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Cite as: [1813] UKHL 1_Dow_324

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SCOTTISH_HoL_JURY_COURT

Page: 324

(1813) 1 Dow 324

REPORTS OF APPEAL CASES IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS During the Session, 1812–13. 53 Geo. III.

FROM SCOTLAND.

SCOTLAND.

APPEAL FORM THE COURT OF SESSION.

No. 30


Tennant and Others (Underwriters)     Appellants

v.

Henderson and Another (Merchants)     Respondents
Henderson and Another (Merchants)     Appellants

v.

Fettes and Others (Underwriters)     Respondents

May 31, 1813.

INSURANCE.

Insurance on a ship engaged in the African wood and ivory trade, without stating her co-operation with another ship. This mutual co-operation or trading proved to have occasionally prevailed in African voyages, but the usage not so complete as to render it unnecessary to communicate the fact expressly to the underwriters. Decided that this was a concealment of a material fact, and fatal to the policies.

This was a question between the assured and underwriters, arising upon certain policies of insurance, effected upon the ship Imperial and her cargo, engaged in the African trade.

Jan. 18, 1803. Letter—Henderson and Seller of Liverpool, to Messrs. Liddell, insurance-brokers, Leith.

The original order of the insurance was as follows:—

“Please effect 2,000 l. upon 5–6ths of the ship; the whole valued at 10,000 l., per the Imperial, Thomas Marshall, at and from Liverpool to the coast of Africa and the African islands, during her stay and trade there, and from thence back to Liverpool, with liberty to exchange goods with other ships; at 6 l. per cent. The Imperial was

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lately built at South Shields, originally intended for the service of the East India Company, is 530 tons register, copper-fastened, and copper sheathed up to the bends, and intended to sail in about a week. Upwards of 5,000 l. has been done on her on these terms to-day here. As your underwriters may not be accustomed to these risks, it may be necessary to say, that we purchase no slaves, nor does the ship go to the West Indies: we barter the produce and manufactures of this country for the produce of Africa, dyewood, ivory, bees-wax, palm-oil, &c.”

Insurances which were effected, Jan 21, 1803, on ship;

Upon the faith of this representation, insurance to the extent of 2,000 l, was, on the 21st of January, 1803, effected on the ship Imperial, “At and from Liverpool to the coast of Africa and the African islands, during her stay and trade there, and from thence back to Liverpool, with liberty to exchange goods with other ships.”

June 18, 1803, on cargo;

The next insurance made was upon the cargo. The policy was dated 18th June, 1803, and was in these terms:—

“At and from her arrival twenty-four hours at her first place of trade on the coast of Africa to Liverpool.”

also on cargo, Nov. 1, 1803.

A third policy, also on the cargo, was effected 1st November, 1803, “At and from Africa and the African islands to Liverpool.”

Order upon which this insurance was made, was dated Oct. 29, 1803.

The order upon which this insurance was made, was dated 29th October, and bore, that the Imperial “was left well at Old Calabar, on 12th June last, taking in her cargo, and was expected to leave the coast in all October.”

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Fourth policy, also on cargo, Nov. 26, 1803.

A fourth policy, upon the cargo, was entered into on 26th November, 1803, “At and from Africa and the African islands to Liverpool.”

The representation upon which this last policy was entered into, and which was inserted in the slip, stated, “ By advices, the Imperial is supposed that she would leave Africa about this time, and in July last she was described a new ship, copper-fastened, and coppered to the bends, and had six six-pounders and thirty-five people.”

Plan of the voyage. Mutual trading by the George and Imperial, both belonging to the same parties.

The fact of the mutual trading not communicated to the underwriters.

It appeared that, according to a plan occasionally adopted in the African trade, the owners of the Imperial had, in October, 1802, sent out the George, a smaller vessel, to take a cargo for herself, and also contract for one for the Imperial. The George, pursuant to the instructions to the Master, proceeded to Gaboon, took in some barwood, contracted for more for the Imperial, which was expected to arrive in two months after, and then proceeded to the Cameroons and to Calabar, where she took in ivory, palm-oil, &c. The Imperial sailed in January, 1803, and, according to instructions, proceeded to Gaboon, where she took in a certain quantity of barwood and ivory, with which she proceeded to Calabar, where she met the George, on board which she put all her ivory and spare barwood, and received from the George all that remained of her outward cargo (the African trade being carried on by barter only) and superfluous stores; the object being, by means of the exertions of both ships, to dispatch the George with a full cargo, before the Imperial began to trade on her own account.

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This fact of the mutual or combined trading was not communicated to the underwriters, and the concealment, it was contended, was of a material fact, since the risk was varied and increased by the consequent protracted stay of the ship in that pestilential climate, &c.

The Imperial captured.

The Imperial, after having nearly completed her cargo, was, on the 14th of February, 1804, captured by a French privateer.

1st Cause. Underwriters refuse to settle loss, and actions by the assured.

Judge Admiral pronounces in favour of the assured.

The underwriters in Scotland having refused to settle the loss, actions were raised against them in the Court of Admiralty; one on the ship policy, and others on the three cargo policies, which last were conjoined by the Judge Admiral, who, in all the actions, pronounced in favour of the assured. The underwriters then carried the matter into the Court of Session, by two bills of suspension, which the Lord Ordinary conjoined, the question on all the policies being the same.

Underwriters ordered to give in a condescendance. Allegation that the ship dealt in slaves.

Underwriters not then aware of the mutual trading.

Feb. 10, 1807. Averment, that the ship dealt in slaves, not proved. First cause decided in favour of the assured.

The underwriters having been directed by the Lord Ordinary to give in a condescendance of the particulars on which they relied, they insisted chiefly upon this, that the ship did traffic in slaves, which was contrary to the representation; and that the Imperial was not entered at the Custom-House in terms of the 39th Geo. 3. cap. 80, sect. 1, for entitling her to trade in slaves. The underwriters did not, at this time, appear to be aware of the fact of the combined or mutual trading. The Lord Ordinary then ordered the Chargers (assured) to produce, upon oath, the instructions to the Captains of the Imperial and George, and the

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correspondence between them, with excerpts from entries in their books, as far as these documents related to the point of trafficking in slaves. These having been accordingly produced, the Lord Ordinary prononounced an interlocutor, “finding that the Suspenders' (underwriters) averment, that the ship Imperial had been employed in the slave-trade during the course of the voyage insured was not only not proved, but was clearly disproved.” The underwriters, after representation to the Lord Ordinary, reclaimed to the whole Court; the interlocutors reclaimed against were adhered to, and the underwriters thereupon appealed.

2d Cause. Fact of mutual trading discovered. Suspension by the underwriters.

Dec. 12, 1809.

Jan. 17, 1811. Judgment of Lord Meadowbank, respecting the mutual trading.

The combined trading having been discovered by the production of the documents mentioned in the above cause, some of the underwriters, in the mean time, presented a bill of suspension against a threatened charge under the policies. This new cause came to be discussed before Lord Meadowbank, as Ordinary. His Lordship, after some previous proceedings, pronounced an interlocutor, “allowing the Chargers to prove that, according to the understanding of those engaged in the African trade, liberty to exchange goods with other ships, imports a liberty not only to barter and sell, but to aid another ship in providing her speedily with a homeward cargo, without regard to any proportion between the goods so delivered or received; and allows them a proof of all facts and circumstances relative thereto; allows the Suspenders a conjunct probation.” And on advising the proof with the whole case, this interlocutor was

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pronounced:

“Having resumed consideration of these conjoined processes, and advised the proof, productions, and debate, finds, that the privilege specified in the different policies of insurance, with liberty to exchange goods with any other ship or ships; or, with liberty to exchange goods with every vessel or vessels; does not, in common language, and without a peculiar conventional meaning, import a liberty to exchange goods, without regard to observing any proportion in bulk or value between the goods so exchanged; and still less, that the exchange may be so conducted by the vessels insured, as that it should retard the completing of her own cargo, and protract her own stay in the seas where it is to be completed, and in order to hasten the accomplishment of the voyage of other vessels, or another vessel, and her or their speedy dispatch with a competent cargo; and as the risks of sea hazard are increased beyond an arithmetical proportion, by the prolongation of the adventure, particularly in the business of a coasting voyage to complete a cargo, so enlarged a construction of the privilege is more difficult to be entertained, where nothing appears in the rate of insurance stipulated between the parties, indicating that such an eventual augmentation of risk was in contemplation: finds it nevertheless proved, that the enlarged construction of the privilege contended for by the Chargers, was adopted by a great number of the dealers and underwriters in the African trade, but not uniformly in point of extent of such construction, and not universally in any extent even at Liverpool:

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and, amidst this diversity of sentiments, being, on the whole, of opinion, that in applying for insurance at such an out-port as that of Leith, it was the duty of the assured not to rely on a conventional meaning so adverse to the natural meaning, and attended with so much difficulty, while not established with absolute universality among all versant in the trade, but to disclose the retardment and increase of risk that might be expected from the privilege stipulated; suspends the letters simpliciter, and decerns; but believing the chargers, individually, may have proceeded bona fide, though on somewhat too great confidence in their own practice, finds no expences due, and decerns.”

Note of Lord Ordinary.

The Lord Ordinary, upon representation, adhered to his interlocutors, and gave the parties the following note of the ground of his decision:—

“I certainly proceeded, in pronouncing the interlocutor, on the opinion, that the long stay of the Imperial, for so many months on the coast, was not at all accounted for, but from her sub-serviency to the George; and if the Chargers reclaim, this seems to me essential to be obviated.”

The assured reclaimed to the second division of the Court, but without effect, and then appealed.

The reasons on which the underwriters rested their case in both appeals, as well in the former, in which they were Appellants, as in the latter, in which they were Respondents, were these:—

Grounds on which the underwriters rested their case in both appeals.

1st, That the Imperial had been employed as a floating warehouse, or tender, to the George, a fact which had not been communicated to the

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underwriters, though it materially varied the risk; and the case of Hartley v. Buggen, where it had been determined that any unnecessary delay was equivalent to a deviation; and that of Lever v. Fletcher, to the same effect, were cited.

Marshall 405. Park 313. Marshall 54. Park 237.

2d, The representation that 5,000 l. had been done upon the ship at Liverpool, on the day then mentioned, was groundless; and that, in fact, only 1,000 l. had been on that day underwritten on her.

Marshall 319. 7 T. R. 705.

Marshall 386. 7 T. R. 186.

3d, It was represented that the Imperial did not traffic in slaves; whereas she did actually deal in slaves, without being regularly entered as a slave-ship, so that the voyage was illegal; or, at least, the vessel, even by having forfeited pawns on board, was liable to seizure and detention, and the policy was thereby void, upon the principle which governed the decision in Rich v. Parker, and Farmer v. Legg.

4th, The misrepresentation relative to the ship had a reference to the policies on the cargo, and rendered them also void.

Park 182. Marshall 320. 7 T. R. 705. Cam. N P. C. 530.

5th and 6th, The representations on which the policies of the 1st and 26th of November, 1803, were effected, were known to the owners, at the time, to be false in several particulars, as to the state of the vessel, the time of her expected arrival, and the number of men on board, &c.; and the policies were therefore clearly void, upon the principles laid down by Lord Mansfield, in Fillis v. Brutton; by Lord Kenyon, in Rich v. Parker; and by Lord Ellenborough, in Edwards v. Portner.

The mutual trading chiefly relied on by the underwriters.

Carter v. Bohem. 3 Bur. 1905.

Plauchs v. Fletcher. Doug. 238.

7 East. 402.

The only point which appeared to be much relied upon, however, was that of the Imperial acting as

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a tender to the George, and the consequent protracted stay of the former on the coast. The answer of the assured to this was, that the George, by contracting for a cargo for the Imperial, so long before the arrival of the latter, had, in reality, co-operated with, and assisted her, and, on the whole, accelerated rather than retarded the completion of her voyage. That this mutual co-operation was common in the African trade, and that this was, or ought to have been, known to the underwriters. The nature of the African trade consisting in barter sufficiently accounted for the length of time occupied by the Imperial in her voyage, without referring her protracted stay to her subserviency to the George. ( Freeland v. Glover.)

The two appeals came on to be heard on the same day, beginning with that of Tennant, &c. v. Henderson.

1st Cause. (Proceedings on appeal.)

Mr. Nolan (for the Appellants) was proceeding to argue on the ground of the mutual trading, when he was interrupted by

Objection, in point of form, to the argument on the ground of the mutual trading, as applied to the first cause.

The Lord Chancellor, who observed, that this and several other points were introduced into the case without being in the original papers. The point relied upon by the underwriters in their condescendance in the present cause, as far as he could understand from the papers, (the condescendance itself not being produced,) was the trafficking in slaves. The new ground of the mutual trading was afterwards discovered; but instead of bringing this before the Lord Ordinary by a

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new condescendance, they went on with the cause. before the whole Court, who decided against them possibly upon the ground, that by their practice the Court could not take notice of the mutual trading, because it was not a point stated in the original condescendance. If such was the fact and the rule, the Counsel must now likewise confine themselves within the limits of the condescendance, and argue the case on the ground of dealing in slaves.

[The further hearing of both causes was post-poned till the condescendance should be produced.]

June 21, 1813. Proceedings on appeal in 2d cause.

The first cause was not further proceeded in at the bar, but this day (June 21st) the second cause came on to be heard, in which the mutual trading was established.

Mr. Park, for the Appellants, (assured,) was proceeding to argue, that it was probable the underwriters knew of the usage of mutual trading in the African trade, though it was not communicated in express words.

Lord Chancellor. Then you must prove the usage as a fact.

Mr. Park. I was going to say that the voyage was not protracted by the mutual trading.

Lord Chancellor. It don't signify what the result was, if there was a deviation from the contract.

Mr. Park admitted that the usage was not proved as a fact. ( Vide Interlocutor of Lord Meadowbank.)

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Lord Chancellor. Then you have no case at all.

2nd Cause. Judgment of the Court below, in favour of the underwriters, affirmed.

The judgment of the Court below, in the second cause, in favour of the underwriters, was accordingly affirmed.

July 20, 1813. Observations and Judgment in 1st cause, (underwriters Appellants,) referring to 2d cause.

Ground of the judgment in the 2d cause.

Lord Eldon, (Chancellor,) after stating the case. The question was, Whether, under all the circumstances, the underwriters were liable to pay. Their Lordships were of opinion in the other cause that they were not liable, and on this ground, that it appeared in evidence that the Imperial had been employed not only in procuring a cargo for herself, but also in finding a cargo for the George. This was unknown to the underwriters, and it was hardly contested at the bar, (indeed it could not,) but that this altered the nature of the voyage. If there had been nothing more than the usual exchanges in such a voyage, that would have raised a different question. But when two ships, belonging to the same parties, the George, and Imperial, were sent out, and the Imperial was employed not only in providing her own cargo, but that of the George also, the risk was altered, and therefore the decision of the Court below, in favour of the underwriters, was affirmed.

Objection, in point of form, in the 1st cause.

The decision of the Court of Session in the 1st cause, in favour of the assured, wrong, if they had in view the mutual trading; but if practice prevented their looking at that point, as not regularly brought before them, then their decision was right. Certificates as to the point of practice.

In the other cause an objection of this sort arose. The Lord Ordinary had directed the underwriters to give in a condescendance of the facts and circumstances upon which they rested their non-liability to pay; and this fact of the mutual trading was not one of those offered to be given in evidence. It

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was, however, established in the proof; but instead of stating this new ground to the Lord Ordinary, they submitted the cause at once to the whole Court, and the Court thought they were liable, either upon the whole merits of the case, or because the new point not having been regularly brought before the Lord Ordinary, they could not take notice of it; but on which of these views of the case they had decided their Lordships did not know. Their Lordships (as appeared from the judgment given in the other cause) thought the Court of Session was wrong, if it meant to say that the mutual trading did not vary the risk; but if their practice did not permit them to look at the new ground which had not been regularly brought before the Lord Ordinary, then the practice precluded the law, and there appeared no good ground to quarrel with their decision.

In order to show how the practice stood in this respect, certificates had been given in, stating that, under the circumstances of the case in question, it was competent to the Court to have taken the whole merits into consideration. These certificates were defective in this, however, that the fact did not appear to have been stated to the persons who signed them, that the Lord Ordinary had required this condescendance. The most proper mode of proceeding would therefore be, to remit the cause to the Court below for review. It would be seen from the judgment in the other cause, that their Lordships differed from the conclusion of the Judges below, if they had decided on the merits, and the judgment would of course be altered; but if they

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had decided on the point of form, then the judgment must remain as it was.

Ordered and adjudged, that the cause be remitted to the Court of Session, to review the interlocutors complained of.

Solicitors: Agent for the Assured, Chalmer.

Agent for the Underwriters, Mundell.

1813


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