Tavares v. Glens Falls Insurance

300 P.2d 102, 143 Cal. App. 2d 755, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1661
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 8, 1956
DocketCiv. 5178
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 300 P.2d 102 (Tavares v. Glens Falls Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tavares v. Glens Falls Insurance, 300 P.2d 102, 143 Cal. App. 2d 755, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1661 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

MUSSELL, J.

This is an action on an insurance policy to recover a fine and expenses paid by plaintiffs to the government of Ecuador for an alleged violation of the law of Ecuador prohibiting the passage of fishing boats without a fishing permit through its claimed territorial seas. The policy, issued on May 27, 1952, by thé defendant Glens Falls Insurance Company, insures the plaintiffs, in respect to a vessel called the “Sun Pacific,” against

“(9) Liability for fines and penalties for the violation of any of the laws of the United States, or of any State thereof, or of any foreign country; provided, however, that the Company shall not be liable to indemnify the Assured against any such fines or penalties resulting directly or indirectly from the failure, neglect, or default of the Assured or his managing officers or managing agents to exercise the highest degree of diligence to prevent a violation of any such laws.”

The policy contains a further provision, by endorsement, in part, as follows:

' “F. C. & S. Clause. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in the Policy, this insurance is warranted free, from any claim for loss, damage or expense caused by or resulting from capture, seizure, arrest, restraint or detainment, or the consequences thereof or any attempt thereat, or any taking of the Vessel, by requisition or otherwise, whether in time of peace or war and whether lawful or otherwise. . . .”

The Sun Pacific is a tuna fishing vessel of approximately 250 tons capacity and is one of a fleet of other such vessels which sail from the port of San Diego and fish off the coast of Mexico, Central and South America." On July 29, 1952, *757 while the vessel was proceeding through the claimed territorial waters of Ecuador and was approximately 16 miles from the next point of land and within the 12-mile limit claimed by Ecuador, officers of that country stopped it and ordered the captain to take it to the Ecuadorian port of Manta. The Ecuadorian Coast Guard official told Frank Dolph, master of the Sun Pacific, that the vessel was being seized because they were fishing without a license.

On or about August 2, 1952, the owners of said vessel were compelled to deposit with the Minister of Economics of Ecuador the sum of $11,600 to secure the release of said vessel. This deposit was made under an agreement that it was to be security for any fine subsequently levied or assessed against the owners of said vessel by Ecuador for a violation of law. On May 10, 1954, the Ecuadorian government levied a fine against the owners of the vessel in the sum of $11,616.30 and applied the sum deposited by the owners in payment of the fine. In an attempt to meet the charges made by the Ecuadorian authorities and to avoid payment of' the fine, plaintiffs expended $1,540.07 to defray expenses of an officer of the Tunaboat Owners Association to Ecuador, and for attorneys’ fees.

The trial court herein rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs and the defendant appeals. The court found, among other things, as follows:

“VII. That the levying of the aforesaid fine was not the result of the failure, neglect or default of the Plaintiffs or any of them, or their managing officers or agents to exercise the highest degree of diligence to prevent the aforesaid violation of law.”
“IX. That said fine did not result from any loss, damage or expense sustained by reason of any provision of the endorsement to said insurance policy denominated the F. C. & S. Clause; nor did said fine result from a violation of the laws of Equador (sic) with the knowledge of Plaintiffs, or any of them.”

Appellants contend that finding number seven has no support in the evidence and that the F. C. & S. clause of the policy excluded liability for fines consequent upon seizure for violation of the Ecuadorian law.

The Ecuadorian law involved, insofar as it is pertinent here, is as follows:

“Decree 003 of Feb. 26, 1951, provided in part:
“No fishing vessel of foreign flag may enter into Ecuadorian *758 territorial seas without being provided with the matriculation, the fishing permit, and other pertinent documents.”

Ecuadorian territorial waters were defined as including an area within . . . “12 nautical miles measured from the line of the lowest tide at the most projecting points of the Ecuadorian coast. ...” Section 52 of the same law provided “(t)here shall be considered as crime of contraband . . . (a) Entry into territorial seas of the Republic without carrying along the Matriculation and Fishing Permit. ...” This Ecuadorian decree was protested by the United States on June 7, 1951, as contrary to the position of the United States that no nation may properly claim more than three miles out to sea. The decree was never published in the United States nor were its terms made known in San Diego by the Ecuadorian government through its consul who dealt constantly with tunaboat representatives. It was stipulated that a copy of this decree could have been in the Los Angeles County Library, but that a copy of it was not obtainable in either the San Diego Law Library or the public library.

It appears from the testimony of William B. Stern, an expert on foreign law, that the precise distance to which any nation may extend claims of jurisdiction offshore its borders has been a subject of dispute between nations since the Middle Ages, and that there does not appear ever to have been reached any particular unanimous agreement among them. Mr. Stern testified that in his opinion the Ecuadorian decree did not prohibit innocent passage and that “the doctrine of innocent passage is one of the unwritten international laws.” In this connection the record shows that the vessel here involved was effecting an innocent passage through the claimed territorial waters of Ecuador and was not engaged in fishing in such waters. Plaintiffs were fined by the Ecuadorian government because the vessel was effecting an innocent passage.

There was a conflict in the evidence as to whether the plaintiffs exercised the highest degree of diligence to prevent the violation of the Ecuadorian law and we conclude that the evidence in this connection was sufficient to support the trial court’s finding number seven.

Mr. Dolph, master of the vessel, testified that there was no fishing from the Sun Pacific off the coast of Ecuador and that his purpose in traversing his course off the coast of that country was to reach the banks off the coast of Peru; that at the time the vessel was stopped, he did not know that he was *759 within the territorial waters of Ecuador. Roman Luz, fishing captain of the vessel, testified that they were stopped at about 9 p. m. on July 29, 1952, and at the time they were watching a movie and were running for the Peruvian banks.

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Bluebook (online)
300 P.2d 102, 143 Cal. App. 2d 755, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tavares-v-glens-falls-insurance-calctapp-1956.