
    Willard Peele et al. versus The Suffolk Insurance Company.
    
    Where the assured in a policy upon a ship, which is stranded and greatly damaged, offers to abandon her to the insurer and refuses to repair her, it seems that the insurer may take possession of her and repair her, and if the repairs are made for less than half her value, may restore her to the assured j but unless the repairs are made within a reasonable time, the insurer forfeits his right to return her, and must be considered as having accepted the abandonment.
    In determining the amount of damage caused by the perils of the seas to a ship insured, it seems the jury will not be justified in adding to the expenses of repairs a sum 6< for damage of leak and straining of the vessel.”
    This was an action for a total loss, upon a policy of insurance, dated December 6, 1820, upon the ship Argonaut, at and from Leghorn to her port of discharge in the United States. The ship was valued in the policy at 12,000 dollars. The cause was tried before Putnam J., upon the general issue.
    It appeared, that in the prosecution of her voyage, the ship was driven upon the rocks at Gerrish’s Island, near Portsmouth, on the 24th of March, 1821, and received great damage. While she lay there an offer to abandon was seasonably made on the 26th of March. The defendants caused the vessel to be taken from the rocks, and having made certain repairs upon her, offered to restore her to the plaintiffs.
    The plaintiffs contended, that the vessel had not been sufficiently repaired, nor within a reasonable time, and that the expense of the repairs made, and of those still necessary, would exceed fifty per cent of her value. All this was controverted by the defendants, and they contended that if there had been some unnecessary delay, it could not change a partial into a total loss.
    
      Nov. 5th.
    
    The jury were instructed, among other things, that if there had been an unnecessary delay in making the repairs, they must find for the plaintiffs as for a total loss.
    The jury agreed that the abandonment was justifiable and duly made ; that the repairs were insufficient; that the expense and damage exceeded fifty per cent of the sum named in the policy, and that there had been an unnecessary delay in repairing the ship ; they therefore found a verdict for the plaintiffs.
    In an estimate returned by the jury, of the expenses and damage, amounting to 6191 dollars, was one item of 1500 dollars, for “ damage of leak and straining of vessel not otherwise provided for.”
    Several other points not necessary to be stated, were made at the trial, and argued before the whole Court. The defendants moved for a new trial on account of the directions which were given to the jury.
    The case was argued by Saltonstall, for the defendants, and by Mason (of New Hampshire) and Nichols, for the plaintiffs.
    For the defendants it was contended, that they had a right, upon the offer of an abandonment, to take possession of the vessel in order to ascertain whether the loss was total or not, and if not total, to repair her and restore her to the plaintiffs. Weskett, 7, § 22 ; Wood v. Line. and Ken. Ins. Co. 6 Mass. R. 479 ; Ritchie v. U. S. Ins. Co. 5 Serg. & Rawle, 509, Hart v. Del. Ins. Co. Condy’s Marshall, 281 a, note, 562, note. If the right of abandonment had not vested when the offer was made, the delay gave no validity to the abandonment. The plaintiffs, if they wished to avail themselves of the delay, should have made a new abandonment for that cause. Suydam v. Mar. Ins. Co. 1 Johns. R. 181; Brown v. Smith, 1 Dow, 349 ; Smith v. Robertson, 2 Dow, 482.
    
      On the other side it was insisted, that the insurer has no right to make repairs himself, without the consent of the assured, and that the defendants, by taking possession of this vessel, had by implication accepted the abandonment. Peele et al. v. Merchants Ins. Co. 3 Mason, 27.
    
      
       See an elaborate ease on another policy upon the same vessel and voy. age, reported in 3 Mason, 87, Peele et al. v. Merchants Ins. Company.
      
    
   The opinion of the Court was afterward drawn up by

Parker C. J.

Considering the unfortunate and somewhat singular course of the controversy upon this policy, and the accumulated loss which must inevitably fall upon the unsuccessful party, we regret being obliged to decide it upon narrower grounds than the course of the argument and the expectations of the parties would seem to require. But the jury having specifically returned one fact as found by them, and there being no report of the evidence, or motion to set aside the verdict as against evidence, in regard to that fact, we think it decisive of the cause ; and whatever might be our opinions upon several other points which may have been raised at the trial, or adjudicated upon in another court, we should be obliged, at last, to settle ourselves down upon this point, and therefore it will not be useful to speculate upon the others.

The mode of computation taken by the jury to raise the expense of repairing up to fifty per cent of the value of the vessel, particularly in assuming a large sum arbitrarily, for the straining and weakening of the ship, after all expenses of repairs were allowed, is of very questionable character, and has been expressly disavowed in the respectable court of a neighbouring State. Sage v. Middletown Ins. Co. 1 Connect. R. 239. Indeed we cannot but think there has been a straining of the cause, as well as of the vessel, in order to charge the underwriter ; but of this, for the reason before given, we say no more.

That the ship, at the time of the offer to abandon, was in a state of peril to justify that offer, cannot be doubted. She was upon the rocks, and whether she could be got off or not was altogether uncertain. Subsequent events must determine whether the loss was then total or not.

. The mete stranding, however perilous, is not of itself a total loss, for the vessel may be relieved and the damage may be small. The assured may, if he please, take measures to get her off, and repair her at the expense of the underwriter in the form of a partial loss, or he may leave her to her fate, trusting to the proof that may entitle him to insist upon his abandonment and indemnity as for a total loss. The underwriter is not, in such circumstances, obliged to accept the offer to abandon ; he also may take the chance of the facts as they may appear, and he may, we think, though this right has been questioned, take her into his possession and repair her, the assured refusing to do it, and if he can do this at an expense less than half her value, he may restore her to the assured,, and thus avoid paying for a total loss. It is asked, who has the property of the vessel, and the risk in case she be destroyed by some cause not within the policy. We say the assured, if it turn out that the loss from the peril insured against was not total.

But the underwriter has his duties, as well as his rights ; if he take the vessel into his possession to repair her, he must do it as expeditiously as possible, in order that the voyage, if it be not completed, may not be destroyed. If he delay the repairs beyond a reasonable time, he forfeits his right to return the ship, and must be considered as taking her to himself under the offer to abandon. This principle cannot well be contested; without it, the underwriter may keep the assured entirely uncertain in regard to his rights and interests, and put his property in jeopardy. The right of the insurer to take into his custody the vessel of the assured without his consent, except under the abandonment, cannot exist without the correlative duty to keep her as short a time as possible under the circumstances in which she may ne placed.

There are no authorities upon this point, nor indeed upon the right of the insurer to take the vessel in order to repair her ; but the principle rests upon the very nature of the law of m surance) which is a fair and honest indemnity for loss.

Now the jury have in this case explicitly found, that the vessel was not repaired and offered to be restored in a reasonable time ; that is, that the underwriter kept her from the assured longer than was necessary to put her in a navigable state so that she could perform her voyage, or be as safe and sound as she was before her state of peril. We know not the evidence by which they came to this conclusion, but it being in legal contemplation the fact, we think thereby they made the vessel their own by a constructive acceptance of the abandonment.

If we were to decide otherwise, we should declare the law to he, that when a vessel has incurred a peril which justifies an offer to abandon, the underwriter may take her into his possession and keep her as long as he pleases, and then restore her and avoid paying a total loss ; which cannot be the law 
      
       Imminent danger of a total loss is no ground for an abandonment. Thus if a ship, being damaged, is abandoned on her way to a port to repair, the abandonment will be void, if the vessel arrives and is repaired for less than half her value. Hall v. Franklin Ins. Co. 9 Pick. 466.
     
      
       The submersion of a ship insured, is or is not a total loss, according to the circumstances. Sewallv. United States Ins. Co. 11 Pick. 90.
     
      
       See 2 Phillips on Ins. 321; Commonwealh Ins. Co. v. Chase, 20 Pick. 142.
     