Court Opinion

ID: 9299379
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-02 17:05:57.801704+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:13:37.544131
License: Public Domain

WASHINGTON, Circuit Justice,
in charging the jury, observed — that it was for them to weigh the evidence, and to decide, not upon suspicions, but upon such circumstances as ought to influence a correct mind, whether the sale was bona fide, or not If not, it was a fraud upon the neutrality of the United States, as well as upon the defendants, and amounted to a breach of warranty in the policy on those goods. That if the jury should be satisfied upon this point against the insured, it would be sufficient to avoid all the policies upon the ground of concealment, because, although the taint upon part of the cargo would not, or ought not to have caused a condemnation of the other parts, or of the vessel; yet it would necessarily occasion a seizure, detention, and expense, if not danger to the whole, and would, at all events, give a right to the insured, on hearing of the capture, to abandon. The insurer calculates not only the risk of condemnation, but of capture and detention, and a concealment of circumstances which may produce the latter, must be material to the risk, and would, if known, increase the premium.
As to the second point, the jury must inquire for themselves, whether these circumstances were material to the risk, and in making this inquiry, they should carry back their minds to the time when these insurances were effected, without attending to the subsequent capture and condemnation. We are all very wise in finding out the causes which have led to particular events, after the events have taken place; and we are apt to give weight and consequence to circumstances, which would originally have passed unnoticed. Would the circumstances of this case, which were disclosed, have appared material, in October 1806, to any of these parties? The insured knew, provided his purchase was bona fide, that the goods became thereby neutral, and were not liable to condemnation. He also knew, that, in general, it was not necessary for the insured to disclose from whom he had purchased the cargo which he asks to be insured; and he also knew, that according to the law of nations, it was no cause of condemnation, that the vendor was an enemy, and was to be a passenger in the vessel carrying the goods. It might or might not have occurred to him, that these were circumstances, which, with a suspicious court, or rapacious captors, might lead to difficulty; but we do not know that the insured is bound to anticipate every pos*850sible ground of suspicion, which might weigh with some minds, and totally escape the observation of others. If, according to any established adjudications of the belligerent courts, generally known, certain circumstances become grounds of condemnation, though in opposition to the law of nations, those circumstances, if known to the insured, should be disclosed. So a case may happen, where the circumstances are of such a nature, as to make the danger of capture very great, in which the court mean not to say, that a disclosure ought not to be made. But it is not every conjecture or opinion, as to the materiality of the circumstances concealed, which ought to weigh with the jury. In this case, the opinions of the witnesses, upon this point, deserve to be respected. Still, however, they are but opinions, which are not obligatory upon a jury. One of those witnesses put the question upon the true ground. The circumstances, if known, would have led him to inquire into the fairness and good faith of the transaction, and if he found it fair, they would have made no difference. This is certainly a very proper inquiry for a jury to make.
[NOTE. Motion for a new trial was made upon the ground of newly-discovered evidence. The motion was allowed. Case No. 9.134. Upon the new trial there was a verdict for defendants. Id. 9,135.]
Verdict for plaintiff.