De Peyster v. Sun Mutual Insurance
De Peyster v. Sun Mutual Insurance
Opinion of the Court
The motion of the defendant’s counsel for a , nonsuit was properly denied by the court. The question, whether there had been a deviation of the vessel, depends upon the construction of the following clause added to the policy, September 6, 1842: “It is agreed, for one per cent additional premium, that the brig ‘Alfred Hammond’ may have the privilege of performing a voyage from Santa Martha to Chagres and back to Carthagena, and also, for three-quarters per cent additional premium, that said brig or any other vessel or vessels may use three additional ports on the voyage from the ■Spanish Main to New York; to return one-quarter per cent ior each port not used, and no loss being claimed.” The policy .was originally upon a voyage from Santa Martha to New York, with liberty to use two additional ports. It was shown that vessels engaged in trade upon the Main were accustomed to visit different ports upon the coast for the purpose of discharging the outward and taking in the homeward cargo, and, when .the latter was completed, to sail directly for New York, touching at no port after leaving the Main. The question is, whether the vessel was at liberty to use the additional ports, specified in the clause added to the policy, upon the Main, or only after her final departure from the Main upon her voyage to New York. The two additional ports that, by the original policy, the vessel was at liberty to use, evidently were ports upon the Main.
The exceptions taken by the defendant’s counsel to the charge of the judge, and his refusals to charge, present the question whether a recovery can be had upon a loss of property insured, embraced in the usual memorandum clause—that is warranted free from average unless general—where it becomes impossible to transport the same to its port of destination in consequence of the perils insured against, when any portion of the property exists in specie, at an intermediate port of distress. The law in this State is settled, that there can be no recovery in case of loss of memorandum articles, when any portion thereof arrives in specie at the port of destination, although possessing no value there. (Maggrath v. Church, 1 Caines, 196; Leroy v. Gouverneur, 1 John., 226; Wadsworth v. Pacific Insurance Co., 4 Wend., 33.) While any portion of such articles remains in specie, capable of being transported to the terminus of the voyage, and within the control of the assured, he cannot recover for a total destruction of a portion of the property, or for the loss of value, however serious such loss may be. See cases cited above. The English' law differs in this respect, that by the latter, when there is a total destruction of a distinct portion of the property insured, a recovery pro tanto may be had. (2 Arnould on Insurance, 1033, et seq., and cases there cited.) The precise point involved in this case remains unsettled by judicial authority in this State. The English rule makes the insurer responsible, when it becomes impossible from any of the perils covered by the policy to transport the property to its port of destination.
The judgment should, therefore, be affirmed.
Allen, J., did not sit in the case. All the other judges concurring,
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- De Peyster and Whitmarsh v. Sun Mutual Insurance Company
- Status
- Published