2. The co-insurance principle, long and consistently applied in
the case of particular average losses under both open and valued
policies, gives a reasonable and equitable effect to the
stipulation fixing value, consonant with principles generally
applicable to marine insurance. It may be applied to general
average contributions with like effect and with added consistency
and harmony in the law. P.
279 U. S. 712.
3. The application of the agreed value to the adjustment of the
insurance loss does not depend on estoppel. P.
279 U. S.
712.
27 F.2d 678 affirmed.
Certiorari, 278 U.S. 595, to a decree of the circuit court of
appeals (
see 1927 Am.Mar.Cas. 1669), which reversed a
decree of the district court for the present petitioner in a suit
in admiralty on a policy of insurance.
Page 279 U. S. 709
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondent issued a war risk insurance policy for $27,690 upon a
cargo of gasoline, owned by petitioner's predecessor in interest
and valued in the policy at $212,000, on board the tanker
Gulflight, bound from Port Arthur, Texas, to Rouen. On the
voyage, the
Gulflight was torpedoed and put into a port of
refuge, where, in consequence of the injury to the ship, damages
and expenses of a general average nature were incurred. A general
average contribution of $49,088.04, the correctness of which is not
questioned, was assessed against the cargo on the basis of the
actual value of the cargo at destination, which was taken to be
$417,178. Petitioner made claim on the policy for indemnity of
$6,411.54, the proportion of the general average contribution which
the amount of the policy bore to the agreed policy value of the
cargo. Respondent paid only $3,258.25, that portion of the
indemnity claimed which the agreed policy value bore to sound value
at the time of the contribution, or that portion of the general
average contribution which the amount of insurance bore to sound
value.
In a suit in admiralty in the District Court for Southern New
York to recover the balance claimed, that court confirmed the
report of its commissioner, 1927 A.M.C. 1669, and gave judgment for
petitioner, which was reversed by the Circuit Court of Appeals for
the Second Circuit. 27 F.2d 678. This Court granted certiorari, 278
U.S. 595, because of a conflict of opinion between that and the
Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
British &
Foreign Marine Insurance Co. v. Maldonado & Co., 182 F.
744,
cert. denied, 220 U.S. 622.
The sole question presented here is whether, in adjusting a
general average loss upon cargo insurance under a valued policy,
the insured is co-insurer to the extent that the sound value of the
cargo at the time of contribution exceeds its agreed value, or,
stated in somewhat different
Page 279 U. S. 710
form, whether the effect of a valued policy on cargo, in
limiting the liability of the insurer, is the same in the case of a
general average as of a particular average loss.
It has long been the accepted rule that, in the case of a
partial loss of cargo insured under a valued policy, with the
valuation honestly made, the insured, in case of increase or
decrease in its value, recovers that proportion of his loss which
the agreed value. or so much of it as was assumed by the particular
insurer, bears to the sound value. In case of an increase in value,
his recovery is thus limited as though he were a co-insurer.
Lewis v. Rucker, 3 Burr. 1167;
Johnson v.
Sheddon, 2 East, 581.
See Tunno v. Edwards, 12 East
488;
Lawrence v. New York Insurance Co., 3 Johns. Cas.
(N.Y.) 217, 218;
Forbes v. Manufacturers' Ins. Co., 67
Mass. 371;
London Assurance v. Companhia de Moagens,
167 U. S. 149,
167 U. S. 171;
British & Foreign Ins. Co. v. Maldonado & Co., supra;
International Navigation Co. v. Atlantic Mutual Insurance Co.,
100 F. 304, 317, 318,
aff'd, 108 F. 987,
cert.
denied, 181 U.S. 623. So applied, the rule permits the
adjustment of the premium to an assumed certain and unchanging
value of the subject of the insurance, and protects the underwriter
against increases in liability because of increase in value of the
cargo, as it protects the insured against diminution of his right
to recover which might otherwise result from a decrease in value.
It recognizes that the purpose of valuing the cargo is not to fix
the maximum amount of recovery, which is accomplished by limiting
the amount of the policy, but to eliminate from the risk which the
insurer assumes so much of it as is consequent upon fluctuations of
the market value of the cargo, whether the loss be total or
partial. For, under it, the insurer's liability for the loss
suffered can never be greater or less than if the actual value were
the agreed value.
Page 279 U. S. 711
Agreed value thus stands in the place of prime value under an
open marine policy, where the insured recovers covers such part of
his loss as prime value bears to sound value.
See Lewis v.
Rucker, supra, 3 Burr. at 1171;
Usher v. Noble, 12
East 639, 646;
Clark v. United Fire & Marine Insurance
Co., 7 Mass. 365.
Petitioner does not question the soundness of the rule when
applied to partial loss of cargo, but argues that it should not be
applied to general average contribution. It is said that petitioner
need not refer to sound value to compute its loss, which is already
fixed by the general average adjustment, and the valuation clause
estops the insurer from showing that the sound value of the cargo
was greater than the agreed value, and so reducing the amount of
its indemnity; also that the rule to be applied to the present case
should be the same as that applied to insurance on hulls, where the
insured is allowed to recover in full for a partial loss up to the
amount of the insurance. Finally, it is insisted that this clause
of the policy should be construed as having been adopted by the
parties in contemplation of the rule contended for as one
established by the decisions in New York, where the policy was
effected, and as settled in
British & Foreign Marine
Insurance Co. v. Maldonado & Co. supra.
Liability for general average contributions is a risk insured
against by the marine policy, as is loss by particular average. Its
amount, as is the case of a particular average loss, is dependent
upon and varies with the sound value of the goods. There is nothing
in the policy to suggest that the liability of the insurer is to be
computed on a basis different in the one case from the other, and a
clause whose general use and effect is to limit risk from
fluctuation of value of the cargo insured is equally applicable in
both classes of risks. Such a limitation is justified in both cases
by the fact that the only assignable
Page 279 U. S. 712
purpose of the agreed value is to substitute a definite for an
uncertain prime value, and to eliminate from the contract, in the
interest of both the insured and the insurer, the fluctuation of
liability which would otherwise result from a change in sound
value. To allow petitioner to recover for the loss suffered in
double the amount which concededly would have been its recovery had
the same loss resulted from fire, jettison, or other partial loss
of cargo, would be an anomalous result for which petitioner offers
no justification in reason or in generally established principles
of marine insurance law. The co-insurance principle, long and
consistently applied in the case of particular average losses under
both open and valued policies, gives a reasonable and equitable
effect to the stipulation fixing value consonant with principles
generally applicable to marine insurance. It may be applied to
general average contributions with like effect and with added
consistency and harmony in the law.
The application of the agreed value to the adjustment of the
insurance loss does not depend on estoppel, as was suggested in
British & Foreign Marine Insurance Co. v. Maldonado &
Co., supra. The policy agreement valuing the cargo at a
specified amount is not a representation, or so regarded. It is no
more than a stipulation, in effect, that, for purposes of
computation of the insurance liability, the cargo shall be taken at
an agreed value. Within this limitation, the policy is still a
policy of indemnity, and the insured must prove the sound value of
the cargo, in order to ascertain his actual loss, by deducting from
it the amount of the proceeds of the damaged cargo. In every
particular average adjustment, the insurer may rely on the sound
value of the cargo in order to establish the extent to which the
insured is a co-insurer. It is true that a general average
contribution is always determined and stated in terms of money, and
so the insured may
Page 279 U. S. 713
establish his loss merely by proof of its amount, but his
contribution is itself based upon sound value which entered into
its computation, and its amount, for all practical purposes, as in
the case of particular average, is increased in proportion to the
excess of sound value over agreed value,
see S.S. Balmoral Co.
v. Marten [1902] App.Cas. 511, 514, 515. We perceive no reason
why his recovery may not likewise be reduced accordingly.
The rule that the insured may recover in full for partial losses
under hull insurance,
International Navigation Co. v. Atlantic
Mutual Insurance Co., supra; International Navigation Co. v. Sea
Insurance Co., 129 F. 13;
Providence & S.S. S. Co. v.
Phoenix Insurance Co., 89 N.Y. 559;
contra, Clark v.
United Fire & Marine Insurance Co., supra; cf. Brewer v.
American Ins. Co., 123 Mass. 78, does not, we think, militate
against the co-insurance rule as applied to cargo insurance, or
afford support for that for which petitioner contends. We need not
determine whether the rule as to hull insurance may be regarded as
that of this Court or of others, or pass upon its merits. The
distinction between insurance on cargo and that on hulls is an old
one, and a different result in the case of the latter may, for that
reason, be accepted without affecting the rule as to the former.
Where the distinction has been regarded as established, the
departure from the rule applied in case of particular average
losses of cargo has been justified on the ground that damage to a
hull is not customarily ascertained by its sale, as is the case
with cargo. The usual practice in cases of partial loss is for the
insured to make repairs. His repair bill represents a sum of money
which is the amount of his damage, ascertained without regard to
the ship's value, and so the rule has been adopted as more
convenient in practice than one requiring determination of the
sound value of the ship.
See Lohre v. Aitchison, L.R. 2
Q.B.D. 501, 507. Some
Page 279 U. S. 714
point is given to this explanation by the ruling in
Pitman
v. Universal Marine Insurance Co., L.R. 9 Q.B.D.192, that the
same rule should be applied as in particular average loss of
cargoes, where the repairs were not in fact made and the loss was
established by a sale of the ship. And, in a case of general
average contribution by the hull, the House of Lords, in
S.S.
Balmoral Co. v. Marten, supra, held the insured to be a
co-insurer, thus applying the rule accepted in the case of partial
cargo losses and implicitly supporting the co-insurance rule
applied below to general average contribution by cargo.
It is said that this rule would result in a recovery by the
insured of more than the amount of his contribution, in event of a
decrease in the value of the cargo below the agreed value. The
court below seems to have thought that this might be so. But no
court has so held. The insured, in the case of partial loss of
cargo whose sound value is less than the agreed, may recover more
than his actual loss, since, in computing the indemnity, the cargo
must be taken at the agreed value. But, where there is in fact no
loss of the cargo, it is not entirely clear upon what theory the
insured could increase his recovery beyond his contribution in
general average by any recourse to the agreed value. Having the
cargo intact, no matter what its value, it may well be that the
insured must needs be content with the discharge of the general
average lien upon it.
While an appellate court may hesitate to set aside a rule of
commercial law long and generally accepted and applied, such is not
the case with the suggestion that general average contributions
must stand on a different footing from particular average losses
under a valued policy on cargo. That has been thought to be the
effect of an early New York case,
Strong v. New York Fireman
Insurance Co., 11 Johns. (N.Y.) 323, in which counsel for the
insurer
Page 279 U. S. 715
argued against any such distinction. But the court seems to have
considered that the only question before it was whether a general
average adjustment made in a foreign port was enforceable against
the insurer even though made under rules different from those in
force in the home port. Diligent efforts at the trial of the
present case to prove a custom failed. The commissioner's finding
that no settled custom or usage was proved is not challenged here.
He found that, underwriters, the
Strong case
notwithstanding, did not usually pay general average contributions
in full when sound value exceeded agreed value; that, after the
decision in the
Maldonado case, refusals to pay on the
basis of full contribution were less frequent, but some
underwriters, including respondent, continued to settle on that
basis, and the failure to bring the issue before a court for
adjudication was due to the fact that the amounts involved were too
small to justify litigation.
The Massachusetts courts have followed the rule applied below.
Clark v. Universal F. & M. Insurance Co., supra.
Cf. Brewer v. American Ins. Co., supra. The other American
cases have dealt with insurance on hulls, and so are not decisive.
The fact that the co-insurance rule has been applied to general
average contributions in England both by judicial decision,
see
S.S. Balmoral Co. v. Marten, supra, and by statute, Marine
Insurance Act 1906, § 73, and that such is conceded to be the
rule by law or custom in France, Germany, Holland, and Japan, is of
weight in making a choice of two conflicting rules applicable to
sea-borne commerce. We conclude that the rule applied below is the
more consonant with principle and the more consistent with other
accepted doctrines of marine insurance, and that the judgment below
should accordingly be affirmed.