Court Opinion

ID: 6423558
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:02:00.030576+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:53.014805
License: Public Domain

W. Allen, J.
The cargo, consisting entirely of fertilizer, arrived at the port of discharge in specie, almost undiminished in quantity, and of substantial though greatly diminished value. If the risk continued to that time, there was not a total loss. Forbes v. Manufacturers’ Ins. Co. 1 Gray, 371. The plaintiffs’ conten*174tion is, that the risk had been terminated by a constructive total loss and abandonment. It was agreed that there had been a loss from the perils insured against of over fifty per cent of the value of the cargo, and the jury found that the cargo had been abandoned by the plaintiffs to the underwriters on account of the loss. It is not denied that these facts would show a total loss under a general insurance, but it is claimed that the insertion in the policy, in the case at bar, of the words “ free of partial loss ” changes the character of a total loss under the policy, so that there can be no recovery for a constructive total loss, but only for the actual total destruction of the thing insured.
It was decided in Heebner v. Eagle Ins. Co. 10 Gray, 131, that an insurance upon a ship against “ total loss only ” covered a constructive total loss. The same decision was made in regard to an insurance against total loss only on a vessel and outfits in Greene v. Pacific Ins. Co. 9 Allen, 217. In Burnham v. Boston Marine Ins. Co. 139 Mass. 399, it was held that there was a constructive total loss of “ advances ” insured free from average by the constructive total loss of the catch of a fishing vessel. Kettell v. Alliance Ins. Co. 10 Gray, 144, is very much like the case at bar. There part of a cargo consisting of tin plates was insured, “ partial loss excepted.” Chief Justice Shaw says :“We can have no doubt that by the true construction of this clause the insurers were not to be liable for loss on tin plates, unless such loss, estimated according to the rules and usages of Boston, should amount to a total loss. . . . What then is the extent of this exception ? The natural construction is, that it leaves the insurer liable for all total losses; but it makes no distinction between absolute and constructive total losses; and in case of a constructive total loss, which gives the assured a right to abandon, and he exercises the right, it becomes a legal total loss, as if absolute in its nature. The clause in the contract gives no intimation that it is any particular kind of total loss, whether absolute or technical; it simply excludes all kind of liability for a partial loss. By the natural construction of these provisions, it would seem that if the goods insured were placed by one of the perils insured against in that situation in which the assured has a right to abandon, and he does abandon, he has sustained a total loss, not within the exception.” This case is *175cited in Pierce v. Columbian Ins. Co. 14 Allen, 320, where Mr. Justice Gray says: “ And by the American law, if goods other than memorandum articles are injured by perils of the sea to more than half their value, it is a constructive total loss, and authorizes an immediate abandonment and recovery against the insurers.”
It is argued that the fertilizer insured should be treated as if included in the common memorandum clause, and that memorandum articles are not subject to constructive total loss and abandonment. We cannot admit either proposition. The distinction between tin plates and memorandum articles was considered in Kettell v. Alliance Ins. Co., ubi supra. The common memorandum clause, by which certain enumerated and described goods are made free from average unless general, or the ship be stranded, has been in use for nearly one hundred and fifty years, and is intended to apply to goods of a perishable nature, and to meet the difficulty of pi-oving whether a loss accrued from the inherent quality of the article, or from a peril insured against. It is printed into the policy in suit in these words: “Nor for any partial loss on salt, grain, peas, beans, fish, fruit, whether preserved or otherwise, hides, hops, vegetables, or other goods that are esteemed perishable in their own nature, or on the freight thereon, unless it amounts to seven per cent on the whole aggregate value of such articles, and happen by stranding.” As Kettell v. Alliance Ins. Co. is directly in point, there is no occasion for considering whether a different rule will be applied to articles of a • perishable nature included in the common memorandum clause, and whether such articles are liable to constructive total loss and abandonment. In England there seems to be no difference between memorandum articles and other goods in that respect. Roux v. Salvador, 3 Bing. N. C. 266. Rosetto v. Gurney, 11 C. B. 176. Anderson v. Royal Exchange Assurance Co. 7 East, 38. Davy v. Milford, 15 East, 559. Adams v. Mackenzie, 13 C. B. (N. S.) 442. De Mattos v. Saunders, L. R. 7 C. P. 570.
Whether in this Commonwealth there can be no total loss of a memorandum article, if any part of it arrives at the port of discharge in specie, or whether a special rule will apply to such articles, and there may be a constructive total loss and *176abandonment of them, if, as may have been tbe fact in the case at bar, tbe damage is sncb that tbe expense of landing and restoring tbe goods will equal or exceed their actual value, or whether tbe general rule in regard to other cargo will apply, and damage to tbe amount of one half of tbe insured value with abandonment will constitute a total loss, we express no opinion. See Marcardier v. Chesapeake Ins. Co. 8 Cranch, 39; Morean v. United States Ins. Co. 1 Wheat. 219; Wallerstein v. Columbian Ins. Co. 44 N. Y. 204; Poole v. Protection Ins. Co. 14 Conn. 47. Judgment on the verdict.