Taylor v. Atlantic Mutual Insurance

9 Bosw. 369
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJune 21, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 Bosw. 369 (Taylor v. Atlantic Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City 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, 9 Bosw. 369 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1862).

Opinions

Bosworth, Ch. J.

The complaint in this action'was dismissed at the trial; and judgment having been perfected, the plaintiff appealed to the General Term.

The ship Joseph Walker, of about 1,300 tons burthen, while lying on the west side of pier Ho. 29, East river, at ■ the-port of Hew York, taking in cargo, took fire, on the 26th of- December,' 1853, and sunk to the bottom. She had on board some 300 or 400 barrels of resin, some 300 bales of cotton, and some 20,000 bushels of wheat, all of which was submerged. The -defendant was insurer of If parts of the ship, other insurance companies, (who are also defendants,) were insurers of the interests of other owners; only 3-2 parts being uninsured, and the owners of those parts are also defendants. The 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 plaintiffs, who are entitled to the wharfage of the ■bulkhead on the west side of this pier, and of the west half of the pier, bring this action to recover by way of damages for the obstruction of the slip, the amount of wharfage they claim to have lost thereby, and also [373]*373damages for using the pier, and for further obstructing the slip, in efforts to raise and remove the wreck of the vessel, and save whatever could be saved from the wreck. The action was tried on the issues formed by the answer of the Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company; the other defendants having stipulated that the action, as to them, should abide the event of that trial.

The two practical questions presented by this appeal are, (first,) what duty or obligation was imposed on the defendant by accepting this abandonment, and, (second,) whether'it has so failed to perform that duty or discharge that obligation, as to have become liable to pay damages to the plaintiff.

With reference to the first question, it maybe observed, preliminarily, that the ship took fire and sunk, without, any agency or fault of the defendant. She sunk to the bottom, in about 30 feet of water, at medium tide. From the time she. sunk until-she was removed, the plaintiffs expressed no desire to undertake her removal, nor made any objection to the means employed or time occupied in the effort; nor suggested that these means were injudicious or inadequate, nor that the efforts were dilatory or censurably inefficient. The vessel was sunk in an arm of the sea, and became fixed to the bottom, and ceased to be movable as a ship or vessel, by any ordinary means in the course of business or navigation. The results of the efforts made to remove the wreck demonstrates, that it cost more to remove her, than all that was saved, of both vessel and cargo, was worth.

This Court held, when this cause was before it on a demurrer to the original complaint, 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 that they were in default for not having done so. (2 Bosw., 106.) The cases relied upon, as supporting this doctrine, are Brown v. Mallett, (5 M., G. & Scott, 613; S. C., 12 Jur., 204,) Hancock v. [374]*374The York, New Castle & Berwick R. R. Co., (10 Com. Bench, 348,) and White v. Crisp, (26 L. & Eq. R., 532.) In the first of these cases, it was held, that “ the duty of the defendant, if it exist at all, is of a public nature; and the plaintiff, in order to succeed, must show a breach of public duty, as well as special injury to-himself,” (p. 620.) In the second of these cases, Maule, J., said, that “ the circumstance of the anchor [the vessel] being the defendant’s property, will not of itself render them liable." To have this effect, it must amount to a public nuisance, and a private injury, hy them. The declaration * * * shows about as 'good a cause of action, as if it had stated that somebody beat the plaintiff with the defendants’ stick.”

Creswell, J., said : “ Ho negligence or want of care is imputed to the defendants, either in placing the anchor where it was originally placed, or in allowing it to be removed.”

In White v. Crisp, (supra,) which, like the other two cases, arose on demurrer, the Court, in commenting upon and construing a particular allegation of the complaint, said: “How, we understand by this, that the defendants “ had it in their power, by due care and exertion, to have “ altogether removed this vessel, or to have shifted, at “ least, its position, and so might reasonably have been “ able to prevent the injury. If these words do not mean “ this, we think there was no liability on the part of the “ defendants.” * *

The fourth plea was, that the defendants “had used all “reasonable means for removing the wreck, but were “ unable before the" time when, &c., to do so; and that, by “ reason thereof, before and at the time when, &c., they “ had wholly abandoned and ceased to have any possession of it.” The Court held this plea good, and said it was clear the original owner or the transferee of the wreck may abandon it, and so put an end to his liability.

These cases establish the doctrine, that where a vessel becomes a wreck and sinks in navigable waters, the owner [375]*375or any transferee may abandon her, and from that time his liability will cease; that he is not under any legal obligation to attempt to remove her. But if, instead of doing that, he retains such possession and control as the thing is susceptible of, he is not liable for any injury occurring while in the exercise of due care and diligence to prevent it; that, so long as he is using all reasonable means to effect a removal, without being able to accomplish it, he is not liable for any damages resulting from the mere fact of its non-removal; and that, although it may be a public nuisance, he cannot, on such a state of facts, be indicted for causing or continuing it.

It would be indeed strange, if a party who was under no legal obligation to remove, or to attempt to remove a wreck, should, because he attempted to remove it, and while using all reasonable means and diligence to accomplish the result, become liable because he had not removed it.

On no principle can a right óf action accrue, in such a ease, for not having removed the wreck, until at -least a sufficient time has elapsed to effect the removal by the use of reasonable means and diligence; and all liability for merely not removing will terminate, when the owner abandons the possession of the wreck and all control of it.

This view of the defendant’s legal duty, makes his liability, if one exist, arise out of his negligence }to use reasonable means and diligence. While using them, and he continues unable to remove the wreck, he is under no liability to pay damages to any one for not having removed it. The plaintiffs’ right, as against the defendant, is commensurate with the duty which the latter owes- to the former. They can maintain no claim against the defendant, except as founded on a duty it owes to him, and a failure to perform that duty.

Kegligence in the use of means to remove the wreck, is not necessarily established by proof that the means first employed were inadequate.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Bosw. 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-atlantic-mutual-insurance-nysuperctnyc-1862.