From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Starbuck v. Phenix Insurance Company

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department
Jan 1, 1900
47 App. Div. 621 (N.Y. App. Div. 1900)

Opinion

January Term, 1900.


Judgment and order affirmed with costs.


This case has been tried four times, and has been before us three times. ( 10 App. Div. 198; 19 id. 139; 34 id. 293.) The facts disclosed upon the fourth trial, now under review, are substantially the same as they were upon the three former trials; and they are sufficiently stated in the reports of the previous appeals. The additional evidence adduced upon the last trial does not materially affect the questions of law now presented. The practical question upon the present appeal is whether the insured vessel was seaworthy at the inception of the voyage. She certainly was seaworthy when the policy was issued. If she was also seaworthy when the voyage commenced, there can be no doubt that the loss was occasioned by "perils of the sea" within the intent and meaning of that expression as used in the policy and as defined in the books. The opening of the port or deadlight, and the entry of the water which followed, was certainly not comprehended in the ordinary wear and tear of the voyage; and if the vessel, notwithstanding the open port, was seaworthy when she sailed, the entry of the water necessarily resulted from the action of the wind and waves, and consequently from the perils of the sea as applicable to the incidental conditions. Was the vessel, then, seaworthy when she sailed? The defendant claims that she was not, because the deadlight failed to resist the ordinary force of the sea. And it insists upon the application of the rule laid down in the last appeal — following Wright v. Orient Mutual Insurance Company (6 Bosw. 269) and Van Wickle v. Mechanics' Ins. Co. ( 97 N.Y. 354) — that there was a presumption of unseaworthiness resulting from the entry of water through the open port shortly after sailing, and without the vessel's encountering any storm. The defendant, under the charge of the court, was given the full benefit of this presumption. The plaintiffs, however, gave evidence tending to rebut the presumption, and the question whether they succeeded in doing so was properly left to the jury. The testimony which they adduced tended to show that the vessel's portholes or deadlights were of the best character, had backers to protect them, were fit and appropriate for the vessel and the employment in which she was engaged, were in good order when the vessel sailed, and were then closed and securely fastened. This was sufficient to require the submission to the jury of the question of seaworthiness. If they believed this testimony, the presumption of unseaworthiness at the inception of the voyage was rebutted; and they were then justified in drawing other inferences as to the cause of the open port. The real question was, should they credit the testimony that the port, or deadlight, was suitable and was in good condition at the inception of the voyage and securely fastened, in view of the fact that it was found open so soon after sailing and under the ordinary weather conditions? We cannot, therefore, agree with the appellant that the facts proved without dispute that the ship was unseaworthy, and that it was entitled to a direction of a verdict in its favor. It is true that the plaintiffs might also have shown the condition of the deadlight after the vessel was raised; and the failure to do so may have been a suspicious circumstance. But that consideration was put before the jury by the learned trial justice, and they were required to give due weight to the failure to produce explanatory evidence which it was in the plaintiffs' power to furnish. Upon the other hand, there were circumstances from which it might fairly have been inferred that the port was not open, at least for some hours after the commencement of the voyage. The ship sailed about two o'clock on the afternoon of the 29th of April, 1888. The side of the vessel, where the deadlight in question was situated, was for several hours thereafter exposed to the beating of the wind and sea; and yet the entry of water does not seem to have been discovered until after two o'clock in the morning of the next day, the thirtieth of April. It is impossible upon these facts to exclude all other inferences save that invoked by the appellant. If the jury believed the plaintiffs' testimony as to the condition of the deadlight when the ship sailed, it was not mere conjecture, but reasonable inference, that the deadlight was opened by some human agency from within, or by some unknown force from without. The former inference is not conclusively rebutted by the application of the rule — laid down by the learned trial justice in charging one of the propositions submitted by the defendant — to the effect that the opening of the deadlight would have been a criminal offense, and that the commission of a crime should not be presumed. What the learned justice undoubtedly meant to convey was that the opening of the deadlight with evil intent would have been a crime. He did not charge that its mere negligent or careless opening could not be inferred. This is apparent from what he said to the jury in his colloquial charge. After speaking of the rule as to seaworthiness at the inception of the voyage, he told them that if the owner had secured a competent master and crew, neither they nor the plaintiffs who represented them could "be charged with a failure of duty even if the vessel became unseaworthy (during the voyage) through some act of neglect on the part of this master or crew." And again, speaking of unseaworthiness, he said, "If the port, or deadlight, became open of itself because unable to stand ordinary wear and tear, then the loss could not be traced to a peril of the seas; but if the deadlight, although sufficiently secure, became open by accident had the loss arose from a cause not reasonably to be anticipated, or guarded against by the owners, it is for you to say whether this was not damage done by a peril of the seas within the definition which I have stated." The jury were thus permitted — we think properly — to consider whether or not it was a fair inference that some one in the vessel opened the deadlight, without criminal intent, though with mistaken judgment. The human agency was present; the port was open; the means of opening it were within reach, and the exclusion of the opposite inference followed the jury's belief in the plaintiffs' evidence as to the condition of the port when the vessel sailed. It is thus impossible, as matter of law, to entirely exclude such an inference. Upon the whole, we see no reason for disturbing the verdict. The case was tried in accordance with the rules laid down by this court upon the previous appeals and with a clear appreciation of the views which we then expressed. There is another branch of the case to which the latter observations are equally applicable. We refer to the claim of unseaworthiness because the water, which got into the starboard alleyway of the vessel through the port, could not be brought under the effective operation of the pumps for the reason that the latter did not reach this particular locality. The evidence sufficiently established that the vessel was well fitted with pumps, adapted to all ordinary conditions or to such as could reasonably be anticipated; and if they were inadequate to relieve the vessel upon the occasion and under the circumstances in question, it was because the occasion and the circumstances were extraordinary and such as could not reasonably have been anticipated. At least it was competent for the jury to so decide. The question on that head was also one of fact, and it was properly submitted to the jury. The exceptions to the charge and to the refusals to charge need not be specially considered. They are based largely upon the position which the defendant took with regard to the effect of the evidence; and they were adapted to the clear elucidation of that position. If the learned justice was wrong in not dismissing the complaint, his error is emphasized by his treatment of these requests. If, however, he was right — as we think he was — his charge was correct and his treatment of the requests unobjectionable. We have gone over all the points made by the appellant, and we find no error which would warrant another reversal of the judgment in this protracted litigation. It follows from our view of the inference properly deducible from the facts that the comments thereon made by the plaintiffs' counsel in his summing up to the jury were entirely admissible and proper. Indeed, the only doubtful rulings which we have been able to discover upon this or any other question in the case are rulings to the prejudice of the plaintiffs. The judgment and order denying the defendant's motion for a new trial should be affirmed, with costs. Van Brunt, P.J., Rumsey, O'Brien and Ingraham, JJ., concurred.


Summaries of

Starbuck v. Phenix Insurance Company

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department
Jan 1, 1900
47 App. Div. 621 (N.Y. App. Div. 1900)
Case details for

Starbuck v. Phenix Insurance Company

Case Details

Full title:Matilda E. Starbuck and Another, as Executors, etc., of William H…

Court:Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department

Date published: Jan 1, 1900

Citations

47 App. Div. 621 (N.Y. App. Div. 1900)