Where a bill of lading provides that in case of loss, the
carrier, if liable for the loss, shall have the benefit of any
insurance that may have been effected in the goods, this provision
limits the right of subrogation of the insurer to recover over
against the carrier upon paying to the shipper the loss.
Where the carrier is actually and in terms the party assured,
the underwriter
Page 150 U. S. 100
can have no right to recover over against the carrier, even if
the amount of the policy has been paid by the insurance company to
the owner, on the order of the carrier.
The claim of the master of the vessel through whose loss the
loss of the goods insured took place to exemption from liability to
the insurance companies having been adjudicated against him, and
the appeal to this Court on that judgment having been dismissed for
want of jurisdiction, he is estopped from again setting up that
claim in this case.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
In May, 1883, Armour, Plankinton & Co., grain merchants
having their place of business at New York city, were the owners of
a cargo of wheat, which they desired to have brought from Buffalo
to New York. Henry Morse and Alanson Morse, composing the firm of
H. Morse & Co., were doing business as intermediaries or
middlemen between boatmen and shippers in procuring cargoes to be
shipped. Charles E. Wager was the master and owner of the canal
boat
William Worden, and also of the steam canal boat
Sydney.
Through one Meadows, as their agent, Armour, Plankinton &
Co. made a contract with H. Morse & Co. whereby the latter
employed Charles E. Wager to take the cargo of wheat, amounting to
7,900 bushels, on the boat
William Worden for
transportation from Buffalo to New York.
In the spring of 1883, before this cargo was shipped on the
canal boat
William Worden, the said insurance companies
delivered to H. Morse & Co. an open or running cargo policy,
which contained the following terms and covenants:
Page 150 U. S. 101
"
Uniform Canal Cargo Policy"
"The New England Underwriters"
"The Security Insurance Co., of New Haven, Conn."
"The Providence Washington Insurance Co., of Providence,
R.I."
"Each acting and contracting for itself, and not one for the
other, for the true performance of the premises, each company for
its own part only, which is one-half of all liability accruing
under this policy, by this policy of insurance, on account of H.
Morse & Co., for whom it may concern, do insure the several
persons whose names are hereafter endorsed hereon as owner,
advancer, or common carrier, on goods, wares, merchandise, or
country produce, on his own boat, or boats belonging to others,
loaded on commission or chartered, from place to place, as endorsed
hereon, or in a book kept for that purpose, for the several amounts
at the rate, and on the goods, wares, merchandise, or country
produce, as specified in the said endorsement."
"No risk considered as insured under this policy until said
endorsement is approved and signed by these companies, or their
duly authorized agents at _____, unless with special agreement with
the companies, and endorsed hereon."
Before the cargo in question was put on board the
William
Worden, H. Morse & Co. applied to Worthington & Sill,
the general agents at Buffalo of these insurance companies, to
insure the cargo of wheat while
in transitu on board the
William Worden.
That application was in writing, as follows:
"
Worthington & Sill, General Agents"
"
New England Underwriters' Canal Insurance"
"Office, No. 48 Main Street, Buffalo, N.Y."
"Insurance is wanted by H. Morse & Co. Loss, if any, is
payable to do, or order, on wheat inboard cargo of boat William
Worden. $9,875, from Buffalo to New York."
Rate ___ cts. is . . . . . . $_____
Total premium. . . . . . . . $_____
"Buffalo, may 17, 1883. H. Morse & Co.,
Applicant."
Page 150 U. S. 102
On receipt of this application, Worthington & Sill delivered
to H. Morse & Co. a certificate of insurance in the following
words:
"Providence Washington Insurance Co., Providence, R.I."
"Security Insurance Co., New Haven, Conn."
"New England Underwriters"
"Inland Marine Department"
"Worthington & Sill, Gen'l Agents, Buffalo, N.Y."
"
Canal Cargo Certificate"
"No. 668 $9,875 "
"This certifies that H. Morse & Co. insured under and
subject to the conditions of policy No. 772, issued by the New
England Underwriters, in the sum of ninety-eight hundred
seventy-five dollars, inboard cargo of boat
William
Worden. On wheat $9,875 at and from Buffalo to New York."
"Loss (if any) payable to assured or order, and return of this
certificate. This certificate of insurance is not valid until
countersigned by the authorized agents for this company at Buffalo,
N.Y."
"Buffalo, N.Y. May 17th, 1883."
"Worthington & Sill"
"
General Agents"
Upon the delivery of said certificate of insurance, Worthington
& Sill entered in the book kept for that purpose, "H. Morse
& Co., boat
William Worden, from Buffalo to New York,
$9,875, rate 15 cts., premium $14.82, wheat." This certificate of
insurance was endorsed in blank by H. Morse & Co., and
delivered to Meadows, the agent of Armour, Plankinton & Co.
Thereupon Wager and H. Morse & Co. signed and delivered to
Meadows an affreightment contract or bill of lading as follows:
Page 150 U. S. 103
"
[Vignette]"
"Buffalo,
May 17, 1883"
"Shipped by W. Meadows, in apparent good order, on board the
canal boat
Wm. Worden, of Morse, whereof _____ _____ is
master, the following described property, to be transported to
place of designation without unnecessary delay, and to be delivered
as addressed on the margin in like good order, in the customary
manner, free of lighterage, upon payment of freight and charges as
prescribed in this bill. Consignees to pay all harbor towing from
and to the usual place of landing. Three weekdays, regardless of
weather (including day of arrival, providing notice of arrival
shall be given before four o'clock P.M.) after arrival and notice
of same, to be allowed consignees to discharge this cargo, after
which time the cargo or consignees are to pay demurrage at the rate
of two and one-half percent per day upon the freight, including
tolls, for each and every day of such demurrage over the three days
as above specified, until the cargo is fully discharged. And it is
agreed between the carriers and shippers and assigns that, in
consideration especially of the rate of freight hereon named, the
said carriers having supervised the weighing of said cargo inboard,
hereby agree that this bill of lading shall be conclusive as
between shippers and assigns and carriers as to quantity of cargo
received inboard and to be delivered at port of destination, and
that they will deliver the full quantity hereon named. All damage
caused by the boat or carrier, or deficiency in the cargo from
quantity as hereon specified, to be paid for by the carrier and
deducted from the freight, and any excess in the cargo to be paid
for to the carrier by the consignee. In case grain becomes heated
while in transit, the carrier shall deliver his entire cargo, and
pay only for any deficiency caused by heating exceeding five
bushels for each one thousand bushels."
"The freight charges and demurrage payable to as directed below
or order at place of destination, who is the only party authorized
to collect the same, and whose receipt shall be in full for all
demands on this cargo or bill of lading. "
Page 150 U. S. 104
"In witness whereof the said master of said boat hath affirmed
to two bills of lading, one marked 'Original,' and one marked
'Duplicate,' of this tenor and date, one of which being
accomplished, the other to stand void."
"7,900 bu. No. 2 red wheat, ex cargo schr. 'R. Hallaran.'"
"Freight to New York, five (5) cents per bu."
"Advanced charges, $200."
"H. Morse & Co."
"Per C. E. Wolfe"
"(Seventy-nine hundred bushel)"
"C. E. Wager."
"(In margin:) Armour, Plankinton & Co., New York"
"The freight charges and demurrage, to the amount of $516.94,
are payable by check to the order of the National Bank of the
Republic, in New York, such check to be delivered to E. B. Brooke
& Co. for such bank. The balance is payable to said E. B.
Brooke & Co., who is the only party authorized to collect the
same, whose receipts shall be in full for all demands
therefor."
Meadows, before the
William Worden started from
Buffalo, forwarded this bill of lading, with the said certificate
of insurance attached thereto, to Armour, Plankinton & Co. at
New York.
Wager signed and delivered to H. Morse & Co. a collateral or
sub-affreightment contract or bill of lading, in the following
words and figures:
"Buffalo,
May 18, 1883."
"Shipped by H. Morse & Co., in apparent good order, on board
the canal boat
William Worden, of Syracuse, whereof
Charles E. Wager is master, the following described property, to be
transported to place of destination without unnecessary delay, and
to be delivered as addressed on the margin, in like good order, in
the customary manner, free of lighterage,
Page 150 U. S. 105
upon payment of freight and charges, as prescribed in this
bill."
"Consignees to pay all harbor towing from and to the usual place
of landing. Three weekdays, regardless of weather (including day of
arrival, providing notice of arrival shall be given before four
o'clock P.M.) after arrival and notice of same, to be allowed
consignees to discharge this cargo, after which time the cargo or
consignees are to pay demurrage at the rate of two and one-half
percent per day upon the freight, including tolls, for each and
every day of such demurrage over the three days as above specified,
until the cargo is fully discharged. And it is agreed between the
carriers and shippers and assigns that, in consideration especially
of the rate of freight hereon named, the said carriers having
supervised the weighing of said cargo inboard, hereby agree that
this bill of lading shall be conclusive as between shippers and
assigns and carriers as to quantity of cargo received inboard and
to be delivered at port of destination, and that they will deliver
the full quantity hereon named. All damage caused by the boat or
carrier or deficiency in the cargo from quantity as hereon
specified to be paid for by the carrier, and deducted from the
freight, and any excess in the cargo to be paid for to the carrier
by the consignee. In case grain becomes heated while in transit,
the carrier shall deliver his entire cargo, and pay only for any
deficiency caused by heating exceeding five bushels for each one
thousand bushels."
"The freight charges and demurrage to the amount of $_____ are
payable by check to the order of _____ _____, New York, such check
to be delivered to _____ _____ for such bank, the balance payable
to said _____ _____, who is the only party authorized to collect
the same, whose receipt shall be in full for all demands
therefor."
"Tolls on this cargo having been advanced by H. Morse & Co.,
if refunded, must be to them or to their order."
"In witness whereof, the said master of said boat hath affirmed
to two bills of lading, one marked 'Original' and one marked
'Duplicate,' of this tenor and date, one of which being
accomplished, the other to stand void. "
Page 150 U. S. 106
7,900 bushels of wheat.
Freight to New York, per bushel, 5 . . . . . . . $395.00
Captain's advance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 319.44
------
On safe delivery, E. B. Brooke &
Co., collect as above and pay captain. . . . . $75.56
"Hold, subject to our draft, $319.44 H. Morse & Co.,
Fero."
"Care E. B. Brooke & Co., New York"
"J. W. Schlehr, Dept. Clerk"
Morse & Co. advanced to Meadows, the agent of Armour,
Plankington & Co., $200 for prior advances made by said agent
upon the wheat, being charges for carriage from Chicago to Buffalo,
and by the bills of lading the cargo was to be delivered upon
payment of this advance and the freight. Pursuant to the contract
between Meadows, agent, and Morse & Co., the latter agreed and
undertook, for and in consideration of the payment of $395, the
payment of which was made a lien on the cargo, to transport the
same to New York, and to insure the cargo. Morse & Co. paid the
premium to the insurance companies.
Upon the voyage, the
William Worden was wholly under
the control of the steamboat
Sidney, and both boats were
navigated practically as one vessel. On May 28, 1883, while
proceeding on the voyage down the Hudson River, the
William
Worden struck the rocks on Esopus Island, and sunk, and her
cargo was damaged to the amount of $6,175.89.
On June 26, 1883, the insurance companies paid to Armour,
Plankington & Co. the sum of $9,211.75 on account of the loss
of the cargo insured, and upon an abandonment by the owners to the
insurance companies, and about the same time they paid Morse &
Co. the sum of $520 in full for their interest in the cargo, in
which sum was included $14.82, the premium theretofore paid by them
on the policy.
Subsequently the insurance companies brought an action
in
rem against the boats
William Worden and
Sidney in the Circuit Court for the Southern District of
New York, and in that action Wager intervened as owner of the
vessels, and
Page 150 U. S. 107
Morse & Co. became sureties for the Worden and for
claimant's costs.
In this suit it was found that the carriers had been guilty of
negligence in their management of the said vessels in the voyage,
which had resulted in the loss, and the circuit court decreed that
the two vessels be condemned in favor of the insurance
companies.
In May, 1887, the insurance companies filed in the District
Court of the United States for the Northern District of New York a
libel and complaint against Henry Morse & Co. and Charles E.
Wager, whereby the libelants sought to be subrogated to the claims
of the owners against the respondents as carriers. This cause was
so proceeded in that a decree in favor of the libelants was
rendered by the district court against the respondents for
$6,292.16, whereof $4,617.16 was payable by all the respondents,
jointly and severally, and $1,675 was payable by Wager
severally.
From this decree separate appeals were taken, one by H. Morse
& Co. and one by Charles E. Wager, to the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Northern District of New York. The circuit
court reversed the decree of the district court against H. Morse
& Co., and dismissed the libel as to them, and affirmed the
decree against Wager, and gave judgment against him, including
interest and costs in both courts, for $8,446.37. From this decree
of the circuit court separate appeals have been taken to this
Court, one by the insurance companies, complaining of the dismissal
of the libel against H. Morse & Co., and the other by Charles
E. Wager, complaining of the decree against him.
We shall first consider the questions arising under the appeal
of the insurance companies.
It is contended that the insurance companies, having paid the
loss to the owners of the cargo, are entitled to be subrogated to
the rights of the assured against the carriers.
It is too well settled by the authorities to admit of question
that, as between a common carrier of goods and an underwriter upon
them, the liability to the owner for their loss or destruction is
primarily upon the carrier, while the liability of
Page 150 U. S. 108
the insurer is only secondary. The contract of the carrier may
not be first in order of time, but it is first and principal in
ultimate liability. In respect to the ownership of the goods, and
the will incident thereto, the owner and the insurer are considered
but one person, having together the beneficial right to the
indemnity due from the carrier for a breach of his contract, or for
nonperformance of his legal duty. Standing thus, as the insurer
does, practically in the position of a surety, stipulating that the
goods shall not be lost or injured in consequence of the peril
insured against, whenever he has indemnified the owner for the loss
he is entitled to all the means of indemnity which the satisfied
owner held against the party primarily liable. His right rests upon
familiar principles of equity. It is the right of subrogation, not
at all upon privity of contract, but worked out through the right
of the creditor or owner. Hence it has often been ruled that an
insurer who has paid a loss may use the name of the assured in an
action to obtain redress from the carrier whose failure of duty
caused the loss.
Hall & Long v. Railroad
Companies, 13 Wall. 367.
But it is equally well settled that the right, by way of
subrogation, of an insurer, upon paying for a total loss of the
goods insured, to recover over against the carrier is only that
right which the assured has, and that accordingly, when a bill of
lading provides that the carrier, when liable for the loss, shall
have the full benefit of any insurance that may have been effected
upon the goods, this provision is valid as between the carrier and
the shipper, and that therefore such provision limits the right of
subrogation of the insurer, upon paying the shipper the loss, to
recover over against the carrier.
Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Erie
& Western Transportation Co., 117 U.
S. 312;
St. Louis, Iron Mountain &c. Railway v.
Commercial Union Insurance Co., 139 U.
S. 223.
If a valid claim by the underwriter to be subrogated to the
rights of the owner will not arise where the carrier has contracted
with the owner that he, the carrier, shall have the benefit of any
insurance, it would seem to be clear that where the carrier is
actually and in terms the party insured, the
Page 150 U. S. 109
underwriter can have no right to recover over against the
carrier, even if the amount of the policy has been paid by the
insurance company to the owner on the order of the carrier.
The facts in the present case were that the open policy declared
that it was issued on account of H. Morse & Co., for whom it
may concern, and that it insured the several persons whose names
should be thereafter endorsed thereon as owner, advancee, or common
carrier on goods, wares, merchandise, or country produce on his own
boat, or boats belonging to others, loaded on commission or
chartered.
Under this open policy, Morse & Co. applied to the insurance
companies, stating that insurance was wanted by H. Morse & Co.,
on wheat valued at $9,875, from Buffalo to New York, loss, if any,
to be payable to Morse & Co. or order. Upon this application
the insurance companies issued what is termed an "insurance
certificate" to H. Morse & Co., setting forth that, subject to
the conditions of policy No. 772, H. Morse & Co. insured, in
the sum of $9,875, the inboard cargo of boat
William
Worden, the loss, if any, to be "payable to assured or order,
on return of this certificate." The premium was paid by H. Morse
& Co.
Clearly, under this state of facts, H. Morse & Co. were,
nominally at least, the parties insured, and came within the terms
of the policy, and, upon a loss, were entitled to receive the
amount of the policy, and of course, in that event, the insurers
could not, after having paid H. Morse & Co. the amount of the
loss, recover it back from them under the principle of equitable
subrogation. The question then arises whether a different
conclusion should be reached because of the fact that H. Morse
& Co., when they delivered the bill of lading to Meadows as
agent for Armour, Plankinton & Co., attached thereto the
insurance certificate endorsed by them in blank.
So far as the insurance companies were concerned, H. Morse &
Co. were under no obligation to transfer the policy to Armour,
Plankinton & Co., nor to make it payable to them in case of
loss. That was a matter entirely between H. Morse & Co., as
carriers, and Armour, Plankinton & Co., as consignees and
owners of the cargo.
Page 150 U. S. 110
When subsequently the insurance companies paid to Armour,
Plankinton & Co. the amount of the loss, they did so not by
virtue of any contract between themselves and the consignees, but
of the contract between themselves and H. Morse & Co., whereby
they had agreed to pay the loss to the latter or order.
We think, therefore, that the circuit court was right in
dismissing the libel against H. Morse & Co., and its decree to
that effect should be affirmed.
Coming, now to the appeal of Wager, No. 41, October term, 1893,
we are met by the contention that Wager, as master of the
Sydney and as carrier, was entitled to the benefit of the
insurance, and that hence it was error on the part of the circuit
court to allow the insurance companies to recover against him by
way of subrogation. It is admitted that Wager was not nominally,
and in terms, insured, but the testimony of Morse and of Wager
himself is relied on as showing that it was understood and intended
that Wager was a beneficiary under the policy.
We are not called upon to consider whether this parol evidence
was admissible to affect the meaning and legal effect of the policy
and certificate of insurance, nor what the proper conclusion would
be if the evidence were competent, because the question of Wager's
liability was determined and adjudicated against him in the case of
The Sydney, in the Circuit Court for the Southern District
of New York, as stated in the findings of facts in this case, and
reported in 27 F. 119.
In that case, the libelants, the insurance companies, alleging
that they had paid the owners of the cargo the loss occasioned by
the negligence of the carrier in charge of the vessel, sought to be
subrogated to the owner's cause of action, and Wager, having been
permitted to intervene as claimant, by his answer admitted that he
was owner of the vessel, denied that the libelants had insured the
owners of the cargo, and claimed that he had paid the premium to
the insurance companies, upon the agreement that the benefit of the
policy, in case of loss, should accrue to his benefit as carrier,
and that
Page 150 U. S. 111
therefore no right of subrogation in favor of the insurance
companies existed.
These issues of fact and law were determined against Wager and
in favor of the insurance companies, and a final decree condemning
the vessel was rendered. This decree remains unreversed and in full
force.
It cannot be questioned that in the present case the circuit
court could, and this Court on appeal can, take notice of the
former case in the Southern District, because the proceedings and
decree therein are set up at length in the answer of Wager in the
present case. It is true that Wager alleges in his answer that he
had prosecuted an appeal to the Supreme Court, which was then
pending; but the record of that appeal shows that it was dismissed
by this Court for want of jurisdiction.
The Sydney,
139 U. S.
332.
We think, therefore, that the circuit court did not err in
regarding Wager as having been concluded by the trial and decree in
the former case, and in entering a final decree against him.
In both appeals, the decree of the circuit court is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, not having heard the argument in this case,
took no part in its decision.