delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellants procured from the respondent an open *207«cargo policy, dated May 25, 1868, by which respondent •agreed to insure for appellants all such shipments to or from St. Louis, on good steamboats or sea vessels, by river, sea, lake, or inland transportation, that should be indorsed ■on the policy-book annexed to the policy, lost or not. lost.
The petition states that on January 29, 1872, a shipment was made to appellants at St. Louis, from New 'Orleans, Louisiana, on a good steamboat; that it was indorsed on the policy-book, and appellants paid the premium, and that the shipment was totally lost. Wherefore •appellants prayed judgment for its value.
The answer of respondent set up that the shipment in ■question had been entered on the policy-book as shipped ■on the steamboat ‘.Howardthat the same was insured as •shipped on the steamboat ‘ Howardthat it was not lost on ’the ‘ Howard,’ but, when that vessel reached Memphis, the ■cargo was, without necessity and without respondent’s knowledge or consent, reshipped onto the steamboat ‘ Columbiana,’ which, in coming to St. Louis, was lost with its cargo.
The appellants replied that the cargo was necessarily reshipped, because of the perils of navigation which compelled the measure, and that the privilege of reshipment was reserved in the bill of lading issued by the ‘ Howard; ’ that it was customary to reserve such a privilege at that season of ■the year, and that this custom was well known to defendant.
The facts shown at the trial were that the goods were .shipped on the ‘ James Howard,’ from New Orleans to St. Louis ; that the boat, in issuing the bill of lading, reserved the privilege of reshipping; that, on reaching Memphis, fhe water was low, and the river above Cairo was full of ice; that a delay of two or three weeks was occasioned by these causes, during which the ‘Howard’ could not have reached St. Louis; that the ice then broke up, and the water rose. The goods were reshipped on a small and not very staunch boat, called the ‘ Columbiana, ’ and she was sunk in the latter part of February, and her cargo lost, by the ice she encountered near St. Louis.
*208Plaintiff offered evidence to prove a custom to reship-cargo, under the circumstances, and to show that the insertion of a clause in the bill of lading authorizing a reshipment was in pursuance of an established custom of the trade. This, at any rate, was the purpose indicated. The-evidence offered was excluded by the court. It hardly came up to the purpose indicated. The Circuit Court-excluded all evidence of custom to which the defendant was-not proved to have acceded. At the close of the case of plaintiffs, defendant asked, and the court gave, an instruction that the plaintiffs could not recover.
1. We must affirm this judgment. There was no justification that defendant was bound by for reshipping the-cargo at Memphis. The temporary detention caused by low water and ice was of uncertain duration, and actually continued for two or three weeks. In the case of Salisbury v. The Marine Insurance Company, 23 Mo. 553, damages-to a vessel, the repairs of which would consume twelve-days, were the cause of a reshipment of the cargo ; but the-underwriters were held to be discharged of the risk incurred in the new bottom. The privilege of reshipment was a. matter which was provided for the convenience of the ‘James. Howard.’ The risk of the defendant was of the cargo on its voyage from New Orleans to St. Louis in the steamboat. ‘James Howard.’ It did not insure the risk when the- ‘ Columbiana ’ ivas made the carrier. It had no notice of the-change, and whether the risk was increased or lessened is-not material. It was not one against which the defendant, assured.
2. The evidence offered was incompetent to affect such a. contract as existed between plaintiff and defendant. A very-definite agreement was here made to assure a particular risk. The evidence offered was for the purpose of subjecting the: defendant to a greatly enlarged and varied hazard. Nothing of a similar kind, to which defendant had ever been a. party, was shown, and nothing was shown of a custom on. the part of underwriters at St. Louis to sanction the resphip*209ment which the ship owners of New Orleans reserved to themselves the right to make. It is plain that by no intendment could defendant be regarded as having made the contract of insurance in contemplation of any such practice.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed;
all the judges concurring.