A contract of reinsurance to the whole extent of the original
insurer's liability is valid in the absence of usage or stipulation
to the contrary.
An open policy of insurance executed in one state and sent to
another and taking effect by acceptance of risks under it by the
insurer's agent there is not affected by local usage of the place
where it was executed.
A policy of reinsurance limited to the excess of the original
insurer's risk above a certain sum does not prevent him from
reinsuring himself elsewhere within that sum.
Page 140 U. S. 566
In equity. Decree for complainant. Defendant appealed. The case
is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a bill in equity by the Hibernia Insurance Company, a
corporation of Louisiana, against the Insurance Company of North
America, a corporation of Pennsylvania, to recover back sums paid
under policies of reinsurance by which the plaintiff reinsured the
defendant. The bill prayed for a discovery, an account, and general
relief. The case was referred to a master, upon whose report a
decree was entered for the plaintiff for $27,986.79, with interest
from the date of the master's report, and costs. The defendant
appealed to this Court.
Upon full examination of the voluminous and somewhat conflicting
evidence, the material facts, as clearly established, appear to be
as follows:
In September, 1880, Marshall J. Smith, a member of the firm of
Marshall J. Smith & Co., agents of the Hibernia Insurance
Company at New Orleans, was in Philadelphia, and called upon
Charles Platt, Jr., an insurance broker, son of the president of
the Insurance Company of North America but in no way connected in
business with that company, and asked him if he could get business
for the Hibernia Insurance Company and a commission for himself by
making an arrangement by which the Insurance Company of North
America should reinsure with the Hibernia Insurance Company under
an open policy issued in Platt's name, and Smith said he would go
back to New Orleans and write Platt on the subject, and
accordingly, after returning to New Orleans, sent him the following
letter:
Page 140 U. S. 567
"New Orleans, October 6, 1880"
"Charles Platt, Jr., Esq. Philadelphia."
"Dear Sir: Our Mr. Smith has returned home, and begs to refer to
his conversation with you in regard to reinsuring here the excess
lines of the North America. We have consulted with the officers of
the Hibernia Ins. Co., a branch of which company is under our
management, and we propose to take a proportion of the general
reinsurance of the North America, excepting coastwise risks from
New York here, of which business, at the present rates, we believe
the North America does little. The Hibernia will carry a line of
$10,000 on all foreign business of the company at all ports,
excepting New Orleans. From New Orleans the line must be limited to
$5,000, as the Hibernia often have a line from their customers, and
they may unknowingly double on a vessel. The Hibernia will allow
twenty-five percent rebate, and to you a brokerage of five percent.
Should you be able to arrange this, please notify us at once. The
Hibernia Ins. Co. has a capital of $400,000 paid up, is
conservative, and we look upon it here as in every way first class
for the amount of risk they will assume."
"Yours, truly, MARSHALL J. SMITH & Co."
To this letter Platt, after calling on the officers of the
Insurance Company of North America, who agreed to give a share of
their reinsurance business to the Hibernia Insurance Company, sent
the following reply:
"Charles Platt, Jr., Insurance, 331 Walnut street,
Philadelphia"
"Philadelphia, October 11, 1880"
"Marshall J. Smith, Esq., New Orleans"
"Dear Sir: Your valued favor of the 6th inst. is received, and I
note contents with care. The Ins. Co. of North America, through me,
will be glad to enter into the reinsurance arrangement with the
Hibernia on the terms named. I enclose herewith a policy I had with
the Home Ins. Co. of Newark, N.J., which you can take a copy of on
a Hibernia policy, making the sum insured $10,000. Please send me
the policy,
Page 140 U. S. 568
and I can begin at once. Of course, all risks accepted by me
will be such that the Ins. Co. of North America carries their line
on, and all risks that are bound by me will be held by the Co., as
it will not do to have any cancellations. Shall I report all risks
to you or the Hibernia Co. direct? I see no reason why the
arrangement should not prove a success, and I will do all I can to
make it so. The most part of it will be grain and general cargo
from Atlantic ports to Europe. Please return the Home policy. With
many thanks and regards from Mr. Prictet and myself, I am"
"Yours very truly, CHARLES PLATT, JR."
On October 13, 1880, the Hibernia Insurance Company issued to
Platt an open policy, No. 268, by which
"The Hibernia Insurance Company of New Orleans by this policy of
insurance do make insurance and cause to be insured Charles Platt,
Jr., for account of whom it may concern, lost or not lost at and
from ports in the United States and foreign ports, upon all kinds
of lawful goods, merchandise,"
etc., with the names of the vessel and master, voyage, value of
goods insured, rate of premium and amount of risk left blank, and
otherwise in the usual from of a policy of marine insurance, not
reinsurance, and having this endorsement:
"This policy is limited to the sum of ten thousand ($10,000)
dollars upon anyone vessel from all ports except from New Orleans,
where the limit is hereby agreed to and understood to be five
thousand ($5,000) dollars. This policy is not to cover any risk
from port or ports to New Orleans. Notice of each shipment to be
given to Marshall J. Smith & Co., managers, as soon as known,
and amounts declared as soon as ascertained. This policy to be
continuous until cancelled by either party giving twenty days'
notice, but without any prejudice to risks pending at the date of
cancellation."
Platt showed this policy to the officers of the Insurance
Company of North America, but retained it in his own
possession.
The Hibernia Insurance Company in 1881 and 1882 issued and sent
to the Insurance Company of North America, on
Page 140 U. S. 569
application of its President, four other open policies, Nos.
277, 296, 297, 306, in a different form from No. 268, and differing
from each other only in date, voyage, and amount of excess. By No.
297, for instance, dated November 9, 1881,
"The Hibernia Insurance Company of New Orleans by this policy of
insurance do make insurance and cause to be reinsured the Insurance
Company of North America, for account of whom it may concern, lost
or not lost at and from port or ports in the West India islands to
port or ports in the United States, direct or via port or ports,
liberty of transhipment to include risk of lighterage when such is
assumed by the Insurance Company of North America, upon all kinds
of lawful goods, merchandise,"
etc. That policy had this endorsement:
"To apply to the excess which the said company may have in all
their various policies over fifty thousand ($50,000) dollars, and
to apply
pro rata with all reinsurance policies on same
excess, but not to exceed ten thousand ($10,000) dollars. This
policy may be cancelled by either party giving notice to that
effect, but without prejudice to risks pending at the date of
cancellation. This policy is subject to such risks, valuations,
conditions, and mode of settlement as are or may be taken by the
said Insurance Company of North America, notwithstanding anything
to the contrary in the within policy, and payment of loss to be
made at the same time. Returns to be sent to Marshall J. Smith
& Co., in New Orleans."
No. 277, dated April 14, 1881, was on an excess of $60,000 on
goods from La Guayra, Porto Cabello, and Curacoa to ports in the
United States; No. 296, dated November 14, 1881, was on an excess
of $50,000 on goods from the East Indies to ports in the United
States, and No. 306, dated September 1, 1882, was on an excess of
$70,000 on goods from ports in the United States to ports in
Europe.
Many hundred of reinsurances were made under the five policies,
mostly under No. 268, in the following manner: whenever the
Insurance Company of North America desired reinsurance, it handed
to Platt, as representing the Hibernia, Insurance Company, an
application in the form copied in the
Page 140 U. S. 570
margin,{1} except in sometimes omitting all statements as to
excess, and Platt, after accepting the application and entering it
in his books, forth with sent to Marshall J. Smith & Co. at New
Orleans a certificate in the form copied in the margin;{2} and
afterwards, as soon as he was advised by the Insurance Company of
North America of the exact amount of risk attaching, sent to
Marshall J. Smith & Co. a statement of particulars in the form
copied in the margin.{3} All Platt's commissions were aid by the
Hibernia Insurance Company out of the premiums received by it from
the Insurance Company of North America.
Page 140 U. S. 571
On July 1, 1883, an endorsement was made on each of the five
policies in the following form, differing only in the description
of the number of each policy:
"New Orleans, La., July 1, 1883"
"From and after this date this policy, No. 268, of the Hibernia
Insurance Co. of New Orleans, shall apply to five thousand dollars
($5,000) instead of ten thousand dollars, ($10,000), as heretofore,
on same excess as expressed therein, and subject to the same terms
and conditions."
On November 23, 1883, all the policies were cancelled in
accordance with their terms by the Hibernia Insurance Company.
The bill and the master's report proceed upon the theory that
Platt, acting for the Insurance Company or North America, applied
to the Hibernia Insurance Company to reinsure the Insurance Company
of North America on the excess of its usual line -- that is to say,
beyond the sum usually carried by it on any good risk, which was
alleged to be $50,000 -- and represented to the Hibernia Insurance
Company that it was to reinsure only those risks that the Insurance
Company of North America carried its usual line on; that the
Hibernia Insurance Company, upon the faith of that representation,
issued nominally to Platt, but really to the Insurance Company of
North America, policy No. 268; that the Hibernia Insurance Company
afterwards issued the other four policies directly to the Insurance
Company of North America for stated excesses; that by ancient and
general usage reinsurance is always made upon the faith that the
reinsured procures it on the excess only of the usual line carried
by him, and is never, unless for special reasons disclosed,
effected to the full sum originally insured; that various
reinsurance risks were placed by the Insurance Company of North
America with the Hibernia Insurance Company under all the policies,
and particularly under No. 268, in cases where the Insurance
Company of North America was not itself carrying the full sum of
$50,000, and in many such cases the Hibernia Insurance Company paid
losses without knowledge of that fact, and that many reports of
risks made by the Insurance Company of North America were false and
were outside of the terms of the policies. We are unable to concur
in this view of the case.
Page 140 U. S. 572
Platt was an insurance broker carrying on an independent
business, and was employed not by the Insurance Company of North
America, but by the Hibernia Insurance Company, to obtain for it a
proportion of the reinsurance business of the Insurance Company of
North America. The letter of October 6, 1880, from the Hibernia
Insurance Company's agents at New Orleans to Platt, after referring
generally, and by way of introducing the subject, to their previous
conversation "in regard to reinsuring here the excess lines of the
North America," proposed, on behalf of the Hibernia Insurance
Company, "to take a proportion of the general reinsurance business
of the North America," excepting certain voyages, and limiting the
amount which the Hibernia Insurance Company would take on each
risk. In Platt's letter in reply of October 11, 1880, the statement
that "the Insurance Company of North America, through me, will be
glad to enter into the reinsurance arrangement with the Hibernia on
the terms named" apparently refers to the terms as to voyages and
amounts to taken by the Hibernia Insurance Company. There is no
evidence whatever that the Insurance Company of North America
authorized him to contract or to represent in its behalf that the
reinsurance should only be in excess of its usual line. Nor is
there anything in his letter which shows an assumption of such
authority by him. Reliance is placed on this sentence:
Of course, all risks accepted by me will be such that the
Insurance Company of North America carries their line on, and all
the risks that are bound by me will be held by the company, as it
will not do to have any cancellations.
But the clear meaning and purpose of this are first to assure
the Hibernia Insurance Company, his employer, that he will only
accept in its behalf risks that the Insurance Company of North
America carries its line on, and second to warn it that whatever
risks he does accept will be held by that company.
Policy No. 268, dated October 13, 1880, was made by the Hibernia
Insurance Company to Platt "for account of whom it may concern,"
and sent to him at Philadelphia, to enable him to accept in its
behalf reinsurance there, and never took effect as a contract of
reinsurance of the Insurance Company
Page 140 U. S. 573
of North America on any risk, until the risk had been stated by
that company to Platt, and by him accepted in behalf of the
Hibernia Insurance Company. The contract between the two insurance
companies was made in Philadelphia. The evidence introduced by the
Hibernia Insurance Company to prove a usage not to reinsure to the
whole amount of the original insurance, giving it the utmost
possible weight, proved no more than a local usage in New Orleans.
See Louisiana Ins. Co. v. New Orleans Ins. Co., 13 La.Ann.
246. It could not therefore affect a contract made elsewhere, and
it is unnecessary to consider whether evidence of a similar usage,
if universal, would be admissible to control a written contract
expressed in the terms of this policy.
Macy v. Whaling Ins.
Co., 9 Met. 354, 365-366;
Parkhurst v. Gloucester Ins.
Co., 100 Mass. 301;
Cobb v. Lime Rock Ins. Co., 58
Me. 326.
In the absence of any such usage and of any specific stipulation
in the policy, there can be no doubt that the original insurer may
protect himself to the whole extent of his liability. In the words
of Roccus, quoted and approved by Emerigon, by Mr. Justice Park,
and by Mr. Justice Livingston,
secundus assecurator tenetur ad
solvendum omne totum quod primus assecurator solverit. Roccus,
n. 30; Emerigon, c. 8, § 14; Park, Ins. (8th ed.) 595;
Hastie v. De Peyster, 3 Caines 190, 196. So Chancellor
Kent says
"After an insurance has been made, the insurer may have the
entire sum he hath insured, reassured to him by some other insurer.
The object of this is indemnity against his own act."
3 Kent Com. 279.
See also Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Erie
Transportation Co., 117 U. S. 312,
117 U. S. 323;
Bradford v. Symondson, 7 Q.B.D. 456.
Policy No. 268, as originally issued, mentions no limit of
excess. It contains nothing to prevent its taking effect for the
sums thereby insured, although covering the whole original
insurance. It does not even show that it is a reinsurance, but it
is not the less effectual for that reason.
Mackenzie v.
Whitworth, L.R. 10 Ex. 142, and 1 Ex.D. 36. In the agreement
of July 1, 1883, endorsed on each of the five policies, by which
the sum insured on anyone vessel is reduced from $10,000 to $5,000
"on same excess as expressed therein," the words just
Page 140 U. S. 574
quoted can have no effect as applied to this policy, in which no
excess is expressed. All the reinsurances under policy No. 268
therefore were in accordance with the terms of the contract, and
the allegations of fraud are wholly unsupported by the
evidence.
All the claims of the Hibernia Insurance Company, sustained by
the decree below, relate to reinsurances under this policy, and are
disposed of by what has been said, except two under policy No. 296,
as to which there is admitted to have been error, and one under
policy No. 297.
That policy, by the terms of the original endorsement thereon,
was
"to apply to the excess which the said company may have in their
various policies over $50,000, and to apply
pro rata with
all reinsurance policies on same excess."
This clause, while it limits the reinsurance by the Hibernia
Insurance Company to excess over the sum named, contains nothing to
prevent the original insurer from protecting himself by obtaining
reinsurance from other companies within that sum. There was error,
therefore, in holding that the fact that the Insurance Company of
North America had obtained such reinsurance elsewhere avoided the
reinsurance of the Hibernia Insurance Company upon the same
property.
The result is that the decree must be
Reversed, and the cause remanded to the circuit court with
directions to enter a decree dismissing the bill, with
costs.
BREWER and BROWN, JJ., not having been members of the court when
this case was argued, took no part in the decision.
"Philadelphia, _____, 18__"
"Reinsurance is wanted by the Insurance Company of North America
for $_____ on _____, on board of the _____ at and from _____; to
apply to the excess which the said company may have on all their
various policies on vessel, freight, cargo, of profits, including
specie or treasure, over $_____, and to apply
pro rata
with all reinsurance policies on same excess, but not to exceed
$_____. This policy is to be subject to such risks, valuations,
conditions, and mode of settlement as are or may be taken by the
said Insurance Company of North America, notwithstanding anything
to the contrary in the within policy, and payment of loss to be
made at the same time. To remain open until particulars are given
in."
"Premium, ___ percent, less ___ percent, $_____."
"When and where built, _____; number of decks, _____; tonnage,
_____; rate, _____."
"________, Secretary"
"To the ________."
"
Office of Charles Platt, Jr., Philadelphia"
"Certificate No. ___. No. ___"
"Insurance has been made in the Hibernia Insurance Company of
N.O., under open policy No. ___ for Insurance Company of North
America, payable, in case of loss, to them, for $_____ upon _____
on board _____ at and from _____ to _____."
"When built, _____; where built, _____; metaled, _____; tonnage,
_____."
"Remarks, _____; rate, _____."
"Premium, _____ percent, $_____"
"CHARLES PLATT, JR."
"Philadelphia, _____, 188_."
"To the Hibernia Insurance Company of New Orleans:"
"The amount attaching on open entry of _____, 188_, under open
policy No. on _____, per ship _____, is _____ at _____ percent;
premium, $_____; net, $_____."
"CHARLES PLATT, JR."
"Philadelphia, ________"