounted to $763.40. She was under charter for her expected return voyage from Belfast, Ga., to Philadelphia to carry lumber under which the freight would have amounted to $2,100 or $2,200. n The vessel never reached Charleston, but encountered violent storms, and at the end of 46 days put into Bermuda on March 7, 1909. The Pen-rose was leaking badly, and during the time she was battling with the storms her hand pumps were being constantly used; her gasoline engine and mechanical pump having become useless shortly after the stress of weather began. The first day the gale was encountered, the mainsail split and the forestaysail gave way, and subsequently other sails were rent and torn. The captain telegraphed to the libelant notifying him of his arrival at Bermuda and wrote him of the serious condition of the vessel. In his letter he said:

“She commenced to leak from the time we come to sea. * * * The en-gin stoped work from the first of the gale and has never Worked any since. * * * yeg!3ei nor her canvass was not fit for no such weather as we got for five week. * * * We will mend our sails and try to git along with them to Charleston. Mainsail foresail Jib and staysail all verry poor sails, and we about used them all up but if we can have any decent weather can git to Charleston with them.”

[188]*188Upon receipt of this letter, the libelant, who was one of the owners, sent the captain an answer in which he stated: '

“The writer to-day has been in consultation with the owners. Thomas Wins; more and Taulane are both uninsured, and instruct us not to advance one-dollar on their account, for they will not pay, and their decision is for you to call a survey that will recommend the vessel to be condemned and sold. If you cannot get a survey to condemn the vessel and order her sold, then all you can do is to repair the engine, pumps and sails and proceed under sail for Charleston as you suggest. As before stated there is no insurance on the vessel, but the little we have on our interest, and notwithstanding that fact, Thos. Winsmore and Taulane say that vessel should be condemned and sold, for they will not pay or reimburse us for any amount we may advance towárds the repairs of vessel at Bermuda or for towing her to Charleston, for she could not be towed over there for less then six or eight hundred dollars. If she is condemned and sold we can collect the $1,700 freight insurance we have for the trip, and then pay the bills, and Taulane can collect his insurance on the bills. We rely on you to do your best for the interest of all concerned and get the owners out of this trouble the best you can.”

Upon the request of the captain, a survey was made at Bermuda, under a warrant from the United States consul, by two surveyors, who reported about'two feet of water in the hold and that the vessel was in a serious condition. They estimated the probable' cost of repairs at ¿570, and, as a result of a second survey, after 200 tons of the cargo had been discharged, concluded:

“Master reported to us that being without funds and the owners having refused to give any money to pay the expenses of the vessel, he could not discharge any more cargo, neither could he effect any repairs to the vessel.”

They estimated her value as she lay at ¿80 and condemned her as unseaworthy and recommended her to be sold at public auction. The vessel, her sails and rigging, and the cargo, were sold by the captain at public auction. The total received from the sale of the vessel, her sails and rigging, was ¿206, and from the cargo ¿295, which, after deducting the expenses, left a balance paid to the libelant of ¿115.

[1] The respondent defends upon the ground that the contract of insurance is void by reason of the unseaworthiness of the vessel at the commencement of the voyage and also upon the ground that the breaking up of the voyage at Bermuda was not necessary, as the captain could have proceeded to Charleston with his cargo.

“There is no principle of marine insurance better settled than the one which declares that in every insurance upon a vessel there is an implied warranty upon the part of the assured that at the time of sailing the vessel shall be seaworthy for the voyage insured. This implied warranty is not confined to the sufficiency of the hull, but in a sailing vessel extends to the soundness of sails and rigging. * * * There is another principle applicable to the case under consideration, and it is this: If a ship, in a short time after leaving port, becomes leaky, * * * the presumption is that she was not ‘seaworthy’’ when she sailed, and the onus probandi in such a case is thrown upon the assured to show that the inability arose from causes subsequent to the commencement of the voyage and attaching of the risk. * * * ‘A ship is always presumed to have been defective when she sailed, unless her disability. be proved to have been occasioned by the perils of the voyage.’ ” Myers v. The Girard Insurance Co., 26 Pa. 192.

If 'it sufficiently appears by the evidence that the vessel sailed in a leaky state and in want of repairs and that she was not equipped and [189]*189fitted out as she ought to have been, there is a violation on the part of the insured of the implied warranty that the vessel is seaworthy. Prescott v. Insurance Co., 1 Whart. (Pa.) 399, 30 Am. Dec. 207.

[2] “The contract of Insurance upon freight is that the goods shall arrive at the port of delivery notvvithsianding the perils insured against; and that, if they fail Unis to arrive, and t.he owner is thereby unable to earn his freight, ihe underwriter will make it good. It does not undertake that the goods shall be delivered in a sound or merchantable state, or that the vessel in which they are shipped shall be safe against the dangers of the sea, but that it shall be in the power of the insured to earn his freight; that is, that the perils insured against sliail not prevent the ship from earning full freight for the assured in that voyage. If the ship and cargo remain, notwithstanding the disasters, in a condition to continue the voyage, it is in his power to earn freight, and he is bound to proceed; hut if damage happens to either, and the voyage is broken up, so that no freight can be earned, the owner is entitled to recover, as for a total or partial loss, according as he may or may not have earned freight pro rata itineris. If the damage happens to the vessel, and that can be repaired at the port of distress in a reasonable time, and at a reasonable expense, it is the duly of the owner to make the repairs, and to continue the voyage and earn his freight. * * * In every ease, before he can recover of the underwriter, he must show that he was prevented by one of the perils insured against from completing the voyage, and, for that reason, had failed to entitle himself to freight from the shippers.” Hugg v. Augusta Insurance and Banking Co., 48 U. S. 604,12 L. Ed. 834.

[3]

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Related

Hugg v. Augusta Insurance and Banking Co.
48 U.S. 595 (Supreme Court, 1849)
Myers v. Girard Insurance
26 Pa. 192 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1856)

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Bluebook (online)
215 F. 186, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stetson-v-insurance-co-of-north-america-paed-1914.