United Insurance v. Scott & Seaman

1 Johns. 106
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1806
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1 Johns. 106 (United Insurance v. Scott & Seaman) 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 v. Scott & Seaman, 1 Johns. 106 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1806).

Opinion

Thompson, J.

The principal questions arising out of this case, are, 1. Whether the~ defendants are answerable in the present action, and if so, 2. To what extent ? A ' *

It cannot be controverted, that the underwriters upon the s^íb after the abandonment and acceptance, became owners thereof, and answerable for all necessary repairs and expenses. The acceptance must, I think, have a retro-active effect, and the underwriters be deemed owners from the time the accident happened. They cannot, however, be consi-> dered joint-owners, so as to constitute them partners, or so as to make them responsible, one for the other. It certainly would not be pretended, that because they subscribed the same policy, they thereby became joint-partners ; they are total strangers to each other ; and, if being on the same policy would not constitute them partners', I connot see why accepting the abandonment, should make them such. If the loss happens by any of the perils insured against, the un. derwriters are bound to pay their subscription, whether they accept the abandonment, or not ; and if the acceptance constitutes them partners, they are driven to the alternative of relinquishing-the subject insured, or of becoming partners, and of course, responsible for whomsoever maybe on the same policy. A doctrine leading to such consequences, never can be tolerated. By the acceptance of the abandonment, each underwriter must. be . deemed interested, indivii dually, and not as a partner, in the proportion which his subscription bears to the value of the subject. Neither can the writing, appointing a common ag-ent to manage the subject, have the effect of making the underwriters copartners. It is not uncommon for different persons to appoint the same agent to transact their business ; but it would be a strange conclusion to say that the principals thereby became joint partners. In these cases, as well as ift the one before us, the common agent must be considered as representing separately, the rights of each individual, according to his interest in the subject. I think, therefore, that the defendants are not to be considered joint-partners with the other underwriters, and that the action is maintainable against them in the present form.

[111]*111• The next question is as to what extent they are responsible. Ship-owners are, undoubtedly, personally responsible for necessaries furnished the master, in the course of the voyage. The supplies, however, must be reasonable, fit, and proper for the occasion. For the security of ship-owners against being improperly charged by the master, it devolves on the creditor to shew that his advances were for necessaries, because it does not fall within the scope of the master’s authority, or within the trust and duty of his station, to pledge the credit of owners for any other purpose. The right of the master, quasi master, to appropriate the cargo for the purpose of repairs, was, I think, at an end, on the arrival of the ship at her port of destination. The cargo then became subject to the controul of the consignees, and the master must, if deficient in funds, resort to other sources for necessaries. In the present case, however, he, together with Steele and Thompson, were consignees of the cargo, and as such, were agents for the plaintiffs, who by the abandonment and acceptance, became owners of the cargo. The plaintiffs’ agents, then, appropriate the proceeds of the cargo for repairs and expenses on the ship ; and though this might have been unauthorised by the plaintiffs, and they might have looked to their agents for compensation, yet there is nothing to prevent their ratifying the acts of their agents, and thereby making the advances their own, which they have done by bringing the present action. The responsibility of the ship-owners, must, however, be restricted, to advances for necessary repairs and expenses, to prosecute the voyage originally contemplated. They have done nothing to ratify the expenses of the master at Kingston, in arming the ship in the manner he did. None of the letters written by the Messrs. Rhinelanders, or Harlshone, approving the conduct of the master, appear to have been written after they were apprised of what course he had pursued at Kingston. They had a right to presume he was prosecuting the voyage according to his original instructions, which were very precise and definite. In violation of which, the master, at Kingston, fitted out this vessel ax [112]*112an armed ship; put on board sixteen guns, and twenty-two additional-seamen, and. Went to the enormous expense of upwards of "seventeen thousand dollars which was more than the ship was valued at, in the policy. Such part of the expenses as related to this armament, were, I think, unauthorised. There is nothing in the case to show that any circumstances had occured rendering it necessary to arm ; and it certainly was not in the contemplation of the original ship-owners, if we may judge from their instructions to the master. These ■expenses must therefore be rejected. The result of my 'opinion is, that the underwriters on the ship, are answerable for all repairs and expenses which Were necessary to 'refit the ship, so as to enable her as a merchant vessel, to •prosecute the original voyage ; ahd that the defendants are liable in this action, for a proportion thereof, in the same ■ratio, as their interest in the ship bears- to the proceeds of the cargo, applied to that object, which must be adjusted by the parties, or referred to some proper person for the purpose.

Livingston, J.

If underwriters accept a vessel, it is reasonable that she should pass into their hímds, cüm onere, and "that they should be liable for proper repairs in a foreign port, "after the disaster which occasioned them, and subsequent to" abandonment. Nor can it make any difference, whether an abandonment be immediately followed by acceptance or not. The party, ultimately benefited by the repairs, should pay for them. The underwriters were entitled to the freight made after abandonment, and we must now suppose, that without repairing, she was in no condition to have earned any. The captain, being the agent of the assured, might have borrowed money of the plaintiffs to repair, and if he "has taken it of his own accord, or from the consignees of the cargo, it can make no difference, if they ehuse to affirm ■his acts, and the monies have been properly expended.

My greatest difficulty has been, to define .the extent of the defendants’ responsibility ; that is, whether they be liable as joint-partners, with the other underwriters, or only in proportion to their subscription. ,The case is admitted [113]*113to be new, at least no decision on the point can be found. We are, then at liberty to adopt a rule, which we think best adapted to do complete justice between the parties. That owners of vessels are liable, as other joint-partners, is not denied, but then, as in other cases, it ought to be a partnership of mutual consent, and the world should credit them as such; but where a vessel, during a voyage, is thrown upon its insurers, who take it only for the purpose of diminishing a loss, and with no other view than to sell her at its termination, it is carrying the general principle too far, to consider them in the light of common partners; nor is it necessary for the security of third persons that they should be thus regarded.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Johns. 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-insurance-v-scott-seaman-nysupct-1806.