Walsh v. Washington Marine Insurance

32 N.Y. 427
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 32 N.Y. 427 (Walsh v. Washington Marine Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walsh v. Washington Marine Insurance, 32 N.Y. 427 (N.Y. 1865).

Opinion

Porter, J.

On the morning of the 22d of August, 1862, the ship “ Senator ” left the port of New York, laden with grain, and bound for Liverpool. On the morning of the 26th of August, the vessel was in a sinking condition, with nine feet of water in her hold, and the pumps clogged with grain. The officers and crew were rescued by a Prussian bark; and within an hour afterwards the ship went down with its cargo, at a distance of a hundred and twenty miles from the nearest coast:

The claim of the plaintiff under the policy of insurance, " gave occasion for three theories as to the cause of the loss: 1. That the ship, was seaworthy on leaving port, and foundered in consequence of injuries by marine perils against which she was insured. 2. That she was scuttled by the master, who was not aware of the insurance, in the hope of being *431 promoted by the owners to the command of a better vessel. 3. That she went down in fair weather and a smooth sea; that the loss must therefore be attributed to some sedret defect, and that her foundering on the fourth day after leaving port raises a legal presumption, which overcomes the affirmative proof that she was seaworthy at the inception of the voyage.

Incongruous as these theories were, there was positive evidence in support of each. The first was that maintained by the plaintiff, sustained on the trial by credit-worthy witnesses, concurred in by the jury, and approved, on review of the facts as well as the law, by the judge who tried the cause, and by the court below on appeal.

The second of these theories was not urged by the defendants on the trial, as there was no pretense that the ship was scuttled by collusion with the owners, and the barratry of the master was one of the perils expressly enumerated in the policy. It derives its sole importance from the fact that the witnesses, who made the false accusation against the master before another tribunal, were those on whose testimony the defendants must rely for the facts on which they rest their theory of presumptive unseaworthiness.

The charge of the court was acquiesced in throughout by the defendants, except in submitting to the jury a portion of the evidence to which a general objection had been taken at the time it was offered., All the instructions they requested, except one which was plainly inadmissible, were approved and adopted by the presiding judge, in the precise form in which they were framed.

The jury having found for the' plaintiff, and the' court below having approved the finding upon the facts, there would seem to be no serious question for consideration here, in regard to the seaworthiness of the vessel; for it is agreed by all the authorities that this is peculiarly a question of 'fact for the jury. (1 Arnould on Ins., § 256; Treadwell v. Union Ins. Co., 6 Cow,, 273; Patrick v. Hallett, 1 Johns., 241; Sherwood v. Ruggles, 2 Sandf., 55.)

But it is claimed that the facts proved raise a legal pre *432 sumption of unseaworthiness, which must overcome the force, not only of the plaintiff’s evidence, but of the finding by the jury, with the concurrence of the court below, that the vessel was seaworthy in fact at the commencement of the voyage. This may properly be considered as a question of -law, involved in the decision of the motion for a nonsuit, which was made when the plaintiff rested, and renewed at the close of the evidence. It is one easy of solution, when the leading features of the case are brought to view.

In considering it, we must exclude all such facts as rest for support on the testimony of the two mates, Schute and Thompson. Both were plainly guilty of perjury; and they claimed for themselves the additional infamy of being accomplices in a capital crime. It is impossible to read their testimony and compare it with the other evidence given on the trial, without arriving at a clear conviction that, from base and venal motives, they conspired to make an unfounded accusation against an innocent man, and that, in order to give an air of plausibility to the charge, they deliberately assumed to have been participants in the guilt which they falsely imputed to another, confident of their own immunity, and looking for money as the price of self degradation. Thompson had been in prison in Australia, and his antecedents were those of an impenitent thief. Schute professed, on the trial, to have previously committed perjury; and the general character of his testimony clearly indicated that, whether this was true or not of the particular occasion to which he referred, he was entirely capable of the crime.

The accusation against the master bore the impress of falsehood on its face. The imputed motive for the offense was his desire to commend himself to the owners of the Senator for promotion to a better command, by sinking a ship which he did not know to be insured, and which they had recently purchased at a price exceeding by $3,000 the entire amount of the insurance valuation. He is represented as voluntarily confiding to these men, in advance, his purpose to commit a capital offense; and this, without holding out to them any prospect of advantage or any inducement to secresy. *433 They represent him as consummating his crime, with the aid of one and the privity of both, at a hopeless distance from land, trusting his life and theirs .to the chance of being rescued from a scuttled and sinking ship by some passing ocean wayfarer.

It happened in this, as. in most cases of deliberate fabrication, that the falsehood-of the witnesses was exposed by their inability to adjust the details of their narration so as to harmonize with the truth of the principal fact. Captain Cunningham was represented to have made auger holes in the ship’s bottom at points wholly inaccessible'—'that portion of the hold being filled with grain in bulk. He was represented as boring several of these holes in ten minutes, with a single auger and through a thickness of twenty inches. The physical impossibility of accomplishing this evidently did not occur to the witnesses until they were confronted by the testimony of the shipwrights, who explained the difficulty of boring through the bolted frame of a vessel of that description, and the impracticability of penetrating it a second time with an auger that had once been forced through the heavy copper sheathing. It is quite evident that even if the vessel had been entirely empty, he could not have accomplished in a day, with the auger he is described as using, the task which he is said to have completed in ten minutes when the hold was filled with grain.

The witnesses perceived the necessity of giving some plausible explanation of an act so improbable as the deliberate scuttling of a ship in' the open ocean, with no probable means of escape from death. This difficulty they met with the ready invention that the captain and Schute fitted plugs to the holes, which they inserted and withdrew from time to time, thus controlling at pleasure the ingress of water from the ocean. It did not occur to them to explain how this prudential adjustment would be practicable with from six to nine feet of water in the hold.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.Y. 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walsh-v-washington-marine-insurance-ny-1865.