Waters v. Merchants' Louisville Insurance

36 U.S. 213, 9 L. Ed. 691, 11 Pet. 213, 1837 U.S. LEXIS 175
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 14, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by107 cases

This text of 36 U.S. 213 (Waters v. Merchants' Louisville 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
Waters v. Merchants' Louisville Insurance, 36 U.S. 213, 9 L. Ed. 691, 11 Pet. 213, 1837 U.S. LEXIS 175 (1837).

Opinion

Mr. Justic Story

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a case certified to us from the circuit court for the district of Kcntücky upon certain questions upon which .the judges of that court were opposed in opinion.

The action was brought by Waters, the plaintiff, on a policy of insurance underwritten by the Merchants’ Louisville Insurance Company, whereby they insured and cafised to be insured, the plaintiff “lost or not lost, in the sum of 6000 dollars, on the steamboat Lioness, engine, tackle, and furniture, to navigate the western W'aters usually navigated by steamboats, particularly from New Orleans to Natchitoches on Red river, or elsewhere, the Missouri and Upper Mississippi excepted; (captain Waters having the privilege of placing competent masters in command a.t any time, 6000 dollars being insured at New Albany, Indiana) whereof William Waters is at present master; beginning the adventure upon the said steamboat, from the 12th of September, 1832, at twelve o’clock meridian, and to' continue and endure until the 12th of September, 1833, at twelve o’clock, meridian (twelve months).” The policy further *219 provided, that “It shall be lawful for the said steamboat, during said time, to proceed to, touch and stay at, any point or points, place or places, if thereunto obliged by stress of weather or other unavoidable accidents, also at the usual landings for wood attd refreshments, and for discharging freight and passengers, without prejudice to this insurance. Touching the adventures and perils, which the aforesaid, insurance company is contented to bear; they are,.-of the rivers, fire, enemies, pirates, assailing thieves, and all other losses and misfortunes, which shall come to the hurt; detriment, or damage of the said steamboat, engine, tackle, and furniture, according to the tru'e. intent and meaning, of this policy.” The premium was nine pjer cent. The declaration avers a total loss; and that the said steamboat and appertenances insured, “ were, by the adventures and perils of fire and the river, exploded, sunk to the bottom of Red river aforesaid, and utterly destroyed.”

The defendants pleaded six several pleas, to which a demurrer was put in by the plaintiff; and in the consideration of the demurrer, the following questions and points occurred

1. Does the policy cover- a loss of the boaf by a fire, caused by the barratry of the master and crew?

2. Does the policy cover á loss of the boat by fire, caused by the negligence, carelessness, or unskilfulness of the master and crew of the boat, or any of them?

3. Is the allegation of the defendants in -their pleas, or either of them, to the effect that the fire, by which the boat was lost, was caused by the carelessness, or the neglect, or unskilful conduct of the master and crew, a defence to this action?

4. Are the said pleas, or either -of them, sufficient?

These questions constituted the points on 'which the decision of the judges took place in the court below; and they are those upon which we are now called to deliver our opinion upon the argument had at the bar.

As we understand the first question, it assumes that the fire yvas directly and immediately caused by the barratry of the master and crew, as the efficient agents; or, in other Words, that'the. fire was communicated and occasioned by the direct act and agency of the master and crew, intentionally done from a barratrous purpose. In this view of it, we have no hesitation to say, that a loss by fire caused by the barratry of the master or crew; is not. a loss within the policy. Such' a loss is properly a loss attributable to the barratry, as its *220 proximate canse, as it concurs as the efficient agent, with the element, eo instanti, when the' injury is produced. If the master or crew should barratrously bore holes in the bottom of the vessel, and the latter should thereby be filled'with water and sink, the loss would properly be deemed a loss by barratry, and not by a peril of the seas or of rivers, though the flow of the water should co-operate in producing the sinking.

The second question raises a different point, whether a loss by fire, remotely caused by the negligence, carelessness, or unskilfulness of the master and crew of the vessel, is a loss within the true intent and meaning of 'the policy. By uriskilfulness, as here stated, we do not understand in this instance, a general unskilfulness, such as.would be a breach of the implied warranty of competent skill to navigate and conduct the vessel; but only unskilfulness in the particular circumstances remotely connected with the loss. In this sense, it is equivalent to negligence or carelessness in the execution of duty, and not to incapacity.

This question has undergone many discussions in the courts .of England and America, and has given'rise to opposing judgments in the two countries. . As applied to policies against fire on land, the doctrine has for a great , length of time prevailed, that losses Occasioned by the mere fault or negligence of the. assured or his servants, unaffected by fraud or design,' are within the protection of the policies; and as such recoverable from the underwriters. It is not certain upon what precise grounds this doctrine was originally'settled. It may have been from the rules of interpretation applied to such policies containing special exceptions, and not excepting this; or it may have been, and more probably was founded upon a more general ground, that as the terms of the policy covered risks by fire generally, no exception ought to be introduced by construction, except that of fraud of the assured, which, upon the principles of public policy and morals, was always to be implied. It is probable, too, that the consideration had great weight, that otherwise such policies would practically be of little importance, since, comparatively speaking, few losses of this sort would occur which could not be traced back to some carelessness, neglect, or inattention of the members of the family.

Be the origin of it, however, what it may, the doctrine is now firmly established both in England and America. We had occasion to consider and decide the point at the last term, in the case of the *221 Columbia Insurance Company of Alexandria v. Lawrence, 10 Peters’ R. 517, 518; which was a policy against the risk of fire on land. The argument addressed to us on that-occasion, endeavoured to establish the proposition, that there was no real distinction between policies against fire on land and at sea.; and that in each case the same risks were included: and that as the risk of loss by fire occasioned by negligence was not included in a marine policy, unless that of barratry was also contáined in the same policy, it followed, that as the latter risk was not taken on a land policy, no recovery could be had. In reply to that argument, the court made the comments which have been'alluded to at the bar, and the correctness of which it becomes now necessary to decide.

It is certainly somewhat remarkable, that .the question now before us should never have been directly presented in the American or English courts; viz.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 U.S. 213, 9 L. Ed. 691, 11 Pet. 213, 1837 U.S. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waters-v-merchants-louisville-insurance-scotus-1837.