1. The purpose of a stipulation fixing the value of the vessel
in a marine hull insurance policy undertaking to indemnify insured
irrespective of the actual value is to dispense with proof of value
in establishing the extent of liability assumed on the policy. P.
304 U. S.
434.
2. Such a valuation clause, beyond its controlling effect in
determining the insurance liability, does not operate, either as an
estoppel or by agreement, to exclude proof of actual value when
relevant. P.
304 U. S.
435.
3. The valued policy, like an open policy, is a contract of
indemnity; in either case the indemnitor is entitled to share in
the insured's recovery of damages for loss of the ship only by
Page 304 U. S. 431
way of subrogation, the sole object of which is to make
indemnity to the insured up to the amount of the policy the measure
of the liability of the insurer. P.
304 U. S.
436.
4. There is no analogy between the insurer's right to be
subrogated to the fruits of the insured's recovery from a wrongdoer
and the insurer's right to a wreck which is his by abandonment. P.
304 U. S.
437.
5. Underwriters insured the hull of a vessel by policies in
which the value of the hull was agreed upon at an amount stated,
and each of which provided for a stipulated indemnity to the owner
irrespective of the actual value of the vessel. The agreed value
was less than the actual value of the hull, so that the owner was
uninsured for the difference. As protection against the risk, the
owner procured from English underwriters additional P.P.I. (policy
proof of interest) policies which waived all right of subrogation
and were "honor" policies payable only at the option of the
insurers, because unenforceable under the applicable Act of
Parliament. Upon a total loss of the vessel by collision with a
vessel of the United States, all the policies were paid in full.
Thereafter, the owner and the underwriters upon the valued policies
joined in pressing their claims against the United States, and, in
a suit under a special Act of Congress not allowing recovery of
interest, there was recovery of the value of the vessel, much
exceeding the total insurance.
Held that, in the
adjustment, the insurers upon the valued policies were entitled by
way of subrogation to no more than the amounts they had paid on
their policies, without interest, less their respective shares of
the expenses attending the recovery.
North of England Iron S.S.
Ins. Assn. v. Armstrong, (1870) L.R. 5 Q.B. 244, disapproved.
P.
304 U. S.
438.
The insurers submitted no interest computations and made no
effort to sustain the burden of proving that the owner had received
more than indemnity for the delay in payment of so much of the loss
as was not covered by insurance.
92 F.2d 576 affirmed.
Certiorari, 303 U.S. 631, to review affirmances, with
modifications, of judgments for interest and expenses recovered by
three marine insurance companies in actions at law against the
owner of a lost vessel. By agreement, the actions were tried
together to the court and one juror. The trial court directed
verdicts.
Page 304 U. S. 432
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question for decision is how far hull insurers upon a valued
marine insurance policy are entitled, in case of total loss, to
participate by way of subrogation in a recovery by the insured
against a tortfeasor responsible for the loss.
In 1918, petitioners, with several other underwriters, insured
the hull of respondent's vessel, the
Almirante, by
policies in which it was agreed that the value of the hull was
$632,610, materially less than its true value. The policies
provided for a stipulated indemnity to the owner "irrespective of
the value of the vessel," and that the owner was free to effect
other insurance to any amount and without disclosure of the amounts
so insured. As the total of the valued policies was $582,002.25,
respondent was co-insurer for about $50,000, and, so far as the
valued hull policies were concerned, it was uninsured to the extent
of any loss in excess of the stipulated value. As protection
against these risks, respondent procured from English underwriters
additional P.P.I. (policy proof of interest) insurance, aggregating
�65,105, partly upon hull and partly against other losses
incidental to total loss of the vessel. The P.P.I. policies waived
all rights of subrogation, and were "honor" policies, concededly
payable only at the option of the insurers because unenforceable
under the Act of Parliament of December 31, 1906, § 4.
Edwards & Co. v. Motor Union Insurance Co., [1922] 2
K.B.D. 249.
Page 304 U. S. 433
In 1918, the
Almirante became a total loss as the
result of a collision with the steamship
Hisko, a vessel
belonging to the United States Government. The underwriters of both
the valued policies and the P.P.I. policies paid them in full. The
former joined with respondent in retaining attorneys to press the
claims for collision damages against the United States. Suit
brought against the United States under a special act of Congress,
resulted in a recovery which included $1,750,000 as the value of
the vessel, but without interest, since the act did not authorize
allowance of interest.
Compare Boston Sand & Gravel Co. v.
United States, 278 U. S. 41,
278 U. S. 47.
Distribution of the proceeds of the suit was made in accordance
with a computation by insurance adjusters who apportioned the
expenses of the suit among respondent and the underwriters, and
allotted to the latter the amounts they had paid on their policies
without interest, less their respective shares of the expenses.
Petitioners, who are underwriters on some of the valued hull
policies, brought the present suit in the district court for
southern New York to participate in respondent's recovery against
the United States. Relying on the valuation clause of their
policies as conclusively fixing the value of the vessel for all
purposes of the adjustment, they contest the allotment, insisting
that they should bear no part of the expenses, and that they are
entitled to interest on the amounts of their policies from the
several dates on which they were paid. They also make, but do not
stress here, the point that the hull insurers are entitled to the
whole recovery. The district court gave judgment for the full
amount which petitioners had paid on their policies, without
deduction for expenses but without addition of interest. 18 F.
Supp. 441. On appeal by both parties, the Circuit Court of Appeals
held that petitioners were entitled to neither
Page 304 U. S. 434
interest nor expenses, and modified the judgment accordingly. 92
F.2d 576. We granted certiorari, 303 U.S. 631, because of the
admitted conflict of the decision below with that of the Court of
Queen's Bench in
North of England Iron S.S. Ins. Assn. v.
Armstrong (1870) L.R. 5 Q.B. 244.
See Queen Insurance Co.
v. Globe & Rutgers Fire Ins. Co., 263 U.
S. 487,
263 U. S. 493;
Gulf Refining Co. v. Atlantic Mutual Ins. Co.,
279 U. S. 708,
279 U. S.
715.
Petitioners' argument turns upon their contention that the
valuation clause, either by estoppel or by contract, is conclusive
between the parties for all purposes, and that, as respondent has
recovered from the Government more than the stipulated value of the
vessel, petitioners are entitled to the benefit of the recovery, at
least to the full extent of the payments on their policies with
interest. We think that the valuation clause in its usual form does
not operate as an estoppel or by agreement to foreclose proof that
actual value exceeds agreed value when the question is of the
insurer's right to subrogation. The application of the agreed value
to the insurance adjustment does not depend upon estoppel,
Gulf
Refining Co. v. Atlantic Mutual Insurance Co., supra,
279 U. S. 712;
British & Foreign Marine Ins. Co. v. Maldonado &
Co., 182 F. 744, and there can be no basis for an estoppel, at
least where, as here, the policy provisions undertake to indemnify
the insured irrespective of the value of the vessel and contemplate
that the insured may effect other insurance. The valuation
stipulation fixes in advance of loss the value of the vessel so as
to avoid the necessity of proof of value in order to establish the
extent of the liability assumed on the policy. The agreed value,
honestly arrived at, thus stands in the place of prime value under
an open marine policy,
Gulf Refining Co. v. Atlantic Mutual
Ins. Co., supra, 279 U. S. 711;
St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Pure Oil Co., 63
F.2d 771, and resembles, in its practical operation, a stipulation
for liquidated damages.
Page 304 U. S. 435
But, beyond its controlling effect in determining the insurance
liability, the clause does not operate to exclude proof of actual
value when relevant. Even in an action on the policy, the actual,
rather than the agreed, value has been held to be controlling for
the purpose of determining whether there is a constructive total
loss.
Bradlie v. Maryland Ins.
Co., 12 Pet. 378,
37 U. S. 399;
Irving v. Manning, 6 C.B. 391 (H. of L.). In the case of
partial insurance of cargo under a valued policy, the insured is
treated as a co-insurer, and is allowed to recover on the policy
only such proportion of the loss as the insured value bears to the
actual value, a computation which necessarily requires proof of the
actual value in order to establish the co-insurance relationship.
Gulf Refining Co. v. Atlantic Mutual Insurance Co., supra,
279 U. S.
710-711;
see International Navigation Co. v.
Atlantic Mutual Ins. Co., 100 F. 304, 318,
aff'd per
curiam, 108 F. 987; Arnould on Marine Insurance, 11th Edition,
§ 340; Eldridge on Marine Policies, 2d Edition, p. 90. It is
true, as was pointed out in
Gulf Refining Co. v. Atlantic
Mutual Ins. Co., supra, that, in case of valued hull policies,
losses resulting in repairs are customarily paid in full not
because of agreement or estoppel, but because partial losses to
hull usually result in repairs without any valuation of the hull,
and the rule that the recovery shall be measured by repairs has
been found 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. The same rule as in the
case of cargo insurance has been applied when repairs were not made
and value was established by the sale of the vessel,
Pitman v.
Universal Marine Ins. Co., L.R. 9 Q.B.D.192, and in the case
of general average contribution by the hull.
S.S. "Balmoral"
Co. v. Marten, [1902] App.Cas. 511, 514-515. The peculiar rule
of the insurer's liability for partial loss to hull when repairs
are made does not depend on the valuation clause, and affords
Page 304 U. S. 436
no basis for treating it as excluding the insured as co-insurer
when there is a total loss.
These variations in the effect of the valuation clause, in
fixing the liability of the insurer, do not alter the character of
the valued policy as a contract of indemnity, or afford any basis
for alteration of his rights as an indemnitor. Whether, upon a
valued or an open policy, he is entitled to share in the insured's
recovery of damages only by way of subrogation, whose sole object
and justification is to make indemnity to the insured up to the
amount of the policy, the measure of the liability of the insurer.
Standard Marine Ins. Co. v. Scottish Metropolitan Assurance
Co., 283 U. S. 284,
283 U. S. 288;
Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. Phoenix National Bank &
Trust Co., 285 U. S. 209,
285 U. S. 214;
Chapman v. Hoage, 296 U. S. 526,
296 U. S. 531.
The doctrine now contended for would require a radical departure
from the principle on which subrogation is founded. Consistently
applied, it would in some cases deprive the insured of indemnity,
and indeed might enable the insurer to make a profit by recovering
more from the insured than the amounts paid on the policy. We are
unable to sanction a doctrine involving such consequences.
No question is raised by the petition for certiorari, or appears
to have been raised below, as to the correctness of the adjustment
statement if the valuation clause does not foreclose proof of
actual value and if respondent is therefore to be regarded as a
co-insurer of the hull in event of total loss. Petitioners make no
contention that respondent, if so regarded, has received more than
appropriate indemnity after the distribution of the proceeds of the
collision suit. The total insurance received by respondent from the
insurers in 1918 and 1919, aggregating $886,068, was approximately
$863,932 less than the prime value of the vessel which, some
thirteen years later, it recovered in the collision suit, without
allowance of interest and after the expenditure of more than
$300,000 as
Page 304 U. S. 437
costs of the litigation. Petitioners submit no interest
computations, and have otherwise made no effort to sustain the
burden of proving that respondent has received more than indemnity
for the delay in payment of as much of the loss as was not covered
by insurance.
Since the expenses have been apportioned by charging the insured
with a proportion greater than its share of the risk, and the
apportionment is not assailed except as it may be wholly precluded
by the valuation clause, it is unnecessary to consider whether the
distribution of expense should be upon principles of co-insurance
or whether the insured should be fully indemnified for it before
the insurer is entitled to subrogation.
Petitioners point to no practice of underwriters with respect to
the valued policy or its rate of premium as compared with that for
the open policy, which supports the rule for which they contend.
But they insist that it has been adopted in England, and has become
so well settled in New York, where the insurance was effected, that
it must be taken to be an implied term of the policies. It is true
that
North of England Iron S.S. Ins. Assn. v. Armstrong,
supra, lends support to petitioners' argument. There, upon a
total loss, the insured had recovered as collision damages an
amount less than the agreed valuation, and it was held that the
insurer, who had paid the policy in full, was entitled to have the
benefit of the entire recovery. The court thought that the case was
analogous to that of abandonment in case of a constructive total
loss where the underwriter, by virtue of the abandonment, is
entitled to the wreck and to such profit from it as he can make.
Pursuing the logic of its reasoning, the court declared that the
insurer would have been entitled to the insured's full recovery
even if it exceeded the agreed value. But it seems plain that there
is no analogy between the insurer's right to be subrogated to the
fruits of the insured's recovery from a wrongdoer
Page 304 U. S. 438
and the insurer's right to a wreck which is his by abandonment.
The Potomac, 105 U. S. 630,
105 U. S. 634;
The St. Johns, 101 F. 469, 472; Arnould on Marine
Insurance, 11th Edition, §§ 1228-1230.
North of England Iron S.S. Ins. Assn. v. Armstrong,
supra, was cited in
The Potomac, supra, 105 U. S. 635,
and in
Mobile & Montgomery Ry. Co. v. Jurey,
111 U. S. 584,
111 U. S.
594-595, neither of which involved the question now
presented. It was followed in
The St. Johns, but not to
the extent of allowing a profit to the insurer. In
The
Livingstone, 130 F. 746, the claim of a valued hull insurer to
the whole collision recovery, which exceeded the agreed value, was
denied upon reasoning which rejected that of
North of England
Iron S.S. Ins. Assn. v. Armstrong, supra, and
The St.
Johns, supra, and calls for affirmance of the judgment here.
Interest was allowed to the insurer, apparently because interest on
the full value of the vessel had been recovered in the damage suit.
Without discussing the point, the court, by its mandate, directed
payment to the underwriters of the full amount of their policies,
without deduction for expenses. But, as it considered that the
insurer's right of recovery rested upon subrogation unaffected by
the valuation clause, we cannot regard the case as an intentional
departure from the rule that the insurer is entitled to subrogation
only after the insured is appropriately indemnified, or as
establishing any rule that the valuation clause forecloses proof of
actual value as a step in measuring the insurer's recovery by way
of subrogation.
We recognize that established doctrines of English maritime law
are to be accorded respect here,
Queen Ins. Co. v. Globe &
Rutgers Fire Ins. Co., supra, 263 U. S. 493;
Gulf Refining Co. v. Atlantic Mutual Ins. Co., supra,
279 U. S. 715,
but the pronouncement in
North of England Iron S.S. Ins. Assn.
v. Armstrong, supra, has never been adopted by
Page 304 U. S. 439
an English appellate court. It was doubted by eminent judges in
Burnand v. Rodocanachi [1882] L.R. 7 App.Cas. 333, 342,
and in
Thames & Mersey Marine Ins. Co. v. British &
Chilean S.S. Co., [1915] L.R. 2 K.B. 214, 221. Its reasoning,
conflicting as it does with established principles of maritime
insurance law and found to be incapable of consistent application
both in
The St. Johns, supra, 474-475, and in
The
Livingstone, supra, 750, should be rejected here.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
* Together with No. 774,
Union Marine & General Ins. Co.
v. United Fruit Co., and No. 775,
Boston Insurance Co. v.
Same, also on writs of certiorari to the Circuit Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit.