delivered the opinion of the court.
On the 16th of October, 1837, the defendants underwrote a policy of insurance to Lambeth & Thompson, commission merchants, on account of whom it may concern, upon tobacco shipped or to be shipped to the latter, at or from any point or landing on the Ohio river or its tributaries, to New Orleans, between the 25th of September, 1837, to the 1st of March, 1838. By a memorandum added to the policy on the 8th of January following, the valuation on the tobacco insured was, by consent, raised from fifty to sixty dollars per hogshead. On the 20th of January, 1838, the plaintiff, a resident of Barren county, State of Kentucky, shipped from two places on Big Barren river, a tributary of the Ohio river, two cargoes of *51tobacco ; tbe one consisting of sixty-two hogsheads, in the flat-_ _ . . , boat Benjamin Franklin, whereof Benjamin Ritchey master, and the other of twenty-five hogsheads, in the flatboat Sam Brown, of which John Brown was master ; the tobacco was consigned to Lambeth & Thompson in New Orleans, with instructions to effect insurance thereon. On their way to the port of destination, the Benjamin Franklin ran against a root or snag concealed under the water, near the mouth of Philips’ Branch, in Barren river, and the Sam Brown sprung a leak at a short distance from that place, by which accidents both the boats sunk. The tobacco on board of them, having remained some time under water before it could he withdrawn, was found to be materially damaged; whereupon the masters of these boats, after making their protest and giving due notice by advertisements, proceeded to sell, and did sell at public auction the said tobacco for the benefit of all concerned. Under these circumstances, the plaintiff claims under the aforesaid policy as for a total loss. The defendants deny the facts set forth in plaintiff’s petition, of that they be indebted to the plaintiff in any amount whatever. They aver that the sales alleged to have been made, were illegal and pretended ; that the flatboat Sam Brown was not seaworthy at the beginning of, nor during the voyage insured; and that the plaintiff has no cause of action whatever against them. The case was laid before a jury who brought in a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $5220; a remittitur having been entered for $403, the nett proceeds of the sale of the damaged tobacco. Judgment was rendered accordingly. After failing in an attempt to 'set aside this verdict and judgmeut, the defendants appealed.
It is not denied, that these shipments of tobacco to Lambeth & Thompson were covered by the policy sued on, or that an abandonment was made to the Company ; but it is said, that plaintiff shares an interest only in' four of the hogsheads on board of the Benjamin Franklin ; that the balance of the tobacco belonged to a number of other persons, whose names are marked on the hogsheads, and that the plaintiff can recover *52only to the extent of his interest. The testimony in the record on this head cannot, in our opinion, outweigh the evidence resulting from the bill of lading, which is in the name of plaintiff. He had the possession, custody and control of the tobacco, coupled with a legal title to the same. It would be stl’ange indeed, that an interest which would give him a right 0f actjon for the property as his own, should not be susceptible x A J A of being insured. Admitting that the plaintiff had an absolute and entire right of ownership only to four of the hogsheads insured on board of the Benjamin Franklin, yet as trustee or ag'ent °f tbe owners, he had in the balance of the cargo such a qualified interest, as authorized him to protect it by insurance. 2 Phillips, 511-740; 1 Peters, 163; 10 Pickering, 40; 3 Mass., 133; 4 Wendell, 75.
lading is^suffi-eient evidence oi ownership to entitle the shipper to recover the insurance 5 testimonynStÜof contmyS t0 theIn relation to the necessity of the sale and the seaworthiness of the boats, we think that the evidence preponderates in favor of the plaintiff. A number of witnesses, and among them the builders of these flafboats, declaré that they were strong- and substantial, and well fitted for the navigation of the Ohio, Barren and Mississippi rivers ; that they were provided with an experienced steersman, a sufficient number of hands, &c., with every thing necessary to boats of this description. The circunistance of the springing of a leak in the Sam Brown, shortly after her departure, cannot of itself create a presumption of unseaworthiness, for the witnesses say, that such accidents not unfrequently happen to the best flafboats, and from causes that cannot sometimes be ascertained ; but even if such a presumption existed, it must yield to the positive proof given in this case, that the boat was a new one, staunch and seaworthy in every respect. The springing of a leak is surely one of the perils insured against. As to the Benjamin Franklin, she struck against a root or snag concealed under the surface of the water, and sunk in spite of every exertion made to prevent the accident. The tobacco saved from the wreck had remained immersed in the water or floating on its surface between thirty and forty hours ; when rescued it was found so *53thoroughly saturated with water and damaged, with the exception of a few hogsheads, as to he considered as almost worthless ; all the witnesses, but one, assess the damage at 75 per cent. Suitable warehouses and the necessary apparatus for drying and reprizing the tobacco, were not to be procured near the spot where the accidents happened ; and the witnesses, even those who thought that the tobacco could have been dried and reprized, express the opinion that the expenses would have amounted to more than the damaged tobacco would have brought in New Orleans. One of them (Foster) says, that the tobacco was so much damaged, that he would not have accepted it as a gift.
A fair and 0f ‘ 'áaínaged cSeumstances61' re“der *ts shipment to the port of destination impossible, except in a very tio^TaiTbest that can be done tor all concern-ecl> and underwriters have no cause of complaint-,Under such circumstances a sale was surely, as most of the witnesses declare, the best thing that could be done for the interest of all parties concerned ; and the evidence shows that on occasions of this sort, it is the course generally pursued in that section of the country. No newspapers being published at a distance less than twenty-five or thirty miles, notices of the sale were posted up at different places in the neighborhood during five or six days, and the sale was well attended. Every thing from the evidence before us appears to have been con- ° _ . . . ducted with fairness and with a view to do the best according . , . to the circumstances of the case. That a master may, m case of necessity for so doing, sell the ship or cargo damaged, has never been doubted, but it must be done bona fide for the ben- ’ efit of all concerned; as to what is a case of necessity and what . . is not, depends upon the particular circumstances and is a question of fact to be determined by the jury ; the evidence in our opinion fully justifies the conclusion to which they have arrived ; 2 Phillips on Insurance, 315, 327, and 328.
But it is contended that the sale was merely pretended and simulated and that the plaintiff by his acts of interference with the property has revoked his abandonment and can now claim only for a partial loss. There is no proof that the plaintiff became the purchaser of any portion of the tobacco saved ; but from the fact that a part of it was bought by his brother-in-law, and that *54it was afterwards placed under the plaintiff’s care to be dried, an¿ re-shipped in two of his boats and one of them having- sunk the plaintiff, in whose charge it was, gave orders in relation to it; the inference is drawn, or attempted to he drawn, that the plaintiff was himself the purchaser. This inference has not been adopted by the jury, and we cannot say that they erred. The acts of the plaintiff which are represented and insisted on by the defendants as acts of interference and ownership, sufficient in law to revoke the abandonment, may each and every one of them have been done by him, as the agent of his brother-in-law, the purchaser. The capacity in which he acted was a matter of fact peculiarly within the province of the jury, and we can see nothing in the evidence which makes it our duty to disturb their verdict.
It is therefore ordered, that the judgment of the Commercial Court he affirmed with costs.