Tlie opinion of the Court was delivered by
McEnery, J.Jacob Weinberger and John Julia, commercial partners, engaged in the fruit trade in the city of Galveston, bought the steamer James H. Geary, of Woodward & Wight, of the city of New Orleans, and had lief repaired in said city, and insured in the Merchants’ Mutual Insurance Company. The repairs were made under the supervision of W. M. Baker, marine inspector for the company.
In November,. 1882, on a voyage from Galveston to Vera Cruz, the Geary encountered severe-gales and was so damaged that she was condemned and sold,
Plaintiff bring this suit to recover on said insurance policy of the defendant company the sum of five thousand four hundred dollars and eighty-seven cents, with five per cent interest from March 1, 1883.
In the United States Circuit Court, suit No. 10,308, plaintiff sued the defendant company in a suit at law to recover on said policy, and after-wards in suit No. 10,957 in equity in the same court for the same purpose, praying that the policy be reformed by striking out the printed clause prohibiting the use of Texas and Mexican ports, and that on the policy as amended judgment be rendered against the company.
Defendant excepts peremptorily to the petition in this suit, alleging as a reason therefor the proceedings in the above suits in the U. S. Circuit Court. In suit No. 10,308 plaintiffs declared on the policy in a suit at law, and are estopped from suing to reform the policy; and in the equity suit 10,957, the matters in dispute were finally determined and are res adjudicata.
In the first suit, No. 10,308, there was a judgment of non-suit only. After the dismissal of the suit plaintiffs were at liberty to bring another suit. • The judgment decided nothing.
In suit No. 10,957 in equity, after several pleas, amended bills, etc., there was on a demurrer of defendant, a dismissal of the suit for want of proper parties. In neither suit was there a final judgment and in neither case a plea of res adjudicata or estoppel is sustained. There is no inconsistency in the demands made in said suits and the pending suit. The judgment of the lower court overruling the exception was correct.
Defendant moved to compel plaintiffs to elect whether they would *34proceed on the demand to reform the policy, or on the policy itself. The evidence was correctly overruled. There is no inconsistency in the alternative prayers of plaintiffs, and if the allegations in a petition will warrant equitable relief, this court, under the well-recognized jurisprudence of the State will grant it. Such is the prayer of plaintiffs in their petition. Art. 21; 1964 et seq.
Defendant answered, denying any liability on the part of the company, that the vessel was damaged and the loss occasioned by a violation of a prohibitory clause in the contract of insurance made between plaintiffs and defendant.
The application for the policy 'of insurance was made on the 2d day of May, 1882, on the blank form furnished by the company as follows: “To navigate the Gulf of Mexico, the Carribean Sea and the Antiantic Coast as far up as Boston.”
Tn the body of the application preceding the signature, in plain type, the following forms a part of the application : “ This application is made and accepted, subject to all other clauses and conditions in the policies of the company.”
The clause and condition in the policy referred to, and which is the matter of contention in this case, is as follows : “ Warranted by the assured not to use port or ports iu Eastern Mexico, Texas nor Yucatan, n'or anchorage thereof during the continuance of this insurance.” Plaintiffs’ right to recover depend upon a construction of the last clause, whether or not it forms a part of the contract. They contend that it was well understood that the intent was for plaintiffs to navigate the Gulf of Mexico and Carribbean Sea, to use the ports of Mexico and Texas, without exception, and that said clause of warranty prohibiting the use of said ports should be stricken out. In order to obtain relief it is incumbent upon plaintiffs to show that there is some conflict or inconsistencybetween the written and printed parts of the contract, and that the latter controls and conveys the intent of the parties to the contract, or that there was an error añade by both in the contract, so that the inteaitioai of neither is expressed, or if there was error on one side it was the result of some artifice or fraud oai the part of the other, or that the contract was executed oai the part of plaintiffs on his coaistrnction of the intent and meaning with the express or implied consent of defendant.
The writteai part of the application forms a part of the policy, and is copied and incorporated in the policy, and thus the application aaid the policy form but one contract.
The policy was delivered soane fifteen days after the application was aiiade. The assured cannot plead ignorance of the clauses in the policy. *35It was tlieir duty to read the policy, so as to determine whether or not it was made in accordance Witli. the application. The defendant company insures vessels navigating the seas, but has clauses in its policies excepting certain ports and localities from its risks. A person dealing with an insurance company ought at least to know the general course of its business, and in the application, if he desires exceptions in policies to be avoided, he ought to state the fact in his application and be willing to pay the additional premiums for the risk.
It is a maxim of the law that words referred to are considered as incorporated.
Verba Mata in esse videntur.
And the same rule applies where a particular clause refers to another clause in the same instrument, or to one disconnected from the instrument to which reference is made. The clause in the application for a policy of insurance on the Geary referred to a clause containing exceptions in the policy with reference to certain ports. This clause formed a part of the' application though it had been written or qninted in it ; “ To cover hull, apparel, etc., of steamer James A. Geary to navigate the Gulf of Mexico, Carribbeau Sea and along the Atlantic Coast, as high up as Boston, the assured not to use port or ports in Eastern Mexico, Texas or Yutatan, nor anchorage thereof during the continuance of this insurance.”
When there is no ambiguity requiring explanation in the language of a written contract, and the intent is plain and complete, no evidence will be admitted to give any other construction to it than that which is so plainly expressed. C. C. 1945-1956.
Neither equity nor usage can be resorted to in order to enlarge or restrict that intent. C. C. 1963.
Authorities are cited by plaintiff to show that the contract of insurance should be construed in the manner in which the assured understood. This is undoubtedly true when the intent is doubtful, and is so expressed in Articles 1956 and 1957 C. C.
The evidence in the record does not convince us that the insurance company had any knowledge of the intention of the owner of thé Geary to' put her in the trade between Galveston and Vera Cruz.
There is some conflict in the the testimony of Fourchy, the President of the Company, and W. M. Baker, the inspector, on the one side, and Wight, for plaintiffs, on the other.
Fourchy and Baker deny all, knowledge of any intent on part of plaintiffs to employ said vessel in commerce with any of the prohibited ports.
They say, on the contrary, after her employment between Mobile and *36Hilvana, she was to l>e used in the fruit trade with the Bahama Islands. Pearl Wight says his firm was negotiating with the owners of the vessel to take a cargo of lumber for the M. C. R. E. to Tauipico, and that he tolcl, Mr. Fourchy, when negotiating for tlie policy, that Sshe might want to g'o to Tampico. There was no agreement and no contract for this proposed voyage.
That nothing was said to Fourchy, tlie president of the company, about excepting Texas or Mexican ports from the prohibitions in the policy, is evident from Mr. Wight’s answer to an interrogatory : “ I think that the only thing that was talked about that I have any' recollection of was about allowing her to run North, and this man stated that he might want to send her East for repairs, and that’s why the Boston clause was'pnt in there.” The fact that Galveston was tlie hailing port of tlie vessel is of very little consequence. A vessel may hail from a port and be employed during her life in distant seas, and never again visit her home port.
. Plaintiffs contend that the defendant company issued policies and paid losses on the Silver Wing and Daybreak in each of which may be found printed clauses warning against the use of Mexican and Texas ports, similar to the clause in the policy sued on. But the written applications and tlie written parts of tlie policy allowed the use of these ports. In the instant case there is no such permission asked in the application or granted in the policy. Evidence showing that tlie insurer and insured meant to make a certain contract, but that misconception of the effect of the language and terms in the policy defeated their intention, makes a proper case for its reformation.
The evidence in such case, however, must be clear. If there be a substantial doubt as to what was the statement of the applicant, or as.to the fairness of his claim to have been mistaken, or tlie agreement ot the parties, or a material conflict of testimony, the court will not aid the plaintiff. The affirmation is upon the plaintiff, and he must show what statement. lie made and what the. agreement Was. May on Ins. § 566, p. 871.
Tlie plaintiff's have failed to show that there is any ambiguity or doubt in the policy widening the contract, or that the intention of the parties was other than that expressed in the. insurance contract, or that there is any contradiction between the printed and written clauses of the contract.
The judgnient appealed from is therefore avoided, reversed and annulled, and it is now ordered that the demand of plaintiff J>e rejected with costs.