Stocker v. Merrimack Marine & Fire Insurance

6 Mass. 220
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1810
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 Mass. 220 (Stocker v. Merrimack Marine & Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stocker v. Merrimack Marine & Fire Insurance, 6 Mass. 220 (Mass. 1810).

Opinion

Sewall, J.

In this action on a policy of insurance, the plaintiff demands the sum of 1800 dollars, insured by the defendants on [183]*183the freight of the ship Fortune, for a voyage from Leghorn to Smyrna, and back from Smyrna to Leghorn with cotton ; and the plaintiff avers a total loss, by a capture of the ship on her return passage with a lading of cotton. The defendants admit that the plaintiff is entitled to recovei, unless their defence prevails; which they state upon the following facts appearing in the case : —

The capture alleged was by a British armed vessel, and the cargo of cotton on board at the time was the property, and had been taken on freight for the account and risk of Messrs. Franchetti, merchants of Leghorn, upon an agreement with them by the supercargo of the ship; they being subjects of the emperor of France, then at war wdth Great Britain. This cargo was disguised and covered, as the property of the owners of the ship, by false bills of lading, and papers made out pursuant to the said agreement. The British prize court at Malta, where the ship was carried by the captors, acquitted the vessel, and, after allowing further time for proof, condemned the cargo, and refused to decree any freight to the owners, for this reason assigned in the sentence — that the bills sf lading expressed the cargo to be the owners’ property, and that no freight was to be paid. It also appears that no notice of the said agreement to carry the goods of the subjects of a belligerent power, or of an intention to cover property taken on freight by false bills of lading, was given to the underwriters, when the policy in question was effected.

* It is contended that the defendants are not liable for [ * 225 j the loss demanded, 1st, because facts and circumstances material to the risk were concealed by the plaintiff, when he effected his insurance; and, 2dly, because the loss happened by the misconduct of the plaintiff, or his agent.

The employment in which a vessel is to be engaged, when attended with any extraordinary hazard, must always be material to the risk ; and if this be known to the assured, and the extraordinary circumstances are not suggested by the description of the voyage, the concealment will avoid the policy.

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Related

Clark v. Manufacturers' Ins. Co.
5 F. Cas. 889 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts, 1847)
Seton, Maitland & Co. v. Low
1 Johns. Cas. 1 (New York Supreme Court, 1799)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Mass. 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stocker-v-merrimack-marine-fire-insurance-mass-1810.