Taylor v. . Atlantic Mutual Insurance Co.

37 N.Y. 275
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 37 N.Y. 275 (Taylor v. . Atlantic Mutual Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. . Atlantic Mutual Insurance Co., 37 N.Y. 275 (N.Y. 1867).

Opinion

This action was prosecuted to recover from the defendants, certain moneys claimed to be due from them to the plaintiffs, as wharfage or slippage, in respect to a certain ship called the Joseph Walker; or the damages which the plaintiffs claimed they had sustained, by the loss of such wharfage or slippage, by reason of the wrongful and negligent acts of the defendants, and their agents and employees.

The ship Joseph Walker of about 1300 tons burden, while lying on the west side of the pier No. 29, East river, at the port of New York, taking in cargo, took fire on the 26th of December, 1853, and sunk to the bottom of the river, in about thirty feet of water. She had on board about 300 or 400 barrels of resin, about 300 bales of cotton, about 20,000 bushels of wheat; all of which were submerged. The defendants, the Atlantic Mutual Insurance company, were insurers of 13-32 parts of the ship. Other insurance companies, who are also parties defendant, were insurers of the interests of other owners — only 6-32 parts being uninsured, and the owners of those parts are also defendants. The *Page 276 sunken wreck was not removed from the slip until the 25th or 26th of October, 1855.

The insured owners of the vessel abandoned her, after she was burned and sunk, as a total loss, and the insurance companies accepted the abandonment.

The plaintiff Moses Taylor, as lessee of the corporation of New York, was entitled to demand and receive the wharfage of the bulkhead on the easterly half of the slip, and to the wharfage or slippage arising from the westerly half of the pier.

When this case was first before the Superior Court of New York for consideration upon a demurrer to the complaint, that court held that the plaintiffs could not recover without showing that the defendants, by due care and attention, could have removed the wreck, or at least have shifted its position so as to prevent its being a cause of injury, and by showing that they were in default for not doing so.

That court also held that the defendants, having insured an individual interest in the ship, and having accepted an abandonment made by such insured owner after the vessel was so burned and sunk, were not liable for loss of slippage or wharfage caused by such obstruction, it not being alleged that by due care and attention it could have been removed.

And also held, that such piers and bulkheads are open to the common use of the public for any purposes connected with the loading, unloading, or repairing of vessels, and securing their cargoes, whether in vessels afloat or sunk, not prohibited by statute or the lawful ordinances of the common council; and that such use, when it neither incumbers the bulkhead or pier so as to incommode the loading or unloading of vessels, or the passing or repassing of carts, nor in any way injures the structure itself, gives no right of action to the party entitled to slippage or wharfage.

Held, also, that a use of a ship, in attempting to raise a vessel and secure the property in it, especially as such attempt was made at the request of the plaintiffs, created no liability to make compensation for such use, as no facts were stated showing such use to be wrongful, or an invasion of the plaintiffs' rights, or a violation of any duty which the defendants *Page 277 owed to them. The demurrer to the complaint was sustained, and judgment given for the defendants, with leave to plaintiffs to amend. (2 Bosw. 106.) The complaint was amended, and, as thus amended, did allege: "That the said (wreck) ship Joseph Walker could have been removed with reasonable care, skill and diligence in a short space of time — to wit, in the space of sixty days from the time when so sunk. That the defendants having control and possession of the said ship, have conducted themselves so negligently, unskillfully and carelessly in and about their attempts at the removal of said ship, which they undertook to do, and as was their duty to do; and in and about the bringing into said slip and sinking or suffering to be sunk and left there, the said other vessels or hulks, and in various other acts of negligence, unskillfulness and carelessness in respect thereto, that the plaintiffs have suffered great and lasting injury." That, "by means of all which premises, and by the said several acts of negligence and unskillfulness, and by said other obstructions, brought into said slip by the defendants, and left there, and by injury to the said wharf and pier as aforesaid, and by the said piles driven and left remaining in the said slip as aforesaid, and by said obstructions to the passing and repassing of carts upon and over said pier and wharf as aforesaid, and by preventing the entering and loading and unloading of vessels into and alongside of said ship, pier and wharf, and by their unnecessary use and occupation of said premises as aforesaid, the said pier, wharf, slip or basin has been greatly interfered with, and the plaintiffs greatly damaged."

On the second trial upon this amended complaint, the plaintiffs adduced their testimony and rested. And it was admitted that the fire in the Joseph Walker was accidental; that it did not originate on board, and that the proprietors were not in fault in regard to the fire. The counsel for the defendants asked the court to charge the jury to find a verdict for the defendants, on the ground,

1. That the wharfage was proved to have been paid by the owners up to December 27, 1854, when the vessel was *Page 278 sunk, and the obligation to pay wharfage after that ceased when she ceased to be a floating ship, without the fault of the proprietor, by an accident, which as to the owner was a destruction of his property; that common loss and calamity were so far shared by the pier owners.

2. That in no view that could be taken of an express or implied contract, was there any ground for implying a contract to pay wharfage by the abandonment of a ship sunk to the bottom, and which could not be removed by any of the ordinary appliances belonging to a ship.

3. As to the idea of obstructing wharfage, it was decided in this case that, under the circumstances of this very accident, no wharfage could be claimed for the materials that were necessary for relieving the pier and slips from the obstructions that had sunk there.

4. That, the vessel being sunk in public waters, it was the duty of the plaintiffs or of the city authorities to remove the obstruction. The city made the plaintiffs grantees of the tolls, and it was the duty of the plaintiffs to remove the obstructions, in consideration of being entitled to such tolls; and they could make no claim upon any one for the continuance of that obstruction which it was their duty, as receivers of the wharfage and tolls, to remove.

5. It was the duty of those having the tolls to clear the obstruction, and then, if any one was in fault, to throw the expenses upon them.

6. The insurers by abandonment do not acquire an actual movable possession; they are not the parties in actual possession, and are not chargeable with the removal of the ships; they were merely owners of what should be saved.

7. Further, if there was an obligation on the owners to remove the vessels, there could be no other obligation than to use reasonable diligence for such removal, and the defendants could not be liable, inasmuch as the evidence was undisputed that they had used due diligence.

8. The sunken ship was an obstruction to public waters, without any fault of defendants, or original liability against them, and the engagement of salvors as contractors, having *Page 279

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.Y. 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-atlantic-mutual-insurance-co-ny-1867.