Citation Numbers: 126 Mass. 70, 1878 Mass. LEXIS 174
Judges: Endicott
Filed Date: 12/23/1878
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
By the terms of the policy the vessel was insured “ at and from Plymouth to the Banks, cod-fishing, and at and thence back to Plymouth.” ' This is a definite and distinct description of the contemplated voyage between two fixed termini. The Banks are named as the outward terminus, and while there engaged in cod-fishing, and until her return to Plymouth, the vessel was covered by the policy. The language used is not open to the construction that it was the intention of the parties to insure her while prosecuting the adventure elsewhere, or doing what was necessary to make it successful outside and beyond the prescribed limits. A voyage is the sailing of a vessel from one port or place to another port or place, and the purpose for which it is to be conducted, whether as a trading, freighting or fishing voyage, is often mentioned in policies of insurance. But this designation cannot vary or extend the description, route or termini of the voyage, as named in the policy, unless some usage, connected with the particular trade or adventure, is shown
We are, therefore, of opinion, that the vessel, by leaving the Banks and going to St. Peter’s for bait, departed from the voyage described in the policy, and the only question to be determined is, whether in law there has been a deviation which avoids the policy.
It may be stated, in general terms, that the assured is protected by his policy, while the vessel pursues the usual and customary course of the voyage; but any departure from the course, or delay in prosecuting it, without necessity or just cause, is a deviar tian, and discharges the insurer, because another voyage has been voluntarily substituted for that which was insured. Whether the degree or period of the risk is increased, is unimportant, as the assured has no right to substitute a different risk. Whenever, therefore, there is a manifest departure from the course of the voyage, the assured must show that it was justified by the necessity of the case. Stocker v. Harris, 3 Mass. 409, 418. Brazier v, Clap, 5 Mass. 1. Coffin v. Newburyport Ins. Co. 9 Mass. 436, 449. Kettell v. Wiggin, 13 Mass. 68.
In the case at bar, the alleged necessity arose from scarcity of bait. The plaintiff did not put on board, when the vessel sailed from Plymouth, enough for the entire trip. Squid had been
We are of opinion that the claim of the plaintiff cannot be sustained; and that a necessity to justify the departure in this case cannot be found in the fact that, without going to St. Peter’s for bait, the voyage would have failed to be successful or profitable to the plaintiff.
The strictness with which the courts have held the insured to the route named in the policy, is illustrated by the cases already cited, and by many others cited at the argument. Dodge v. Essex Ins. Co. 12 Gray, 65. Middlewood v. Blakes, 7 T. R. 162. Brown v. Tayleur, 4 A. & E. 241. Fernandez v. Grreat Western Ins. Co. 48 N. Y. 571. Merchants’ Ins. Co. v. Algeo, 32 Penn. St. 330. But the question to be determined here is, what is the nature and extent of the necessity or just cause which will warrant a departure from the route.
In this connection it may be well to refer to the necessities which clearly justify a departure. There is no deviation when the master is compelled by force, either to depart from his route, or delay its prosecution by the acts of his crew; Elton v. Brogden, 2 Str. 1264; Driscol v. Passmore, 1 B. & P. 200; Driscol v. Bovil, 1 B. & P. 313; or where he is detained by those in authority, or taken out of his course by a ship of war. Scott v. Thompson, 1 N. R. 181. In Phelps v. Auldjo, 2 Camp. 350, a master was ordered to sail out and examine a vessel in the offing, by a captain of a king’s ship, and, it appearing that he complied without remonstrance or threat of force, it was held to be a deviation. In cases of this description there must be a vis major, compelling a departure or delay, which excuses the master. So
Nor is the departure from the route for the purpose of saving human life a deviation;, nor is a policy avoided when the ship goes out of her course to obtain necessary medical assistance for those lawfully on board. Bond v. Brig Cora, 2 Wash. C. C 80. Perkins v. Augusta Ins. Co. 10 Gray, 312. In this class of cases the justification does not rest on the same ground as in those previously noticed. It is allowed from motives of humanity, and cannot be extended to the saving or protection of property. In all other cases the necessity must be a real and imperative necessity affecting the vessel, such as actual force preventing the master from exercising his will, peril of the sea, danger of capture, want of repair, disability of the crew, or unseaworthiness, occurring under such circumstances that the master, acting upon his best judgment for the interest of all parties, has no alternative, and is forced to leave his route, or delay its prosecution.
When the departure is caused by such a necessity, the change of route in no respect alters the insurance; because the course of a seá voyage must at times be necessarily subject to extraordinary perils of the sea, and contingencies beyond the control of the master, and in the presence of which he is forced to succumb; and when they occur, and he is obliged to depart from the usual course of the voyage, there is no deviation in the legal sense of the term, for the departure is the necessary incident of the route named in the policy, as prosecuted at the time by the ship. The probability of such occurrences is well understood;
It is true, there is a class of cases much relied on by the plaintiff, where the test is whether the ship at the time of the alleged deviation was pursuing the object and business of the voyage. But those are cases of delay, where the ship was at the port or place named or permitted in the policy. The permission in a policy to go to certain ports or places must always be construed in reference to the purpose of the voyage. Williams v. Shee, 3 Camp. 469. 1 Arnould on Ins. §§ 141, 142. Any delay for the prosecution of other business, or any unreasonable delay in prosecuting the business of the voyage at such port is a deviation. African Merchants v. British Ins. Co. L. R. 8 Ex. 154. But if the delay was necessary in order to accomplish the objects of the voyage, and was reasonable under the circumstances of the case, then there is no deviation. Columbian Ins. Co. v. Catlett, 12 Wheat: 383 Phillips v. Irving, 7 Man. & Gr. 325. In other words, if the ship is at a place permitted, the delay shall not be a deviation, if it is necessary in the proper prosecution of the business of the voyage. But this test cannot be applied to a departure from the route to a port not named or permitted, for the purpose of the adventure. In all trading voyages, for example, the ship is confined to the ports or coasts named in the policy, and she cannot depart to other places, simply because she may better prosecute the trade elsewhere. If
The illustration put by the defendant’s counsel is apposite: “If a vessel insured to Havana and back should learn, before entering the port, that there was no cargo there with which she could be loaded, no one would say that her policy protected her in going to the nearest port where a cargo could be had.” Other illustrations may be given. If a vessel insured to a particular port, having letters of credit, should find on arrival that the parties on whom they were drawn had failed, she could not go to another port for funds, and return for her cargo, and be protected by her policy. If fish had been scarce on ■ the Banks in 1874, it would hardly be contended that the vessel could have gone to other fishing-grounds to fish, although not more distant than St. Peter’s, and yet, if she was justified by necessity in leaving to obtain bait at St. Peter’s and to return in order to make the trip successful, it would be difficult to hold that the same necessity would not allow her to fish elsewhere.
In the argument of the plaintiff’s counsel, no case was cited which "sustains the position he has assumed, and we are not aware of any case which goes to this extent. In Greene v. Pacific Ins. Co. 9 Allen, 217, the voyage was broken up by reason of perils to the ship insured against in the policy, and the question was as to the right to abandon. In Stocker v. Harris, 3 Mass. 409, which is strongly relied on by the plaintiff, an American ship sailing under Spanish colors, as allowed by the policy, delayed at Vera "Cruz five months for the purpose of
As in the opinion of the court the trip to St. Peter’s was a deviation which discharged the insurer, by the terms of the report Here must be
Judgment for the defendant.