1. Clauses in a marine insurance policy excepting, "all
consequences of hostilities or warlike operations," and in a war
risk insurance policy insuring against acts "authorized by and in
prosecution of hostilities," should be construed narrowly as
applicable only where war-like acts or operations are the proximate
cause of a loss. P.
263 U. S.
492
Page 263 U. S. 488
2. There are special reasons for construing such policies in
harmony with the marine insurance law of England. P.
263 U. S. 493.
3. Where the cargo lost was all contraband, shipped in an
Italian steamship from this country to Italy during the late war,
and consisted in part of supplies and munitions for the Italian
government, and where the loss occurred while the vessel was in a
convoy sailing with screened lights, protected by British, Italian,
and American war vessels and subject to the command of a naval
officer, and resulted from a collision with a British steamship in
another convoy similarly commanded which met the first one in the
dark,
held that the loss was not attributable to war-like
operations within the meaning of the above exception. P.
263 U. S.
491.
282 F. 976 affirmed.
Certiorari to a decree of the circuit court of appeals affirming
a decree of the district court which dismissed a libel upon an
insurance policy.
Page 263 U. S. 490
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a libel in admiralty upon a New York policy insuring
cargo on the Italian steamship
Napoli lost by collision in
the Mediterranean, in or near the Gulf of Lyons, on July 4, 1918.
The libellant, also in New York, had insured the cargo concerned
against marine risks, and the libellee had insured it against war
risks. Each company, by agreement, paid half the loss subject to
adjustment, and took an assignment of the claim of the assured
against the other. The main question in the case is whether the
loss was covered by the libellee's policy, as the libellant
contends. We were asked to assume that the exception of "all
consequences . . . of hostilities or warlike operations" in the
marine policy and the liability for "acts of kings, princes and
people authorized by and in prosecution of hostilities between
belligerent nations" assumed by the libellee were coextensive. For
the purpose of argument, we shall do so. The courts below, in
deference to the English decisions, held that the loss could not be
attributed to war-like operations. There was a difference of
opinion as to whether the collision was due to faulty navigation,
but all the judges agreed that it was expedient to follow the
English law. 278 F. 770, 282 F. 976.
Page 263 U. S. 491
It will not be necessary to state the facts in detail. They are
fully set forth in the decisions below, but those that are material
to our conclusion need but a few words. The
Napoli sailed
from New York for Genoa with a cargo of which a part was intended
for the Italian government and a small part was munitions of war.
All of it was contraband. At Gibraltar, she joined a convoy, as it
was practically necessary to do, although not ordered by the
military powers. The convoy sailed with screened lights, protected
by British, Italian, and American war vessels, and navigated by an
Italian commander on the
Napoli, subject to the command of
a British captain as the senior naval officer present. The route to
be followed was ordered beforehand up to a point where instructions
from Genoa were to be received, but were not, as the convey was
ahead of the scheduled time. At about midnight July 4, another
convoy similarly commanded met this one head on. It was seen only a
very few minutes before the meeting, there was much confusion, and
one of its vessels, the
Lamington, a British steamship,
struck the
Napoli and sank her. As our judgment is based
on broader grounds, we do not describe the movements bearing upon
the nice question whether the navigation of the
Napoli or
the
Lamington was in fault.
To show that the loss is to be attributed to war-like
operations, the petitioner points to sailing under convoy and
without lights, both made necessary by the war, as enough. To this
it adds that the cargo of the
Napoli was an aid in
carrying on the struggle, a matter of special importance in the
late war, where the issue depended so largely on supplies, where,
as it was put by Hough, J., below "commerce existed only as an
adjunct to war;" that the routes and particulars of navigation were
determined by naval command, and that the naval authorities were
responsible for the meeting of the two convoys without previous
notice. It urges with plausibility that the
Page 263 U. S. 492
collision would not have happened but for the proceedings thus
prescribed as an essential part of the conduct of the war. As
corroborating its large interpretation of "consequences of
hostilities or war-like operations" it states that, while the
premiums upon war risk insurance were greatly increased, those upon
marine risks underwent but little change.
On the other hand, the common understanding is that, in
construing these policies, we are not to take broad views, but
generally are to stop our inquiries with the cause nearest to the
loss. This is a settled rule of construction, and if it is
understood, does not deserve much criticism, since theoretically,
at least, the parties can shape their contract as they like.
Morgan v. United
States, 14 Wall. 531, applied this rule beyond the
limits of insurance to a charter party made during the Civil War,
by which the United States assumed the war risks and the owners
were to bear to the marine risks. The boat carrying troops and
stores was compelled to put to sea by the orders of a quartermaster
given to meet what he thought the exigency of the service, although
the danger was obvious and the master and pilot advised against it.
This Court recognized the hardship of the owners' case in view of
the peremptory order to proceed to sea, but declined to look beyond
the wind and waves that were the immediate cause of the loss. A
similar decision was reached by the House of Lords after the late
war in a case where the chartered vessel,
The Petersham,
was sailing without lights because of Admiralty regulations and
collided with a Spanish vessel also without lights, and it was
found that, because of the absence of lights, the collision could
not have been avoided by reasonable care.
Britain Steamship Co.
v. The King, [1921] 1 A.C. 99, affirming the decision of the
Court of Appeal, [1919] 2 K.B. 670.
See Morgan v. United
States, 5 Ct.Cls. 182, 194;
Reybold v. United States,
5 Ct.Cls. 277, 283-284.
Page 263 U. S. 493
The same principle was applied to insurance, the special field
of this narrow construction, in the case of
The Matiana,
heard and decided with
The Petersham, where a vessel was
sailing under convoy and struck a reef without negligence on the
part of the master or the naval officer in command of the escort.
The discussion turned largely on the question whether the remoter
causes of the collision and stranding were war-like operations,
and, from the tenor of the arguments on the one side and the other,
it may be doubted whether
Morgan v. United States would
not have been thought to go too far. But
The Matiana
certainly goes as far as the decision below in this case. There are
special reasons for keeping in harmony with the marine insurance
laws of England, the great field of this business, and as we could
not reverse the decision below without overruling
Morgan v.
United States, we are of opinion that the decree of the
circuit court of appeals must be affirmed. We repeat that we are
dealing not with general principles, but only with the construction
of an ancient form of words which always have been taken in a
narrow sense, and in
Morgan v. United States were
construed to refer only to the nearest cause of loss, even when
there were strong grounds for looking beyond it to military
command.
Decree affirmed.