Court Opinion

ID: 3590777
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:39:27.607163+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:42:07.353001
License: Public Domain

The action is on a policy of marine insurance on the good barge called "Cary Brick Company No. 8." It is a time policy (1 Arnould on Marine Ins. [10th ed.] § 436) running for one year from the 23d of *Page 299 
August, 1917, to the 23d of August 1918. The barge was confined to the waters of New York harbor and adjacent waters. The policy in usual terms covered the adventures and perils of the harbor. It excepted from its terms among other things all damage that may be done to the vessel (a) from the want of ordinary care and skill in loading and stowing the cargo of said vessel, and (b) from rottenness, inherent defects and other unseaworthiness.
The barge was a deck scow, built to carry brick, 115 feet from stem to stern, 34 feet beam. On June 10, 1918, she loaded in Jersey City with 13 carloads of freight, 600 tons round steel bars laid fore and aft in the bottom of the cargo, and kegs of nails, nuts and hoop iron placed on top of the barge.
She was then towed safely to the Bush docks in Brooklyn where she tied alongside a lighter which was alongside a steamship. She listed a little to starboard when making this trip. As she lay alongside the scow a carload of the cargo, weighing 40 to 45 tons, was taken from the stern of the boat and placed 20 or 30 feet forward on top of the rest of the cargo by stevedores employed by the consignee, in order to get at a portion of the cargo resting below for future unloading. This put her head down some and listed her more to starboard. She was then towed a short distance to the other side of the ship and tied up to the pier.
Captain Olson, who was alone on the scow, pumped her out and went ashore for his supper at about nine o'clock in the evening. He returned about eleven o'clock. She then listed eight or ten inches. More water was in the hold. Within an hour and a half after his return, the cargo rolled off the deck and the scow righted herself.
The first question that presents itself is whether plaintiffs sustained the burden of proof resting on them and made out aprima facie case by showing that the loss arose from some of the perils covered by the policy and not *Page 300 
from some of the excepted risks; that capsizing was due to a peril of the sea and was not due to the defective condition of the scow or to improper loading and stowing of the cargo. (Berwind v. Greenwich Ins. Co., 114 N.Y. 231, 235.)
The phrase "perils of the sea" as used in a policy of marine insurance is not limited to extraordinary perils. It covers all kinds of marine casualties due to the fortuitous action of the sea such as sinking or capsizing (2 Arnould on Marine Ins. [10th ed.] § 812; Clinchfield Fuel Co. v. Ætna Ins. Co.,114 S.E. Rep. 543), but it includes only a sea damage, occurring at sea, a peril of the sea. A peril on the sea is not enough.
In order to bring the loss within the terms of the policy plaintiffs must also establish affirmatively that the scow was seaworthy at the time the cargo rolled off the deck. A ship is seaworthy when reasonably fit in all respects to encounter the ordinary perils of the sea, incident to the adventure insured. (The Southwark, 191 U.S. 1, 8.) To be seaworthy the ship's cargo must be properly stowed. "One of the conditions implied by law in case of an insurance upon cargo, is that it shall be stowed in a safe and proper manner, and in the usual and customary place for the carriage of goods of the description insured; and any breach of this warranty by which the risk is varied and the perils insured against increased, vitiates the policy. (Leitch v. Atlantic Mutual Ins. Co., 66 N.Y. 100,108.) It is the duty of the insured to keep the vessel seaworthy during the risk if practicable to do so. If in handling the cargo, it is negligently bestowed, not under any stress of circumstances, and the vessel thereby becomes unseaworthy, this is negligent navigation and an unnecessary increase of the risk, both at common law (Paddock v. Franklin Ins. Co., 28 Mass. [11 Pick.] 227) and under a fair reading of the terms of the policy.
The evidence in this case does not establish that the scow encountered any extraordinary danger or peril of the sea, such as stress of weather, winds and waves, *Page 301 
lightning, tempests, rocks. If she were seaworthy, she would endure all ordinary perils incident to mere floating on the surface of the water. (Van Wickle v. Mechanics  Traders' Ins.Co., 97 N.Y. 350.)
The question is: "Did the scow encounter a peril of the sea which disabled and rendered her unseaworthy or was her unseaworthiness the cause of her disaster?" It appears that the scow after a short voyage in moderate weather, when moored in calm water, listed and turned over; that the cause was (a) leakiness whereby the water entered the hold, coupled with (b) want of ordinary care in placing a portion of the cargo preparatory to unloading another portion of it, which caused the cargo to role when the ship had listed sufficiently to put it in motion. No other explanation suggests itself. She was a leaky acow with a cargo improperly stowed. In short she was unseaworthy, and her own defects, not the perils or dangers of the sea, were the cause of her misfortune.
The judgment below was, therefore, right and should be affirmed, with costs.
HOGAN, CARDOZO, McLAUGHLIN, CRANE and ANDREWS, JJ., concur; HISCOCK, Ch. J., concurs in result.
Judgment affirmed, etc.