The Caledonia

157 U.S. 124, 15 S. Ct. 537, 39 L. Ed. 644, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2183
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 11, 1895
Docket107
StatusPublished
Cited by187 cases

This text of 157 U.S. 124 (The Caledonia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Caledonia, 157 U.S. 124, 15 S. Ct. 537, 39 L. Ed. 644, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2183 (1895).

Opinions

Me. Chief Justice Fullee,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

In The Edwin I. Morrison, 153 U. S. 199, 210, the language of Mr. Justice Gray, delivering the opinion of the Circuit Court in the present case, was quoted with approval, to this effect: “In every contract for the carriage of goods by sea, unless otherwise expressly stipulated, there is a- warranty on the part of the shipowner that the ship is seaworthy at the time of beginning her voyage, and not merely that he does not know her to be unseaworthv, or that he has used his best efforts to make her seaworthy. The warranty is absolute that the ship is, or shall be, in fact seaworthy at that time, and does not depend on his knowledge or ignorance, his care or negligence.”

After renewed consideration of the subject, in the light of the able arguments presented at the bar, we see .no -reason to doubt the correctness of the rule thus enunciated.

The proposition' that the warranty of seaworthiness exists by implication in all contracts for sea carriage, we do not [131]*131understand to be denied; bat it is insisted that the warranty is not absolute, and does not cover latent defects not ordinarily susceptible of detection. If this were so, the obligation resting on the shipowner would be, not that the ship should be fit, but, that he had honestly done his best to make her so. We cannot concur in this view. '

In our opinion, the shipowner’s undertaking is not. merely that he will do and has done his best to make the ship fit, but that the ship is really fit to undergo the perils of the sea and other incidental risks to which she must be exposed in the course of the voyage ; and, this being so, that undertaking is not discharged because the want of fitness is the result of latent defects.'

The necessity of this conclusion is made obvious when we consider the settled rule in respect of insurance, for it is clear that the undertaking as to seaworthiness of the shipowner to the shipper is coextensive with that of the shipper to his insurer.

That rule is thus given by Parsons (1 Marine Insurance, 367): “ Every person who proposes to any insurers to insure his ship against sea perils, during a certain voyage, impliedly warrants that his ship is, in every respect, in a suitable condition to proceed and continue on that voyage, and to encounter all common perils and dangers with safety. . . . This warranty is strictly a condition precedent to the obligation of insurance ; if it be not performed, the policy does not attach; and, if this condition be broken, at the inception of the risk in any way whatever and from any cause whatever, there is no contract of insurance, the policy" being wholly void.”

In Kopitoff v. Wilson, 1 Q. B. D. 377, 379, 381, although, as there was no necessity to consider the law as to latent defects, whether such defects would constitute an exception cannot be said to have been passed on, the general rule was laid down as we have stated it, and the existence of the warranty in question on the part of a shipowner was asserted with reference to his character as such, and not as existing only in those cases in which he is also acting as a carrier. That was an action in which the plaintiff sought to recover damages for the loss of a [132]*132large number of weighty iron armor plates and bolts, one of the plates having broken loose and gone through the side of the ship, which, in consequence, went down in deep water and was totally lost with-all her cargo. The case was tried before Blackburn, J., who told the jury as matter of law that the shipowner warranted the fitness of his ship when she sailed, and not merely that he had honestly and in good faith endeavored to make her fit, and left the following questions to the jury : “ Was the vessel at the time of her sailing in a state, as regards the stowing and receiving of these plates, reasonably fit to encounter the ordinary perils that might be expected on a voyage at that season from Hull to Cronstadt ? Second. If she was not in a fit state, was the loss that happened caused by that unfitness % ” The rule for new trial was discharged in view of thé warranty by implication that the ship was in a condition to perform the voyage then about to be undertaken, and Field, J., among other• things, said: “It appears to us, also, that there are good grounds in reason and common sense for holding such to be the law. It is well and firmly established that in every marine policy the assured comes under an implied warranty of seaworthiness to hisassurer, and if we were to hold that he has not the benefit of a similar implication in a contract which he makes with a shipowner for the carriage of his goods, the consequence would be that he would lose that complete indemnity against risk and loss, which it is the object and.purpose to give him by the two-contracts taken together. Holding as we now do, the result-is, that the merchant, by his contract with the shipowner, having become entitled to have a ship to carry his goods warranted fit for that purpose, and to meet and struggle against the perils of the sea, is, by his contract of -assurance, protected against the damage arising from such perils acting upon a seawrorthy ship.”

This was the view expressed by Mr. Justice Brown, then District Judge,.’in The Eugene Vesta, 28 Fed. Rep. 762, 763, ■in which he said: “There can be no doubt that there is an implied warranty on the part 'of' the carrier that his vessel shall be seaworthy, not only when she begins to take cargo [133]*133on board, but when, she breaks ground for the voyage. The theory of the law is that the implied warranty of seaworthiness shall protect the owner of the cargo until his policy of insurance'commences to run ; and, as it is well settled that the risk under the policy attaches only from the time the vessel breaks ground, this is fixed as the point up to which the warranty of seaworthiness extends.” And the case of Cohn v. Davidson, 2 Q. B. D. 455, 461, was cited, where it appeared that the ship was not in fact seaworthy at the time she set sail, but that as she was found to be seaworthy at the time she commenced to take cargo, she must have received the damage in the course of loading; and Field, J., observed that “no degree of seaworthiness for the voyage at any time anterior to the commencement of the risk will be of any avail to the assured, unless that seaworthiness existed at the time of sailing from the port of loading. As, therefore, the merchant in a case like the present would not be entitled to recover against his underwriter by reason of the breach of warranty in sailing in an unseaworthy ship, it would follow that, if the warranty to be implied on the part of the shipowner is to be exhausted by his having the ship seaworthy at an anterior period, the merchant would lose that .complete indemnity, by means of the two contracts taken together, which, it is the universal habit and practice of mercantile men to endeavor to secure.”

The reasons for the strict enforcement of the warranty, in insurance, have frequently been commented on.

In Douglass v. Scougall,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 U.S. 124, 15 S. Ct. 537, 39 L. Ed. 644, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-caledonia-scotus-1895.