The New England Insurance Company v. the Sarah Ann

38 U.S. 387, 10 L. Ed. 213, 13 Pet. 387, 1839 U.S. LEXIS 445
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 38 U.S. 387 (The New England Insurance Company v. the Sarah Ann) 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 New England Insurance Company v. the Sarah Ann, 38 U.S. 387, 10 L. Ed. 213, 13 Pet. 387, 1839 U.S. LEXIS 445 (1839).

Opinion

Mr.-Justice Wayne

delivered the opinion of the Court.—

-This is an - appeal from the Circuit Court, of the Unitéd States for the district of Massachusetts, and has been submitted to this Court on the printed arguments of the counsel for the libellants and respondents. Those arguments so entirely occupy the grounds relied, upon in support of the respective rights of the parties, and the case has been so fully considered in the Court below, as if is reported in. 2 Sumner, 206, that this Court has little left for it to do, than to announce its opinion upon the points it deems material for its decision. This will be done briefly. The particular case will be better understood and settled, by inquiring what is the right of the master to sell a ship in the event of an admitted stranding ? ' This involves the necessify for a sale, in the circumstances under which it is done, to make it justifiable in the blaster, or otherwise. All will agréé that the master must act in good faith, exercise his best discretion for the benefit of all concerned, and that it can only he done upon the compulsion of a necessity, to be determined in each case by the. actual and impending peril to which the vessel is exposed; from which it( .is probable, in the opinion of persons competent to judge, that the' vessel cannot be saved. This is, as it is decided in some of the English Courts, an extreme necessity. The master must have the best information which.-can be got, and must act' with the most pure good faith. So says. Lord Ellenborough in Hayman vs. Molton, 5 Esp. 65. It is also- properly termed a moral necessity, because when the peril and information concur, aS we have just stated, it then'becomes-an “ urgent, duty upon the master to sell, for the preservation, of the interest of -all concerned.” It shohld not be termed a legal' necessity, as it is' in the argument of the counsel for the libellants; for though the necessity, information, and good faith *401 of the master will make the sale legal, the term legal is not descriptive of the prerequisite upon which the master’s right to sell depends. Nor can the/necessity for a sale be denied, when the peril, in the opinions of those capable of forming a judgment-, make a loss probable; though the vessel may in a short time afterwards be got off and-put afloat, it is true the opinion or judgment of competent persons may be falsified by the event, and that their judgment may be shown to have b.een erroneous by the better knowledge-of other persons, showing it was probable the vessel could have been, extricated from her peril, without great injury or incurring great expense; and the master’s incompetency to form a judgment or to act with a proper discretion in the case, may bé shown. B.ut from the mere fact of the vessel having been extricated from her peril, no presumption can be raised of the master’s incompetency, or of that of his advisers.' It is right .also to test the peril in which the vessel ;may be, by information of the locality where she is stranded, by the season' of the .year, and by a comparison of the number of vessels' lost or saved, which have -been driven on the - same beach or shoal. But in doing so, though it shall be found.that a largér number of vessels stranded have been;got off than were lost on the same beach; it is very difficult in a case of stranding upon a shifting beach of sand, with the wind'blowing hard on shore, and in a month, when the winds are usually strong and stormy, to disprove the necessity for the master, to sell, by what may have happened in other cases. The evidence taken in this case establishes, thát five to one of the vessels stranded where the.Sarah Ann was driven on the beach, have been altogether lost. The evidence in such a ease, and under such proof of the loss of vessels there, must .be very strong before it can prevail‘to show that there was ho necessity for the master to sell. ' It must also, be proved, in a particular case given,-that the means in the master’s power, or which he may command from those to get his vessel off, had not been- applied, and that there, wouldhave been what we shall call, and what.ought to beso esteemed, a controlling difference between the value of the vessel, as her- condition may be when she is old, and the expense to be incurred in getting her off Nor will any ascertainment of the cost of repairs subsequent to the extrication of. the vessel, raise a presumption against the necessity to sell, whatever may.be her condition as to strength, and though .she may' not. be injured in the hull, if the actual..and immediate prospective danger menaces a probable total loss. We think such was the Sarah Ann’s danger.

The Court then, having stated its-opinion as to what makes an extreme, necessity, it follows that it cannot- be laid down as a .universal rule, that the master’s power to sell is limited to cases of extreme necessity in a foreign port, or in a port of the United States of a different state than that to which-the vessel belongs, or in which her owners may he or re'side when the necessity occurs. The true criterion •for determining the occurrence of the master’s authority to sell is the inquiry, whether the owners or insurers,- when they are not distant ' *402 from the scene of stranding, can, by the earliest usé of the ordinary means to convey intelligence, be informed of the situation of the vessel in time to direct the master before she will probably'be lost. If-there is a probability, of loss', and it is made more hazardous by every day’s delay, the master may then act promptly,-to save something for the. benefit of all concerned — though but little may be saved.- There is no way of doing so more effectual than by exposing the vessel to. sale; by which the enterprise of such men id brought into competition as are accustomed to encounter such risks, and who know from experience how to estimate the. probable profits and losses of such adventures. And we here say that the power of the master to . sell the hull of his. stranded vessel exists also as to her rigging and sails, which he may have stripped from her, after unsuccessful efforts to get her afloat; or when his vessel, in his own • judgment, and that of others competent to form an opinion and - to advise, cannot be delivered from her peril. The presumption is that they are injured; they can never again be, applied to the use of the vessel,, and they must, ordinarily, become from day to day of less value. In -fact they are a part of the vessel when stripped from her, and the mere act of separation by the vigilance and effort of the master, by which.they are saved from the' ocean, does not take them out of his implied power to sell in a case of necessity. Thé necessity does not, as has been supposed, mean that no part of her tackle, apparel, or furniture saved' shall "be sold, because they are no longer liable to loss; but when they are.saved, whether a sound discretion does not require them to bé sold for the benefit of all concerned. If, however, the master sells without good faith, or without a sound discretion, the owners, may Against the purchaser, assert their right of property in the sails and rigging; as they may in any case of a stranded- vessel, which has been sold without good faith in-the master, with her sails and rigging standing. We do not think the case of Scull vs. Briddle, 2 Wash. C. C. Rep. 150, notwithstanding our respect for the memory of the eminent -judge who made it, sound law. It is expressed'in terms too broad.

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Bluebook (online)
38 U.S. 387, 10 L. Ed. 213, 13 Pet. 387, 1839 U.S. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-new-england-insurance-company-v-the-sarah-ann-scotus-1839.