delivered the court’s opinion.
It appears by the bill of exceptions in this case, that the question is simply this: are the expenses and disbursements for seamen’s wages, provisions, &c. during the time the defendants’ ship was detained by an embargo at Bordeaux, to be considered as a partial loss, for which the underwriters on the freight are liable?
It is contended by the counsel for the plaintiffs in error, that these expenses fall upon the owners of the ship, and are not covered by the policy; but that at all events, if the underwriters are in any manner liable, the loss must be considered of the nature of general average. Although one would suppose the case must frequently have occurred, yet we find no precedent of any such action as the present, nor any decision directly in point, either in England or in this state. There is a difficulty attending subjects of this kind, arising from the abstract nature of freight; and from this circumstance, that although the freight is earned by the ship, and both ship and freight generally belong to the same person, yet they are allowed to be the subjects of different insurances. In France and some other countries, insurances on freight are not permitted. A ship is an object of the senses. Every one understands in what manner it may suffer damage. But when we speak of a damage sustained by freight, we may easily be led to misconceptions. What is an insurance on freight? It is an engagement, say the insurers, that the ship shall complete her voyage, and earn the freight, and the freight being earn.ed, the engagement is fulfilled. On the other hand, the assured contend, that although the whole freight has in fact been earned, yet it has been subject to considerable expens.es, occasioned by one of the perils insured against, and that by the true construction of the policy, the insurers are bound to make good the whole freight clear of these expenses. It is certain that an embargo is a peril insured against, and that extraordinary expenses were occasioned by it. But it does net, *558follow of course, that these expenses are all chargeable to t^le although they may have been paid by the owners of the ship, who are entitled to receive the freight. The ship being restrained by the embargo, it was for the interest of all persons concerned in ship, freight and cargo, that the crew should be retained for the purpose of taking care of every thing; and in this point of view, the extraordinary expenses might in equity be apportioned among the several persons, who derived benefit from them. As to the loss by consumption of provisions, it seems by no means clear that it is applicable entirely to the freight, because provisions are appurtenant to the ship, and where there is an insurance on the ship and her furniture, it has been determined, that the stock of provisions laid in for the voyage, is covered, and in case of loss, may be recovered on such insurance.
The assured rely on the opinion of respectable judges, that the loss falls exclusively on the freight. Those opinions it will be necessary to consider.
In the case of Robertson v. Ewer, 1 D. & E. 127., it was .decided, that on a policy on a ship, the insured could not recover expenses for seamen’s wages and provisions, during an embargo; and this was the only point decided. Nothing is said about freight.
The same point precisely was determined by Judge Bul-Icr in Eden and Court v. Poole, 1 D. & E. 132., note; and although it is said by Park 153., that Buller declared the freight and not the ship was liable for the loss, yet it is evident that if he did say so, it was an extrajudicial opinion, for no such point was before him. There is reason to suppose however that that learned judge did not express himself in the manner mentioned by Park; for Mr. East in a note to the case of Sharp v. Gladstone, 7 East 33., says that on examining his own manuscript note of Eden v. Poole, he finds it only stated that Judge Buller was of opinion that those charges were not allowable on such a policy on a ship, and that he gave no opinion as to the exclusive liability of the freight.
In the case of Dacosta v. Newnham, 2 D. & E. 414., Judge Buller is reported to have said, “ this is not like the “ case of a ship detained by an embargo, where the court *559* have said the expenses shall fall on the owner only, and “ the freight must bear it.” But in what case the court so said we are not informed; certainly we can find no case where they so determined. These are the principal English authorities relied on by the defendants in error. They are no more than the sayings of judges, certainly very respectable; but these sayings are often mistaken and misrepresented, and even when truly reported, must not be put in competition with solemn judgments. We see that in neither of the above cases did the question come immediately before the c.ourt, how far the insurers on freight' were answerable for losses of this kind. But that question has been brought more immediately in view lately, and since the decision of this cause in the Supreme Court.
In the case of M'Carthy v. Abel, 5 East 888, 397., the assured abandoned both ship and freight to the different underwriters, on receiving information of an embargo. The-ship afterwards performed her voyage and earned the entire-freight. The assured sued for a. total loss, and it was adjudged against him, because in the event which happened, the freight was not lost, but fully earned and received by or ©n his behalf.
In the case of Sharp v. Gladstone too, 7 East 34., where the subject of freight was before the court, it did not seem to be their opinion, from what fell from them, that freight should be exclusively liable to losses of this kind.
We do not find then any express authority that this loss-can be recovered in any shape.' That it cannot be recovered from the insurers on the freight exclusively, may be strongly inferred from the nature of the contract, which engages that the freight shall not be lost, and in fact no part of it has been lost. Park, one of the most accurate writers on insurance, seems to have no idea that the freight alone is liable, but states it as a question undecided, “ whether the extraordinary wages c‘ and victuals expended during an embargo, ought to be-brought into a general average, so as to charge the under- ‘‘ writer.” He supposes that lord Mansfield inclined to the opinion that they might, and gives his reason for such supposition. The criterion of general average is, were the expenses necessarily and unavoidably incurred for the general safety *560of the ship and cargo? Although the decision of this point is not absolutely necessary at present, yet as it may be useful to settle it by the highest judicial authority in the state, it has been thought proper to have it declared as the opinion of a majority of this court, that the expenses incurred during the embargo at Bordeaux, should be brought into a general average.
Upon the whole, it is the opinion of a majority of this court, that the judgment of the Supreme Court be reversed.
Rush, President. A general question, interesting to commerce, important in its principles, and heretofore universally confessed to be an undecided point, is brought before this court by writ of error; and we are called upon to determine whether an insurer on the freight who underwrites a particular sum, which has been received by the insured, is exclusively obliged to pay the expense of provisions and mariners’ wages arising from an embargo.
. The material facts are these: The Insurance Company of North America insured 3000 dollars freight on the brig Benjamin Franklin, on a voyage from Philadelphia to Bordeaux and back, and have covenanted in the policy against the usual perils “ by arrests, restraints, and detainments of all kings, “ princes, and people, of what nation, condition, or quality, “ soever.” The ship and cargo were also insured against the same perils. While the ship lay at Bordeaux, she was detained by an embargo; and the expense of such arrest and detention has been estimated at 875 dollars and 13 cents. As soon as the embargo was taken off, the ship proceeded on her voyage, and having arrived safely in Philadelphia, the 3000 dollars freight were received by the insured. It is not alleged, that the ship, cargo, or freight, sustained any other loss but what arose from the embargo, in wages and provisions.
Upon the trial of the cause the court below were of opinion and so charged the jury, that the expenses of the embargo; were a partial loss on the freight, that is, they were not an average loss; in consequence of which the jury gave a verdict for the insured for 725 dollars and 30 cents.. To this opinion the insurance company tendered by their counsel a *561bill of exceptions, and have brought their writ of error from the Supreme Court. ' .
1 he question is not whether the insured shall recover the expenses of the embargo? That in my opinion is certain. But the question is, zvho shall pay them? Is the insurer in the present case solely bound to pay them, according to law and a fair construction of the policy? I will inquire,
1st, Does an insurance on the ship cover the expenses of an embargo?
2d, Is an insurer on the cargo liable for such expenses?
3d, Can an action be supported for such expenses against an insurer who underwrites a precise or fixed sum on the freight, which has been received?
4th, If the insurers on the ship, cargo and freight be not in the present case separately liable for the expenses of the embargo, are they jointly answerable on the ground of general averageP
Is the insurer on the ship liable for the expenses of an embargo?
That he is not liable is evident from the nature of the contract, and express adjudications on the subject.
A policy is a contract in writing, by which the insurer, for a reasonable compensation, engages that certain property of the insured, specified in the policy, shall sustain no loss or damage from any of the perils enumerated in the contract between the parties.
To found a claim upon the policy, the insured must prove, that the identical property specified has been destroyed or lessened in value by some of the perils mentioned in the policy. When the property insured arrives safe without damage from any of the perils stated in the policy, the insurer has complied with the contract, and law and justice can demand nothing more of him. The insuring party can never be called upon to answer for a breach of contract, where no breach of contract has taken place. To make the insurer on the ship liable, there must not only be peril to the ship, but she must receive loss or damage from the embargo. When, there is no actual loss to the ship occasioned bv the embargo, it is the same thing as if she had arrived safe after the perils ©f a storm, enemies, or pirates; in which cases, there is n© *562pretence to say the insurer is liable, if the ship receives ho <T,-maSe‘ The peril of a storm and the peril of an embargo are the same thing to the insurer of the ship, after she has returned in safety to her port.
In conformity to these remarks, and with a spirit of perfect justice and propriety, it has been decided on several occasions, and particularly in Robertson v. Ewer, 1 Term 127, that the insurer on the body of the ship is not liable for provisions and sailors’ wages, during an embargo. In this case Justhv Butter says, the court look only to the thing itself which is the subject of the insurance, and that when the ship was insured, the wages and provisions were no part of the thing insured. Upon this principle of restricting an insurance to the article or object insured, it has also been decided, that sailors’ wages and provisions, expended while a ship is refitting, cannot.be recovered against the insurer of the ship. Fletcher and others v. Poole. Park 52, 53.
As to the second point: is the insurer of the cargo liable for such expenses?
There cannot be the slightest foundation for the position. Attempts it is true have been frequently made to extend the insurance of a ship to wages and provisions during an embargo; but nobody ever ventured to charge those expenses on the insurer of the cargo. As long as the terms of a contract and the intention of the parties shall have any weight-in courts of justice, the idea will be reprobated. It is not easy to conceive an instance of grosser injustice than to make-the insurer of specific property liable for consequential injury to other property, and more especially when the property insured has received no damage from any of the perils stated in the policy.
With respect to the third point. Can an action be supported against the insurer of the freight in the cause now before the court, for the expenses of provisions and sailors’ wages during an embargo?
What is the nature of the insurance on freight in the present instance? It is an engagement -that the insured shall receive 3000 dollars freight for the transportation of goods, Wares, and merchandise on board the brig Benjamin Franklin. The ship'has arrived safe, and the insurers have receiv* *563ed the sum stipulated. Under these circumstances it would be a violation of every sound principle of law and j ustice to maintún an action for the breach of a contract, which has been complied with literally and to the fullest extent.
To render an insurer liable, it is equally the dictate of law and common sense that the loss should happen to the property or interest specifically insured. But who I ask, will hazard the assertion, that the insured have sustained a loss on the freight insured, when they have received the whole sum insured agreeably to their contract with the insurers?
An insurance on freight to a precise amount, is a contract that the insured shall receive the sum mentioned for the conveyance of merchandise, without any loss or diminution arising from an embargo. When there is an insurance of this kind, and the embargo is the means of preventing any-part of the cargo from being put on board, or in any other mode diminishes the freight, this will be a direct loss on the freight, arising from the embargo; and the insurer would of •course be responsible for a partial loss on the freight.
There is no foundation for the position that the only peril from the embargo was t<£ the freight. It would be more correct to say, the only peril to the freight arose from the peril to the ship and cargo; or any injury to them might create a loss on the freight. Even if it were true the freight only was in peril, yet the insurer thereon is not liable, unless it shall appear the embargo in some way produced a loss on the freight; in which case he would be liable only for such defieiency.
The reasoning of Justice Buller in Robertson v. Ewer, that the court look only to tire thing insured and inquire if that be safe, applies with unanswerable force to prove that the insurer of the freight is not liable in this case any more than the insurer of the ship. If the insurer of the ship be not responsible for the expenses of an embargo because she arrives safe, unquestionably the insurer on the freight cannot be responsible for such expenses where the freight has been received, or in other words, is safe. In both cases the contract is equally complied with by the insurers.
It appears, therefore, upon the true construction of the policy, that neither the insurer of the ship, or of the cargo, *564bp of the freight to a certain' amount, is liable by virtue of cont:ract to pay the expenses of an embargo.
But though not any one of the insurers be separately liable under an express contract for the expenses of an embargo, yet upon every principle of equity, and by operation of law, they are all bound to contribute their several proportions as gross or average loss, which is the
4th point. It is an acknowledged principle of distributive justice,, that all persons who risk their property at sea, shall make compensation to any one of them who is obliged to sustain a certain loss for the common or general benefit. For this purpose it is understood they all enter into a tacit obligation; nothing of which is expressed in the policy. Natural justice however and the obligations of common honesty require it at their hands. In case their respective interests are insured, the insurers must make good the loss in such proportions as they have underwritten; and in Dacosta v. Newnham, 2 Term 407., it is admitted, and very properly, that freight as well as ship and cargo shall contribute to a general average.
But the question occurs, is the expense arising from an émbargo to be brought into general average? Does the law throw these expenses as the result of unavoidable necessity on the insurer of ship, cargo and freight? Park in his treatise on insurance seems to be clearly of opinion they are general average; and that both Lord Mansfield and Justice Butter were of the same opinion. Be this as it may, we find an average loss described to be, where the expenses are deliberately- and unavoidably incurred' with a view to the general safety of ship and cargo. Park 128, 125.
What is an embargo? It is the detention of a ship by pub* lie authority for national purposes, and continued any length of time that the real or imaginary interests of the country may require. Let me ask then whether the master and crew could possibly avoid a situation of this kind, any more than they could avoid a fleet of pirates, or the overwhelming fury of a storm? In the latter case the loss is produced by the elements, in the former it is the effect of human violence; but in both it is equally inevitable. Whether the loss be occasioned by a physical or moral necessity, all who are bene*565fitted by it are bound in justice to contribute to the aid of' the principal sufferer. '
_ _ To make the loss gross average, it is said the expenses must be deliberately incurred. We shall not enter into a dispute about words. It is properly observed by Lord Kenyon, that the rule of consulting the crew is founded more in prudence than in necessity; and that the danger is often too great to admit of deliberation. 1 East 228. To which may be added, not only the danger is often too great to consult the crew, but the nature of the transaction may afford decisive evidence of the inutility and folly of doing it. In thecáse of an embargo the thing-speaks for itself; and nothing would be more truly-ridiculous than a formal consultation whether they should resist the whole power of a nation or country. The nature of the force applied in the case of an embargo admits of deliberation no more than the danger from a number of pirates with a bloody flag would admit of it. Where there is sufficient evidence that the loss was unavoidably incurred for the general benefit, the deliberation of the thing is a matter of no consequence.
The law to some purposes considers an embargo both as a peril' and a loss, as much so as it does a storm attended with the most fatal effects; and it is for this reason the assured may abandon in the case of an embargo. When an embargo happens, it is the same thing as if a storm happens with damage, both as to the right of abandonment, and the expense' incurred in saving the ship and cargo.
In the case of a capture it is admitted, the charges of reclaiming the vessel, with the wages and expenses of the ship’s company, shall be brought into general average. Park 124, 5.
The embargo like the capture is accompanied with superior force; and in both cases the expenses are equally necessary to preserve the ship and cargo. An embargo is an arrest, a capture for special purposes; and while it continues,, may be called a capture during the pleasure of the government that causes it. The expenses requisite to save bev from destruction, whether she be under the gripe of national force or individual rapacity, appear to be equally unavoidable, and must be borne by all who have an interest in the preservation! of the property.
*566The case of Brinkley and others v. Presgrave, 1 East 220., in Point of principle is very much the same with that now before the court. It was an action by the owner of the ship against the owner of the cargo, to recover for an average loss-on a quantity of wheat the property of the defendant, damaged in the harbour of Sunderland on board the ship Argo, owned by the plaintiffs. It appeared that the ship in entering the harbour was exposed to a storm, which made it necessary in order to save her, to cut and destroy the cables and other parts of the tackle, and to hire a number of workmen at an extravagant rate to work at the pumps. To recover an average loss of all these expenses, the action was brought and succeeded. In deciding the cause, the court observe that all those articles made use of by the master and crew upon the emergency and out of the usual course, and other expenses incurred, must be paid proportionably as general average. Upon the argument, the counsel for the defendant urged that the captain had not consulted the crew. But the court treated the idea with deserved neglect, it appearing that what he did was for the benefit and interest of all concerned.
In Dacosta v. Newnham the same principle is admitted and recognised, 2 Term 407., that where a ship is obliged to put into port for the benefit of the whole concern, the charges of loading and unloading the cargo and taking care of it are general average. Whether a ship be obliged to put into port for the benefit of those concerned, or whether she be obliged to stay in port for their benefit, the principle of necessity is the same. In one case indeed it is a physical necessity, in the other a moral necessity, but both are equally imperious.
Upon this point I shall only add, that the average loss is consonant to the very nature and essence of insurance, which is intended to divide the misfortunes of commerce among several, rather than throw them upon a single person. It seems repugnant to the feelings of justice and to the spirit of the contract, to render an insurer on freight exclusively liable to pas the expenses of the embargo, while others are equally benefitted by these expenses. The determination, is oppressive, and injurious to commerce.
It may be remarked, that in giving my opinion I have uniformly stated the question in very particular terms, and *567that I have considered it under all the peculiar circumstances attending the case. My reasons for this I shall now mention.
I approve the position advanced by Mr. Moylan on the former argument of this cause, that to render an insurer on freight liable for the expenses of an embargo, on any other ground than general average, a special contract, or some memorandum at the foot of the policy, is absolutely necessary. It should seem from the expressions of lord Mansfield, that an insurance on the voyage or on the crew is a special contract of this nature. In the case of Robertson v. Ewer he says, “ on a policy on a ship, sailors’ -wages and provisions “ are never allowed in settling the damages. The insurance “ is on the body of the ship, not on the voyage or crew.” An insurance on the voyage it should seem purports to be a contract that the voyage shall sustain no loss from any of the perils in the policy; in which case the voyage is made the direct object of the insurance, and will cover the expenses of the embargo, because the embargo occasions an injury and loss on the voyage. A policy that the insured shall sustain no loss on account of the crew from any of the usual perils, would no doubt be a' direct insurance against the expense of sailors’ wages and provisions arising from an embargo. A general insurance on the freight would also be such a contract ás to subject the insurer exclusively to the expense of an embargo. Where the freight of a vessel is insured in general terms, it is an express engagement she ohall earn her full freight without loss from an embargo; and will Be equivalent to an insurance on the voyage, or the profits of the voyage. The insurer in these cases stands in the place of the owner, and when Judge Buller says, “ the expenses of an “ embargo must fall upon the owner only, and the freight shall k£ bear it,” he means that where the owner had insured his ship and nothing more, himself as the owner, or the freight, which is the same thing, must bear the expense arising from an embargo.
There is an evident distinction between a general and in? definite insurance of freight, and insurance of a precise sum. on the freight. If this had been an insurance of the whole freight, eo nomine, it would cover all the expenses of the e.m*568bargo. But insuring a fixed sum on the freight is the same thing as an insurance of a fixed sum on the cargo; and there is no just reason why the expenses of an embargo should be a partial loss on freight received, any more than they should be a partial loss on goods delivered.
I have given my opinion that this is a case of general average. If it be not, the plaintiff is totally without remedy. He can never be indemnified for the expenses of the embargo by virtue of any contract expressed in the policy. The underwriters on the ship, cargo and freight, have complied with their engagements, agreeably to the terms and meaning of their respective assumptions. The ship has returned in safety to her port, the cargo has been delivered without damage, and every farthing of the freight has been paid to the owner, which the underwriter stipulated he should receive.
I shall conclude with the remark, that I have felt much satisfaction on discovering that cases have occurred in Westminster Hall, since forming my opinion on this subject, in which the Chief Justice of England has added the weight of his judicial authority to the two leading points I have endeavoured to establish. In the case of M’Arthy and others v. Abel, reported in 5 East 388., the defendant underwrote 200/. on the freight. The ship also was insured by some other person. The vessel being detained by the Russian government, the assured abandoned both vessel and freight to the respective insurers. The embargo being taken off, the ship arrived at Plymouth, and earned freight to the amount of 2242l. 6s. 10d., and notwithstanding these circumstances the assured sued the underwriter on the freight. The court gave judgment in favour of him, and in delivering the opinion, lord Ellenborough reasons in the following manner: “ If the “ fact, says he, be merely looked at, freight, in the events “ which have happened, has not been lost, but has been fully “ and entirely earned and received by the plaintiffs, the assur- “ ed; and if so, no loss can be properly demandable against “ the underwriter on the freight, who merely insures against “ the loss of that particular subject by the assured. But if “ the freight can be considered lost to the owner of the ship “ in any other sense or manner, it was not by means of the *569“ perils insured against, but by means of the abandonment “ of the ship, which abandonment was the act of the assured “ themselves, with which and its consequences the under- “ writer on the freight has no concern.” “ Therefore,” continues lord Ellenborough, “ it appears to us, quacunque via “ data, that is, whether there has been no loss at all on the “ freight, or being such, it has been a loss occasioned entirely “ by the act of the plaintiffs themselves, they are not entitled “ to recover,” and they were accordingly nonsuited. I cite this case to prove the present action cannot be maintained.
The case of Sharp v. Gladstone, in 7 East 33, 34., shews that in the opinion of lord Ellenborough the expenses of an embargo are a ground of general average.
For these reasons I think the judgment of the Supreme Court is erroneous, and should be reversed.
Young, President. Having the misfortune to dissent from the judgment of my respectable colleagues, it may be proper to”state the grounds of my opinion. My remote situation and general course of study do not well qualify me for deciding in cases of this kind. But as the parties have a right to my opinion, it is my duty to give that which I believe to be most consonant with law and justice.
In the expounding of contracts, the meaning and intention of the parties is to be ascertained according to the subject matter. In mercantile transactions of a general nature, founded on the common usage of civilized countries, a regard ought to be had to the substance and spirit of the contract; and I consider it to be a sound rule, that where one of the parties has received an adequate, consideration for his engagement which is somewhat dubious in its terms, it ought to be liberally construed, and not in such a manner as tends to disappoint the j ust and reasonable expectation of the party in whose behalf the promise was made.
In the first place, it may be observed that so far as respects mercantile usage, upon which the plaintiffs in error attempted to support an exoneration from the claim of the insured, if was negatived by the jury. If such a usage had been established in Pennsylvania, it is natural to suppose particular instances of it might have been shewn. In that case there would have been no question on principles or the practice *570of other states. The usage in this would have been considered as known by both parties, and to have formed a part of their contract. If the negativing of the usage after an endeavour to support it by testimony be- not evidence of the contrary, I consider the verdict as entitled to weight, unless it can be shewn by some adjudications that the jury have been mistaken.
The counsel for the company have in the first place relied upon an observation of Mr. Park in his compilation, that it was a general opinion, that the extraordinary wages and victuals expended during the detention of a vessel by a foreign prince not at war, ought to be brought into general average. He adds that this matter, alluding to the period of his writing, had never been expressly determined. A court of law however cannot be too cautious in adopting opinions which must be more or less general, according to the views and interests of particular persons. We ought to see whether they are supported by just principles, have been sanctioned in practice, or established bj legal authority. Opinionum commenta delet dies, naturae judicia confrmat.
The argument relied on for the company is that the insured having upon the determination of the voyage received their full freight, the insurers have satisfied the terms of their contract. The position however proves too much. In that point of view the loss which the insured have sustained from the detention of their ship would not be general average, for the company would be excepted from contribution, upon the plea that it had satisfied the terms of its engagement, while in reality it satisfied nothing. S .pposing the detention to have been so long- as to have swallowed the whole freight, the insurers of it on this ground would still escape contribution. If the owner of the ship, the several shippers of the cargo or their respective insurers, were called upon to indemnify the loss of freight, might not they with equal reason say, u We u have satisfied the terms of our contract. The ship and <c goods have arrived at the port of discharge, and we ai*e u bound only for the ordinary expenses of the voyage. By “ not abandoning when those concerned might have done it, ic our contract was not intended to cover those extra ex-a penses.” The very detention might have occasioned a *571?ise in the market of the goods shipped, instead of occasioning a loss to the freighters. The interests of the owners of ship, goods and freight, are frequently altogether distinct and separate. It is otherwise when there is a common end, a joint profit and advantage; as in the case of a copartnership, where the maxim applies, qui sentit commodum, sentire debet et onus. It has the appearance of a quibble to tell the owner of freight, perhaps the charterer for a particular voyage, who has been necessarily put to expenses for the purpose of securing it, “ You have lost nothing. It is true indeed you “ paid us for insuring that your freight should neither be en- “ tirely lost or materially diminished. But we meant only to “ secure the solvency of the shippers of the cargo, and they “ have paid you.” I am unable to discover this to have been the intention of the parties. The lien upon the goods is generally ample security. If worth the freight, the owners or their insurers must pay it. The question here is, have the insured sustained a loss under one of the risks assured against? There is no doubt but that an embargo is one of those risks. It may defeat the main end of a' voyage, and occasion a very great loss. But it is contended that the owners in this case did not sustain the loss as owners of the freight. But it is clear to my mind that their primary object was freight. The ship was in fact what is termed a seeking ship, and was only the medium for acquiring freight. The mariners were only subservient to this main object. The freight became thus the true fund for defraying not only the ordinary charges which fall under the head of ship and furniture, but of those extraordinary expenses which are the result of an embargo. It wpuld seem therefore natural and reasonable for this fund to bear them, and consequently the insurers of it. It has been intimated that these expenses occasioned only a partial loss, and there is no instance of a recovery for such a loss. On the principle that the whole includes every part, it will not be easy to distinguish between a total and a partial loss. It has not been contended that the exertions and the expenses incurred by the insured were not for the benefit of the insurers, the present plaintiffs in error. The ship herself and the goods aboard were apparently safe. The owners of both found it more convenient to wait than abandon, if they had insured, *572which does not appear from the case before us. If there was in fact no insurance of ship and cargo, those expenses were exclusively for the benefit of the freight, unless it can be clearly shewn they form a subject for general average, and that the several and distinct owners of ship, cargo and freight, are all responsible pro rata. This might often occasion a great uncertainty and confusion; and unless I can see sound principle or settled law for extending general average so far, I must consider it special, and applicable to the freight. In England jhe point appears to have been long ago so determined at nisi prius, and acquiesced in there and by the neighbouring commercial state of New Tork, It appears recognised in several cases under the Russian embargo, which by a species of courtesy obtained that name, although an act of hostility on its commencement.
M'Arthy et al. v. Abel, 5 East 388., was the case of an abandonment of both ship and freight by the owners, who had chartered their vessel for a particular voyage, to certain persons. There it was held, under the particular circumstances stated in the report, that the assured could not recover as for a total loss of the freight, the freight having been in part earned: or, as the margin reads, supposing the freight to have been in any other sense lost to the assured by the abandonment of the ship to the insurers thereon, it was so lost not by any peril insured against, but by the voluntary abandonment. It appears from the case that one of the owners, the insured, received 500l. from the freighters to pay the seamen’s wages, &c., and that the freight was considered the fund for those wages, to which they were entitled though confined and rendered unable to earn them. The assured could not therefore recover as for a total loss, and as to a partial loss there was an abandonment of both ship and freight. It must be acknowledged however, there is some obscurity in the expressions attributed to lord Ellenborough. If the reporter be accurate, it can only be said “ aliquando bonus dormitatT It would seem as if that able judge had considered the abandonment, with the actual receipt of part of the freight, as acts inconsistent with each other, and the plaintiffs concluded by their own conduct. But this is explained by the subsequent case of Sharp v. Gladstone, 7 East 24. There the several under*573writers who had separately paid as for a total loss of ship and freight, were held as coming into the place of the assured. It was in fact an adjustment of loss of ship and freight, and the object was to apportion the losses among the several underwriters, according to the subjects insured. Each set of underwriters were to be entitled to their respective salvage, subject to the deductions applicable to each. Certain items were entirely struck out, others to be apportioned according to the respective interests of the two sets of underwriters; and on this j subject he lays it down, that the very charges of putting the cargo on board was for the benefit of the underwriters on the freight. This carries an extension of special-average arising from embargo farther than mere seamen’s wages and ordinary disbursements; so far is lord Ellenborough from calling in question the authority of the several eases, then cited to shew that the expenses of an embargo belonged to the underwriters on freight. Judge Livingston, now of the Supreme Court of the United States, acknowledged to be well versed in the knowledge of commercial law, appears to have entertained the same opinion, as well as the learned bench of the Supreme Court of New Tori, and that of our own. I would therefore be for affirming the judgment.
Judgment reversed.