United Insurance Co. v. Robinson

2 Cai. Cas. 280
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1805
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Cai. Cas. 280 (United Insurance Co. v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Insurance Co. v. Robinson, 2 Cai. Cas. 280 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1805).

Opinion

Kent, Ch. J.

delivered the opinion of the court. This is a clear case for the plaintiffs. Their claim is founded on sound principles in the law of insurance. The defendants abandon, and the plaintiffs accept and pay. They were then substituted for the defendants, and succeeded to the benefit of the acts of the agent abroad, in relation to the property in question. The master and merchants at Mala-ga acted, nominally, as agents for the defendants, but, in reality, they were agents for the party having the ultimate claim to the property. What they did was, undoubtedly, founded on previous instructions from the defendants, and on the connexion that the defendants had with the property, as former proprietors, and existing claimants. When the defendants abandoned the ship and cargo, and received their indemnity from the plaintiffs, they renounced all concern in the interference of their agents, and transferred to [283]*283the insurer the result of that interference. This is settled doctrine in respect to abandonment. The present case is analogous to that of capture and subsequent ransom, where, upon an accepted abandonment, the whole benefit of the composition, and the effects reclaimed, go to the insurer.

There is no ground for considering the purchase by the house of Grrevigne & Co. as made for the defendants, in the character of strangers to the property. It was' made for the defendants as having an interest in it, and with intent to mitigate the loss. The law of abandonment applies to such a case with the greatest justice and good policy in making the previous instructions, and all acts of the agent enure to the insurer. To give to the insured a full indemnity on his policy, and also the advantages of these efforts of the agents to repair the loss, would be doubly injurious to the insurer. It would deprive him of the benefit of his substitution, tend to slacken the exertions of agents to recover the property, and invite them to resort to fraudulent speculations upon the loss. It cannot be admitted, that the condemnation at Malaga put an end to the interest of the insured, so as to render a purchase, ’by him, thereafter, equivalent to a purchase by a stranger. In the case of M’Masters v. Shoolbred, 1 Esp. Rep. 237, the vessel was condemned by the French consul, sold by him as a prize, and the captain purchased her at such sale on account of the owners. But it was considered as so much property recovered *by the assured, and it was likened, by Lord Kenyon, to the case of ransoms. The condemnation, and change thereby of the legal title, wafe not considered as .any impediment to the doctrine that the assured, by a recovery in that mode, had sustained only an average loss. That case differs from this in one particular only; that here was an abandonment and payment of a total loss. It was admitted in the case I have cited, that if the insured, upon the capture, had abandoned he might have recovered a total loss. But then upon the very principles of abandonment, (and which that case did not mean to question,} [284]*284the property so recovered, to use Lord Kenyon’s expression, must have enured to the benefit of the insurer. It is a principle perfectly well settled, that abandonment has a retrospective effect, so as to make the insurer to be regarded as the proprietor ab initio. The insurer is put in the place of the insured, and the latter is considered as if he had not existed, according to the language of some of the books. Putting out of view, as the case in Espinasse certainly does, any material operation from the fact of condemnation, I cannot see any difficulty in the question. Suppose there had not been a condemnation, but the insured had, by their agent, purchased, or recovered the property, immediately upon the capture, and before this technical change of title by condemnation, I apprehend there would, in that case, be no question but that the assured, when he abandons, parts also with the benefit of his repurchase. The consequences would,'otherwise, be most unjust towards the insurer, and the insured would turn his contract from one of indemnity into one of gain. If the condemnation in this case creates no difficulty, no other exists. The insurer was not bound, unless he pleased, to accept of the purchase at Malaga; nor was the insured. The agent purchased at his peril. There can be no risk, therefore, that this doctrine will involve insurers in hazardous mercantile concerns. They have nothing to do with them, but at their election. After an accepted abandonment, they can, if they please, accept of the repurchase by the agent, and affirm his acts, or they may leave them to fall upon the agent. The French ordinance of marine has made provision for this very case of repurchase after capture, and it ordains that the insurers may take the composition for their own benefit, or they may, at their election, refuse to have anything to do with the repurchase, and content themselves with paying a total loss. So also, on the other hand, the assured may refuse to ratify *the repurchase, and for this reason, says Valin, it behoves the agent to act with great circumspection and prudence. [285]*285Ord. Art. 66 and 67; 2 Val. 159, 160. See also 1 Emer. 464, and s. 21. 1 agree that tbe insurer is always bound to decide promptly, wbetber or no be claims tbe benefits of the repurchase; but as that point is not drawn in ques tion in tbe present case, I intend that no objection exists on that ground. Tbe repurchases, authorized by tbe French law, are as applicable to cases where tbe vessel has been condemned as where she has not. For by tbe law of nations, as understood when these ordinances were established, a capture and carrying into port, or infra proesidia, so as to take away from tbe captured the hope of recovery, as effectually changed the property as a sense of condemnation will do at this day.

In the case of Gross v. Withers, 2 Burr. 694, the doctrine of capture underwent a very learned investigation; and Lord Mansfield, in giving the opinion of the court, observed, that if after condemnation the owner recovers, or takes his captured ship, the insurer can be in no other condition that if she had been recovered or taken before condemnation. The reason is plain from the nature of the contract. The insurer runs the risk of the insured, and undertakes to indemnify. He must, therefore, bear the loss actually sustained, and can be liable to no more. So that, if after condemnation, the owner recovers the ship in her complete condition, but has paid salvage, or been at any expense in getting her back, the insurer must bear the loss so actually sustained. He observes, in another place, that no capture by an enemy, though condemned, can be so total a loss as to leave no possibility of recovery. Page 696.

I agree, that after a condemnation, the property is changed, so that a complete title can be transferred from the captor to a third person. But this rule does not apply between insurer and insured, so as to authorize the insured to be that purchaser, at the very time of the loss, and with the express view of indemnifying himself against a part of it. If he does, - and still claims a total loss from the insurer be must tender to bim tbe benefit of that purchase. Tbis rule is founded on tbe clearest justice, and is essential to prevent fraud. As long as tbe property remains in tbe bands of tbe captor, although a condemnation has taken place, there is still tbe possibility of a recovery.

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2 Cai. Cas. 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-insurance-co-v-robinson-nysupct-1805.