Tremaine v. Phoenix Assurance Co.

45 P.2d 210, 6 Cal. App. 2d 552, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 951
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 1, 1935
DocketCiv. 9689
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 45 P.2d 210 (Tremaine v. Phoenix Assurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tremaine v. Phoenix Assurance Co., 45 P.2d 210, 6 Cal. App. 2d 552, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 951 (Cal. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

STURTEVANT, J.

The plaintiff sued to recover on several insurance policies. The defendants denied certain allegations contained in the complaint and each company pleaded two affirmative defenses, concealment and that the barge insured was not seaworthy. As to the first affirma *553 tivc defense the trial court found the facts as alleged by the defendants. As to the. other affirmative defense it found the probative facts but did not find on the ultimate fact. Continuing it made conclusions of law in favor of the plaintiff. At this time the defendants contend that the judgment should be reversed and that the trial court should be directed to enter judgment for the defendants. That contention we think must be sustained.

The things insured were the engines on a barge, W. T-B No. 60. The barge was, and for several years had been, at San Quintín, Mexico. In 1929 it was insured. In 1930 the insurance was renewed. By the terms of the policy the movements of the barge were limited to a zone having a radius of seven miles in and about San Quintín. Desiring to take the barge to San Francisco the owners applied to have the policies modified. That matter was taken up in 1930 and the modification was accomplished March 13, 1931, upon the payment of an additional premium. Among others the court made the following findings:

'“That it is true that at the time said W. H. Worden applied for and obtained the extended insurance herein concerned, said barge was located in the harbor of San Quintín, Mexico. Said barge was then and there lying on the bottom of the channel in about twenty-one (21) feet of salt water, with her aft hold and engine room submerged, and had been so situated for at least four (4) months prior to that time. That thereafter the said W. H. Worden caused the said barge to be refloated and in so doing caused to be cut two small holes in her main deck through which pumping hose was inserted for the purpose of de-watering the said craft. Said barge and its two main Diesel engines were then and there in need of repair and were unable to function without such repairs. That a tail shaft to one of the engines was broken. That all of said facts and conditions were known to said W. I-I. Worden at the time the application for the extended insurance was made by said W. H. Worden to M. Thompson & Company. That M. Thompson & Company were marine insurance brokers in the city of San Francisco, California, and secured the said policies of insurance at the request of W. H. Worden. That in securing the said extended insurance, said M. *554 Thompson & Company disclosed such facts as are represented in certain documents now in evidence to Bowring & Company, marine insurance brokers of London, England. That no other facts were then known to defendants, or any of them, save facts contained in said documents, which facts were the only facts disclosed to C. T. Bowring & Company, brokers, in London, England.” An examination of the documents referred to in the last two sentences of said findings shows that they are silent as to the then condition of the barge. The defendants quote finding XI and cite the foregoing facts and contend that the trial court should have drawn conclusions of law therefrom in their favor and should have ordered judgment for them. The plaintiff makes no direct reply. He propounds six questions. Not all of them are pertinent to the record. We must confine ourselves to an attempt to' determine the questions presented by the record.

Under the facts recited above M. Thompson & Company was acting as the agent of the insured; and C. T. Bowring & Company was acting as the agent of M. Thompson & Company. The most that can be said is that Mr. Worden disclosed to M. Thompson & Company, his own agent, the facts. But there is no evidence that any of the facts happening after the original policies were written were communicated to the insurers.

In every marine insurance a warranty is implied that the ship is seaworthy. (Civ. Code, sec. 2681.) That rule applies to a modification of a contract of insurance as well as to the original contract. (Civ. Code, sec. 2582.) As a general rule, unless inquiry is made the insured need not communicate such facts as are covered by a warranty, express or implied. (Civ. Code, sec. 2464, subd. 3; 2 Duer on Insurance, p. 572 et seq.) But to that rule there are well-defined exceptions. In 2 Duer on Insurance, at page 435, the author says:

“ But, although where the assured acts with an entire good faith, he is not bound to make any communication relative to the condition of the ship, it by no means follows, that when he knows, or has positive information, that the vessel is unseaworthy, the implied warranty of seaworthiness will justify him in procuring an insurance, with *555 out disclosing to the underwriter his knowledge or information. An unseaworthy ship, it is not to be doubted, may be insured. When the facts are made known to the underwriter, he may, for a premium that he deems to be adequate, assume the. risk; but the attempt to cast upon him such a risk, without his knowledge or consent, is an evident fraud, and it is this fraud that the assured, by his concealment, in the cases I have supposed, attempts to practice. It is his fraudulent design to charge the underwriter with a loss, not justly recoverable under the policy. His expectation must be, that in the event of a loss, the underwriter will not be able to defeat its recovery by evidence, that the implied warranty of seaworthiness had been broken; for if he had believed that the facts known to himself would be discovered by the underwriter, it is certain, that he would not have effected the policy. He would not have paid a premium for an insurance, that he knew, could in no event avail to his indemnity. Hence, a policy, where the ship is unseaworthy, and the fact is known to and suppressed by the assured, is conclusive evidence of a meditated fraud.
“It may possibly be thought that these remarks, admitting them to be just, have no practical value, since, where the underwriter rests his defense on the unseaworthiness of the ship, if the fact is established, he is discharged, and an inquiry into the knowledge of the assured, at the time the policy was effected, becomes immaterial; but this is a mistaken view of the subject. Where a breach of the implied warranty is proved, it may still be material to prove the fraud, and where no such breach is shown, the fraud may still exist, and the proof be given to avoid the policy. If the ship was, in fact, unseaworthy when the risk commenced, the breach of the implied warranty would prevent the policy from attaching, and in cases exempt from fraud, where the policy has not attached, the assured is entitled to a return of the premium. But, if the facts that falsify the warranty were known to the assured when the policy was effected, his fraud, in the concealment, might properly be shown to bar his recovery of the premium. ’ ’ According to the note in the commissioner’s edition of the Civil Code, section 2569 thereof, is a statement of that same rule. In the case of Hamblet v. City Ins. Co., 36 Fed. 118, a set *556 of facts almost parallel to the facts we have recited was involved.

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Bluebook (online)
45 P.2d 210, 6 Cal. App. 2d 552, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tremaine-v-phoenix-assurance-co-calctapp-1935.