Court Opinion

ID: 6407641
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 11:50:12.482767+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:15.959866
License: Public Domain

Shaw, C. J.
The right of an insurer, after refusing to accept notice of an abandonment, and when the owners themselves have manifested their intention not to get off and repair the vessel, to take possession of her, and repair and restore her in a sound condition to the assured, is a peculiar privilege. This is not witlun the direct provisions of the contract of insurance, but it lias been held as one of the incidental consequences of the relation arising out of that contract, that if the insurers can make the necessary repairs, and thereby show that the loss did not *163amount to fifty per cent, according to the computation made in adjusting a partial loss, and can tender the ship to the assured, restored and made whole, it is a good compliance with their contract of indemnity, and a good defence to a claim for a total loss. But it has been held as a strict condition, that this must be done within a reasonable time. And in the case of Peele v. Suffolk Ins. Co. 7 Pick. 257, where the rule itself is definitely laid down, it is said, “ that underwriters must do this as expeditiously as possible, in order that the voyage, if it be not completed, may not be destroyed.” And it is added, “ if he delay the repairs beyond a reasonable time, he forfeits his right to return the ship, and must be considered as taking her to himself under the offer to abandon.”
The defendants’ counsel, at the trial, and again on the argu ment, admitting the rule to be so, in regard to the act of repairing, contended that until the commencement of the repairs at Philadelphia, the defendants were not bound to the duty of diligence and despatch, and therefore if they did not use due diligence in removing the vessel from the beach, and carrying her to a place of safety, it did not amount to an acceptance of the abandonment.
There is a clause in the policy, that no act done by the in surers, towards saving the property, shall be deemed to be a constructive acceptance of an abandonment; and hence it is argued, that whether the acts are done promptly and actively, or tardily and negligently, can make no difference, and that whatever may be the character of such acts, they are pi tected by the policy from being regarded as evidence of an accej. .‘anee of the abandonment. Supposing this view to be correct, still taking possession of the vessel, for another and distinct purpose, is not within this provision in the policy. The act is qualified by the intent and purpose with which it is done. If done solely with a view to save the property, the underwriters were at liberty to do such acts or not, as they should see fit, and do them in their own time. If done with an intent to repair and restore the vessel, then it wao to be done with reasonable diligence and despatch, on peril of making the vessel their own, by taking .her *164into custody. This was the view of the subject taken at the trial, and the jury were accordingly instructed, that if the insurers, after the abandonment and refusal to accept, took possession and control of the vessel, with the purpose and design of getting her off, repairing, and restoring her, they were bound, from the lime they took possession with that intention, to use reasonable diligence, as well in getting her off, as in repairing her after her arrival in port. This instruction we think was correct; and the jury were sufficiently cautioned against any misapprehension on the subject, by the further instruction, that the mere act of entering on the property, for the purpose of recovering, saving, and preserving the property, is not to be considered as an acceptance of the abandonment.
The extent to which the acts of persons will be characterized, and their effect determined and governed by the intentions with which they are done, is nowhere more strikingly illustrated, than in the' principles of insurance law. In many cases, acts done with one purpose will be justified, when the same acts, done with another, will vacate the policy. It has often been held, that it is no deviation to depart from a direct line, for any. of the ordinary purposes of navigation ; and if a master alters his course with any view to avoid a current, or to take the wind to better advantage, or any purpose connected with the navigation of the vessel, it is no deviation. But it was held, in Parr v. Anderson, 6 East, 202, where a master altered his course a quarter of a point, and pursued it a quarter of an hour, for the purpose of pursuing an enemy, when he had no liberty to chase or make prizes, that it was a deviation, which discharged the insurers. In all such cases, the purpose with which an act is done is a question of fact to be decided by a jury, upon evidence.
The ground, and the only ground, upon which the underwriters can defend- themselves, in a case like the present, is, that they have restored, or tendered, the vessel to the assured, repaired and made whole, and fit for use, within a reasonable time. All the same reasons, which require reasonable diligence and despatch in actually making the repairs, apply with equal force to all the anterior proceedings incident and necessary to such restoration. *165These reasons are, that during the whole of the time, as well whilst getting the vessel off, as whilst the repairs are making, the voyage is delayed, the owners are deprived of the use of their vessel, and the insurers are withholding her, under a claim which can be justified only on the ground that they proceed with due diligence. Were it necessary to the decision of this case, we are inclined to think, that within the principle laid down on this subject, it is necessary, if the insurers intend to repair and restore the vessel, that they come to that determination and act upon it promptly, and that due diligence is as requisite to the engineering operations of getting the vessel from the strand, as the mechanical operations at the ship-yard, after she reaches it; because both are necessary to an actual restoration, within a reasonable time. It is to be regarded as one entire act, governed by the object and purposes with which it is done.
In the case cited, Peele v. Suffolk Ins. Co.., it was found by the jury, that the vessel was not repaired and offered to be restored in a reasonable time ; and on this ground, the court decided against the underwriters, without distinguishing between the act of taking possession and getting the vessel off, and the act of making the repairs upon her, when removed. But it is not necessary now to decide what would be the effect of delay in talcing possession. In the present case, the jury have found, that after the defendants took possession and control of the vessel, with the purpose and design of getting her off, repairing, and restoring her to the assured, they did not use reasonable diligence ; and we are therefore of opinion, that the vessel was not tendered within reasonable time ; that by the delay, the defendants forfeited their right to return her, and must be considered as having accepted the abandonment.

Judgment on the verdict.