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United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Messrs. Brown, Huson, Macgauley, and Co., Liverpool Merchants v. Alex. Smith and Others, Underwriters on the ship Friendship, and her Cargo [1813] UKHL 5_Paton_718 (2 June 1813)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1813/5_Paton_718.html
Cite as: [1813] UKHL 5_Paton_718

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SCOTTISH_HoL_JURY_COURT

Page: 718

(1813) 5 Paton 718

CASES DECIDED IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS, UPON APPEAL FROM THE COURTS OF SCOTLAND, FROM 1753 TO 1813.

No. 78


(Dow, i. p. 349.)

Messrs. Brown, Huson, Macgauley, and Co., Liverpool Merchants,     Appellants


v.

Alex. Smith and Others, Underwriters on the ship Friendship, and her Cargo,     Respondents

House of Lords, 2d June 1813.

Subject_Insurance —

Right to Abandon as for Total Loss.

Action was raised on a policy of insurance upon the ship Friendship, insured “to the port or ports of discharge, sale, and final destination in the British or Foreign West Indies and America,” which words, the appellants contended, in the case of a ship engaged in the slave trade, were customary, and understood to cover a voyage from port to port, in search of a market, till the object of the voyage is completed.

The vessel, in consequence of the mutiny of the crew who were guilty of piracy and murder, was taken possession of by them, and the object of the voyage was thereby defeated; but the boatswain and two others, who remained honest, pretending to gratify the mutinous part of the crew by steering for Cayenne, while they made direct for Barbadoes, on arrival there handed the ship and crew over to the government authorities.

The master, with seven of the crew, had been put on shore in the whale boat, but the master procured passages, first to St. Thomas, and then to Barbadoes, where he found the Friendship, with nothing but the hull and rigging of the ship remaining. The cargo and stores were here sold by the King's agent before his arrival; and he saw at once that the intended trade to the coast of Africa was thus defeated. The appellants gave notice that they intended to abandon as for a total loss. The ship was then sold for the insurers.

In an action before the Judge Admiral, he found the appellants entitled to their demand. Of this decree a suspension was brought to the Court of Session, in which they pleaded, as to the ship, that as she sustained no injury whatever, however much the cargo may have been damaged, and the trading voyage therewith defeated on the coast of Africa, yet as the vessel arrived at Barbadoes in a better condition

Page: 719

than when she set out, there were no grounds upon which the appellants were entitled to abandon the ship as for a total loss. 2. In addition to the plea that the ship was not lost, and could not be abandoned as lost, it was further maintained that though the appellants had been in a situation to abandon, yet that they had not abandoned tempestivè. Held in the Court of Session that the appellants were not entitled to abandon as for a total loss, and to recover accordingly. Reversed in the House of Lords, and ordered that the decree of the Court of Admiralty be affirmed, which decided that the appellants were entitled to abandon as for a total loss,—the object of the voyage being totally defeated.

Counsel: For the Appellants, V. Gibbs, J. A. Park.
For the Respondents, M. Nolan, Wm. Erskine.

1813


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1813/5_Paton_718.html