Philadelphia Insurance v. Washington Insurance

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Woodward, J.

The only questions on this record are questions of evidence, the first and most material of which relates to the policy of insurance issued by the defendants on the 15th August, 1848, to William Cummings, on the brig Delaware, for $3000. Having given in evidence the plaintiffs’ contract of reinsurance on this vessel for $1500, the defendants offered their own original insurance for the purpose of establishing in themselves an insurable interest; the objection to which was that the reinsurance was not coextensive with the principal insurance, one being a time policy, the other for a specific voyage. Had the fact been that the reinsurance was larger than the original risk, there would have been force in the objection, for then the reinsurance would have been beyond any insurable interest possessed by the defendants. Rut the fact was the other way. Roth policies were issued on the 15th August, 1848. The Washington Company were the original insurers, and their risk was $3000 on the brig, “lost or not lost, at and from June 6, 1848, at noon, for five calendar months, with use of the Globe’ (Tampico and ports in Texas at all seasons excepted); and, if at sea at the expiration of the time, the risk to continue at same rate of premium.” The reinsurance of the Philadelphia Company was for $1500 on the brig, “ at and from Rio de Janeiro- to' Havana, and at and from thence to Philadelphia;” a voyage which, according to the proofs, takes about 40 days from Rio to Havana, and, as this vessel sailed, 18 days from Havana to Philadelphia, she was at sea on her voyage to the Havana at the date of these policies, having sailed from Rio on the 15th July, 1848. It is apparent from these facts that while the defendants, in virtue of their insurance, were bound for any voyage she might make or commence within five months from the date indicated, the plaintiffs were bound, in virtue of their reinsurance, only for the one voyage, partly performed when they assumed the risk, and capable of being finished far short of the five months; and thus their risk was less and included within that of the defendants. Now, it is distinctly admitted by the learned counsel of the plaintiffs, that, if the defendants’ policy had been for the particular voyage specified, they would have had such an interest as would have entitled them to purchase a reinsurance; but we have not been shown how, when a less interest would have qualified, a greater interest disqualified them to reinsure. If an insurable interest can spring from a prior insurance, which, since the judgment in the celebrated case of Lucena v. Craufurd, before the House of Lords, 3 Bos. & Pull. 75, I believe has not been doubted, why not from a time policy as well as any other ? In respect to the right of deviation *253and warranty of sea-worthiness, and perhaps in other legal consequences, time policies differ from voyage policies; but for the single purpose of creating an insurable interest, I can see no reason and can find no authority for a distinction. If a distinction were to he made, I should think it would be in favor, rather than against, the time policy; for he who insures a ship for a period of time that is to cover a variety of undefined voyages, comes much nearer to the position of an owner, has a far deeper stake in her welfare, than he who insures her simply for one specified voyage which she is to perform within that time. This is too obvious to need illustration.

If then a time policy, as well as any other, can create air insurable interest, why are not the plaintiffs bound by their, contract of reinsurance ? Because, say counsel, every reinsurance necessarily contains an assertion that the specific risle had been previously taken by the first insurer. This expression, specific risle, is not in the definition of reinsurance as given by Arnould, Phillips, or Marshall. According to Arnould, reinsurance is a contract by which, in consideration of a certain premium, the original insurer throws upon another the risk (or according to Marshall, part of it) for which he has made himself responsible to the original assured, to whom, however, he alone remains liable on the original insurance. The other writers define the contract to the same effect. The risk, or part of it, implies the same subject-matter of insurance in both policies, and hence in Merry v. Prince, 2 Mass. R. 176, an unsuccessful attempt was made to apply a reinsurance of a policy on vessel and cargo, to other policies on the cargo only. And these expressions also imply the same perils in kind, but not in quantum or duration. Thus, if the insurance be against perils of the sea, the reinsurance must be against perils of the sea; but whilst it may not be against more, it may be against less perils of the sea than the original insurance. The reason of this required identity in the subject-matter and the kind of perils, is, that the first insurer has no insurable interest except in the thing and against the kind of perils in respect of which he has insured. This is plainly developed by Phillips on Insurance, p. 56, where he says, “ An underwriter, by subscribing a policy, acquires no interest in the subject insured, yet he acquires an insurable interest, and having rendered himself directly liable to loss from certain perils, may stipulate to be indemnified against these perils. His interest, however, exists only in relation to the perils against which he has insured in the original policy.” Yet reinsurance is not an endorsement or readoption of the first policy, for Arnould adds to his definition of the contract “ that it is totally distinct from and unconnected with the primitive insurance.” Neither the rate nor amount of premiums — the amount insured — -nor the duration of the policies are similar, and the, liabilities are to different parties, the reinsurer being never liable to *254tbe first assured, save, perhaps, in the exceptional case of the first insurer’s insolvency. The proposition, then, that reinsurance is a retaking of the specific risk, is- not sustainable in the sense contended for, and if it were, would deprive commerce in a great degree of the benefits of such contracts.

Before any party has a right to an insurance he must have an interest to protect, and as the interest of a first underwriter springs from his contract and must be measured by the liability assumed, he can have no insurable interest beyond that. But because the greater contains the less, the whole the parts, he has an insurable interest in every portion of his risk, which by reinsurance he throws on another. This seems to be the sum of the whole matter, and hence it follows that the policy of the defendants was properly admitted in evidence to establish their insurable interest, both when the reinsurance was made and when the loss occurred, and having shown such an interest, the plaintiffs were bound to indemnify to the extent of the terms of their own contract.

Without the pleadings in the case, it is impossible for us to say whether the verdict and judgment could ever be evidence against Forsythe, the master of the brig, and, therefore, we cannot pronounce on his competency as a witness. For aught that appears in the paper-books, he was competent. There is not a shadow of ground for the objection to Riche. Though the president of the company, he was not a stockholder nor party to the record. Having no necessary interest in the event, he was competent, and his credibility was for the jury.

The errors have not been sustained, and the judgment is affirmed.