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United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Robert M'Nair, Merchant in Glasgow v. James Coulter and Others, Merchants in Glasgow, Insurers of the Ship Jean and her Cargo [1773] UKHL 2_Paton_297 (15 February 1773) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1773/2_Paton_297.html Cite as: [1773] UKHL 2_Paton_297 |
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Page: 297↓
(1773) 2 Paton 297
CASES DECIDED IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS, ON APPEAL FROM THE COURTS OF SCOTLAND.
(M. 7106.)
No. 74.
House of Lords,
Subject_Valued or Open Policy — Proof — Bill of Lading — Interest.—
Insurance for £1000, on ship and cargo, lost on her voyage from Virginia to Barbadoes. The son of the insured was master. The policy proceeded on false information of the value sent by the son to the insured, but without the latters knowledge. The Court of Session held, that the bill of lading was not good evidence of the value and quantities of goods. The question was, Whether he was entitled to recover the sum named in the policy, or the real value of the ship and cargo only. Held, reversing the judgment of the Court of Session, that be was entitled to recover the sum of £1000 named in the policy; also to recover interest thereon.
This question arose out of a policy of insurance effected on the ship Jean and her cargo, for the voyage from Virginia to the Barbadoes, in which the respondents were the insurers, the appellant the party having the insured interest.
The particulars of the case are fully detailed in a report of the case, which went to the House of Lords (Vide ante, p. 224.) The case was then remitted back to the Court of Session to dispose of the other points in the cause.
By interlocutors of 8th February and 21st June 1765, the Court found that the insurers were not bound to pay the sums at which the ship and cargo were insured, but only the real value, as the same might be ascertained, and finding the value of the ship to be £450. When the case came back from the House of Lords further discussion took place, on the point, whether it was an open or a valued policy?
Feb. 13, 1772.
Of this date, the Court pronounced this interlocutor:
“Find that the charger (appellant) is not entitled to recover from the suspenders (respondents) the £1000 Sterling specified in the policy, but only a sum equal to the damage he sustained by the loss of the ship Jean and her
Page: 298↓
cargo: Find, That in this circumstantiate cause, the bill of lading and invoice, which last is only signed by James M'Nair, cannot be admitted as good evidence, neither of the quantities nor value of the goods which were put on board said ship in Virginia: But find, That the quantities must be held to be as ascertained by the manifest of the naval officer, and the values ascertained by the oath of John Hood, by whom the goods were mostly furnished: Find the suspenders (respondents) are also liable to make good the value of the ship as formerly ascertained, expense of shipping the goods, and the freight thereof from Virginia to Barbadoes, and likewise the sums paid for the insurance: But find, That out of the sums aforesaid, the suspenders (respondents) are entitled to have deduction of £2 per cent., in terms of the policy, as also to have deduction of the value of the goods aboard the Jean which belonged to Mr. Smith, to the extent of £100 Sterling; and, in the last place, find the suspenders (respondents) liable for interest of the balance, after deducting as above, from the date of the decree of the Admiral Court, and remit to the Lord Ordinary to proceed accordingly.”
Against this interlocutor the present appeal was brought, and a cross-appeal brought, in so far as the interlocutor found the respondents liable for the value of the ship and cargo, with interest.
Pleaded for the Appellant.—That this is a valued policy of both ship and cargo, and under such a policy the insured was entitled to recover the whole sum (£1000) in the policy. A valued policy is one wherein the ship and cargo are valued at a particular sum, without any further account to be given, and upon such a policy, where the interest insured is admitted to have existed, so as to take it out of the meaning of the statute 19 Geo. II., the rule is, to take the quantum of that interest from the value expressed in the policy, without any other proof of the quantities and values of the goods. He is further entitled to insure a sum larger than the value of the cargo, to protect him from loss. This the appellant maintains as a general principle of law. But even if he were wrong in this, and any further proof of value than the policy affords were necessary, it is clear that the value of the ship, as ascertained by the interlocutors of 8th February and 21st June 1765, cannot be held to be her true value at the time she was lost; because, although James M'Nair paid £450 for her, it is proved at this time she required very considerable repairs, which cost £150. And in regard to the cargo, the kinds and quantities are fully proved by the bill of lading,
Page: 299↓
Pleaded for the Respondent.—1st. The policy in question cannot, by the law of Scotland, be considered a valued policy, which obliges the underwriters to pay the whole sum of £1000 mentioned in the policy; but only a policy, the claim under which is for the value of the ship and cargo insured, as the same might be ascertained. This latter rule of adjusting the claim between the insurer and insured, has been long recognized in Scotland, and is agreeable to the spirit and meaning of 19 Geo. II., as it effectually discourages the pernicious practice of effecting insurances for more interest than the insured has in the subject insured. In any view, the insurers are entitled to deduction of £23. 7s. as salvage for that part of the wreck saved, and also to 2 per cent. the deduction mentioned in the policy in case of loss. 2d. In regard to the cross-appeal, a policy of insurance is not a contract which carries interest for any sum which the underwriters may become liable to on account of a loss; they engage only to be liable for the loss itself, not for any interest for or upon such loss, as the policy cannot be placed on the same category with a bond, bill, or other security, which, upon the face of them, or by Jaw, carry interest; and there has never been any instance in the courts of Westminster where such interest has been allowed on a contested policy.
After hearing counsel this day upon the original appeal, complaining of certain parts of three interlocutors of the Lords of Session in Scotland of the 8th February 1765, the 21st June 1765, and the 18th of February 1772, it is
Ordered and adjudged that the interlocutors of 8th February and 21st of June 1765, in so far as they found the policy of insurance does not, in this case, oblige the insurers to pay the sum at which the ship and cargo were insured; and also the interlocutor of the 13th February 1772, in so far as it finds the appellant is not entitled to recover from the respondents the one thousand
Page: 300↓
Counsel: For Appellant,
Ja. Montgomery,
Al. Wedderburn.
For Respondents,
J. Dunning,
Fl. Norton.