Thomas P. Miller & Co. v. Palmer

58 Md. 451, 1882 Md. LEXIS 42
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 11, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 58 Md. 451 (Thomas P. Miller & Co. v. Palmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas P. Miller & Co. v. Palmer, 58 Md. 451, 1882 Md. LEXIS 42 (Md. 1882).

Opinion

Stone, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellants, Miller and Co., hankers and residents of Mobile, Alabama, advanced to Trafton, the master of the British Brig “Magdala,” then lying in the port of Mobile, hut which was owned and registered in New Brunswick, a sum of money for the purchase of necessary supplies to, and repairs upon, the brig, custom house and port charges, and other necessary disbursements, to be made at that port. These advances were made at the request of the master, and the consignee Groldthwaite, and this suit is brought to recover the amount so advanced, from the appellee, the owner of the brig.

There is little doubt as to the general rule of law, applicable to such advances, and it will be found laid down with great clearness, by the Chief Justice of the United States, in the case of The Grapeshot, 9 Wallace, 136, where he says:

“ Where the claim of the material-man is against the owner only, and no privilege is given upon the vessel, no [457]*457necessity need be shown affirmatively. The master in the absence of known fraud, is fully authorized to represent the owners in all matters relating to the ship ; and it will always be presumed that supplies and repairs ordered by the master were reasonably fit and proper, unless there is clear proof to the contrary, and also proof of collusion by the material-man.”

It is hardly necessary to refer to authority to show that if money is advanced to pay for the necessary supplies and repairs, that he who so advances it, stands in the place of, and has all the rights of, the material-man. But if any authority is needed, it will be found in the same case. The money to pay for these supplies, &c. having been advanced by the appellants, at the request of the master of the brig, while she was lying in a foreign port, it is clear that the owner is liable for the amount so advanced, unless the appellants have, by some act of theirs, forfeited their right to recover the same against the owner—there being no clear proof that the supplies were unnecessary, or of collusion on the part of the appellants.

The appellee insists that they have forfeited their right to recover against him, for several reasons assigned in the record, and which we are called upon to examine.

The appellants presented three prayers to the Court below, two of which were granted and the third was refused.

We will first examine the correctness of this refusal. Without giving the evidence in detail, it is sufficient to say, that there is evidence in the record tending to prove the facts set forth in this prayer. It is not for us to decide upon the weight of such evidence, as that is the exclusive province of the jury, but if the jury found the facts stated in that prayer to be true, then it followed as a legal and necessary conclusion, that the retention of the percentage did not impose on the appellants an obligation to procure insurance on the freight. The facts so set forth in the prayer expressly negative any such obligation, and the prayer should therefore have been granted.

[458]*458The theory of the twelfth prayer of the appellee which was granted is, that if the jury should find, that before the 'percentage was retained, it was agreed, that if insurance could be obtained for less than the percentage retained, the diffei’ence should he returned, that then, the jury must find that the percentage was retained to pay for the insurance, and if thereafter the appellants made no effort to insure, they could not recover. It asserts in unqualified terms, that an agreement, that if- insurance could be obtained for less than the percentage retained, the difference should he returned, imposed a positive obligation on the appellants .to insure, or make an effort to do so. It was error to grant this prayer.

It does not follow legally or logically, that because the appellants may have agreed that the percentage retained by them might be applied to pay the insurance premium, that they thereby hound themselves to effect the insurance. . Such an agreement is entirely consistent with the fact, that the master or consignee Avas to procure the insurance, and not the appellants.

The retention of a sum of money, to pay for insurance, certainly did not of itself superadd the obligation on the party holding the same, to effect the insurance.

If the amount of this percentage had been placed in the hands of some third party, a mere stakeholder, for the purpose of being applied to pay for insurance, if any could be obtained, it would hardly he contended, that such a deposit of itself imposed an obligation on the stakeholder to endeavor to effect the insurance. It can have no greater effect if left in the hands of a party in interest.

Nor does it necessarily follow that because it was agreed, that if an insurance could he obtained for less than the percentage retained, that the difference should he returned to the master, that this percentage was retained exclusively for the purpose of paying for the insurance. Such an agreement is entirely consistent with the fact, [459]*459that the percentage was retained because the bill was damaged, for want of insurance. The primary pirrpose of the retention, may have been on account of the damaged bill, although the appellants may have been very willing and agreed to refund it, upon the bill being made good by insurance. They may have been ready at any time, to give up their percentage, for a complete bill of exchange.

Eor these reasons, the appellee’s twelfth prayer should not have been granted.

The third prayer of the appellee which was granted by the Court, and specially excepted to by the appellants for want of evidence to support it, presents a very important question in this case. That prayer rests upon the assumption that the appellants agreed to effect an insurance on the freight, or to endeavor so to do. The appellants insist that there is no evidence legally sufficient in the record to prove such agreement, and the question, whether there is, or is not, is lor us now to determine.

In order to determine the legal sufficiency of the evidence to prove that fact, we must assume the truth of all the evidence offered by the appellee, on the point in issue, and add thereto, every inference, which may be fairly and legitimately drawn therefrom, by the jury in the exercise of a reasonable intelligence.

The only proof offered by the appellee, or to be found in the record, that the appellants agreed to obtain or make an effort to obtain an insurance upon the freight, will be found in the evidence of Gfoldthwaitc, the consignee. ITis testimony was taken under a commission, and all that relates to the point in issue, will be found in his answers to the eighth and ninth interrogatories. These answers evidently relate to one and the same interview, and will be better understood by setting them forth in an inverse order. In answer to the ninth interrogatory, he said,

“I made efforts through the agent (Mr. C. A. Holt,) of the North American Insurance Company, of Philadel[460]*460phia, Mr. Marshall J. Smith, of New Orleans, general insurance agent, and through the Atlantic Insurance Company, of New York, and when I found it impossible to effect the insurance upon the amount of the bills of exchange, I went with Captain Trafton to Messrs. T. P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 Md. 451, 1882 Md. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-p-miller-co-v-palmer-md-1882.