Washburn & Moen Manufacturing Co. v. Reliance Marine Insurance

179 U.S. 1, 21 S. Ct. 1, 45 L. Ed. 49, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1839
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedOctober 15, 1900
Docket6
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 179 U.S. 1 (Washburn & Moen Manufacturing Co. v. Reliance Marine Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washburn & Moen Manufacturing Co. v. Reliance Marine Insurance, 179 U.S. 1, 21 S. Ct. 1, 45 L. Ed. 49, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1839 (1900).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Fuller

delivered the opinion of the court.

By the memorandum, wire of all khids was expressly “ warranted by the assured free from average unless general;” and by the rider, “ free of particular average but liable for absolute total loss of a part if amounting to five per cent.”

The memorandum and marginal clauses were in pari materia- and to be read together. They were not contradictory, and the rider merely operated 'to qualify the memorandum by allowing recovery for an actual total loss in part, which could not otherwise be had. In other words, the qualification was manifestly inserted so that, while conceding that under the memorandum clause no liability was undertaken for a constructive total loss, but only a liability for an actual total loss, the insurers might be held for an actual total loss of a part.

The contracting parties thus recognized the rule that articles warranted free of particular average, or free from average unless general, are insured only against an actual total loss..

The warranty or memorandum clause wras introduced into policies for the protection of the insurer from liability for any partial loss whatever on certain enumerated articles, regarded as perishable in their nature, and upon certain others .none under a given rate per cent. This was about 1749, and since then in the growth of commerce, the list of articles freed by the stipu-, lation from particular average has been, enlarged so as to em *9 brace many, which, though they may not be inherently perishable, are in their nature peculiarly susceptible to damage.

The early form ran as follows: “ Corn, fish, salt, fruit, flour and seed are warranted free from average, unless general or the ship be stranded; sugar, tobacco, hemp, flax, hides and skins are warranted free from average under five pounds per cent; and all other goods, and also the ship and freight, are warranted free from average under three pounds per cent unless general or the ship be stranded.”

In 1764, Lord Mansfield, in Wilson v. Smith, 3 Burrow, 1550, held that the word “ unless ” meant the same as “ except,” and that “the words ‘free from average unless general’ can never mean to leave the insurers liable to any particular average.”

In Cocking v. Fraser, 4 Douglas, 295 (1785), the Court of King’s Bench held, Lord Mansfield ■ and Mr. Justice Buller speaking, that the insurer was secured against all damage to memorandum articles unless they were completely and actually destroyed so as no longer physically to exist.

Chancellor Kent in his Commentaries commended this rule as “ very salutary, by reason of its simplicity and certainty,” “ considering the difficulty of ascertaining how much of the loss arose by the perils of the sea, and how much by the perishable nature of the commodity, and the impositions to which insurers would be liable in consequence of that difficulty; ” and declared that notwithstanding the authority of Cocking v. Fraser had been shaken in England, the weight of authority in this country was “ in favor of the doctrine that in order to charge the insurer, the memorandum articles must be specifically and physically destroyed and must not exist in specie.” He added, however, that it had been “ frequently a vexed point in the discussions, whether the insurer was holden, if the memorandum articles physically existed, though they were absolutely of no value.” 3 Kent (1st ed. 1828), 244; 12th ed. *296.

The general rule is firmly established in this court that the insurers are not liable on memorandum articles except in case of actual total loss, and that there can be no actual total loss *10 where a cargo of such articles has arrived, in whole or in part, in specie, at the port of destination, but only when it is physically destroyed, or its value extinguished by a loss of identity. Biays v. Chesapeake Ins. Co. (1813), 7 Cranch, 415; Marcardier v. Chesapeake Ins. Co. (1814), 8 Cranch, 39; Morean v. United States Ins. Co. (1816), 1 Wheat. 219; Hugg v. Augusta Ins. &c. Co. (1849), 7 How. 595; Insurance Co. v. Fogarty (1873), 19 Wall. 640. And see Robinson v. Insurance Co., 3 Sumner, 220; Morean v. United States Insurance Co., 3 Wash. Cir. Ct. Rep. 256.

Biays v. Chesapeake Ins. Co. was a case of insurance upon hides, of which some were totálly lost; some were saved in a damaged condition'; and some were uninjured. This court overruled the contention that there, could be a total loss as to some of them, notwithstanding the memorandum clause, and Mr. Justice Livingston said:

“ Whatever may have been the motive to the introduction of this clause into policies of • insurance, which was done as early as the year 1749, and most probably with the intention of protecting insurers against losses arising solely from a deterioration of the article, by its own perishable quality; or whatever ambiguity may once have existed from the term average being used in different senses, that is as signifying a contribution to a general loss, and also aparticular or partial injury falling on the subject insured, it is well - understood at the present day, with respect to such [memorandum] articles, that underwriters are free from all partial losses of every kind, which do not arise from a contribution towards a general average.
“ It only remains then to examine, and so the question has properly been treated at bar, whether the hides, which were sunk ánd not reclaimed, constituted a-to tal or partial loss within the meaning of this policy. It has been considered as total by the counsel of the assured, but- the court cannot perceive any ground for treating it in that way, inasmuch as out of many thousand hides which were on board,’ not quite eight hundred were lost, making in point of value somewhat less than one-sixth part of the sum insured by this policy. 'If there were no memorandum in the way, and the plaintiff had gone on to recover, as *11 in that case he might have done, it is perceived at once that he must have had judgment only for a partial loss, which would have been equivalent to the injury actually sustained. But without having recourse to any reasoning on the subject, the proposition appears too self-evident not to command universal assent, that when only a part of a cargo, consisting all of the same kind of articles, is lost in any way whatever, and the residue, (which in this case amounts to much the greatest part), arrives in safety at its port of destination, the loss cannot but be partial, and that this must forever be so, as long as a part continues to be less than the whole. This loss then being a particular loss only, and not resulting from a general average, the court is of opinion that the defendants are not liable for it.”

In Marcardier v. Chesapeake Ins. Co.,

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179 U.S. 1, 21 S. Ct. 1, 45 L. Ed. 49, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washburn-moen-manufacturing-co-v-reliance-marine-insurance-scotus-1900.