
    Case No. 8,028.
    LAMBERT et al. v. SMITH et al.
    [1 Cranch, C. C. 361.] 1
    Circuit Court, District of Columbia.
    Nov. Term, 1806.
    Evidence — Marine Insurance — Admissions of Underwriters — Payment by Another upon Same Risk — Conclusiveness of Foreign Sentence-Proof of Appeal Prosecuted.
    1. The admissions of one of several underwriters upon the same policy, cannot be given in evidence against another underwriter: nor the admissions of a committee of the company, not authorized by the articles of association to make admissions.
    2. Nor can evidence be given by tbe plaintiff that another insurance company, or other underwriters on the same policy, have paid upon the same risk.
    3. If one party alleges that the other agreed to receive certain papers in evidence, and the fact of such agreement be contested, the court will not hear affidavits to prove the agreement, and will reject the evidence, if it be incompetent.
    4. The sentence and proceedings of a foreign court of vice-admiralty, condemning the goods as enemy property, are not conclusive evidence of that fact, in a suit upon a policy of insurance. But it is competent and prima facie, although not, in itself, sufficient evidence to prove that fact.
    5. The sentence may be invalidated by the evidence contained in the record of the proceedings.
    G. The prayer of an appeal, and the order granting it upon terms, is not evidence that the terms were complied with, or that the appeal was prosecuted.
    Assumpsit [by Lambert & Co.] on a policy on goods on board the brig Celia, from Alexandria to Bourdeaux, and at and from thence to St. Bartholomews, with leave to attempt to get into Guadaloupe; but if, in attempting to get in, they should be warned off, and register indorsed, they should desist from any further attempt. Interest averred to amount of §6,000, at 30 per cent, premium, 25 per cent, to be deducted, if lost on the voyage to Bourdeaux; captured by the British, and lost to the insured. Arrived at Bourdeaux, took there a cargo, and was captured near Guadaloupe, and condemned in the vice-admiralty court in Antigua. The plaintiffs offered parol evidence of conversations with other underwriters than the defendants, on the same policy, and produced the articles of association.
    C. Lee, for plaintiffs.
    A conversation between tbe committee and the insured, is tantamount to a conversation between tbe plaintiffs and the defendants. A paper admitted by the committee, is as if admitted by tbe defendants. An application was made to tbe committee to settle this loss. Shall we not give in evidence what passed between tbe committee and tbe agent of tbe plaintiffs? By tbe articles, the company is to meet every day. The committee are to examine and report upon claims to the company, who are to consider tbe same, and if a majority agree that the claim is just, they are to give their notes, &c. Tlie committee are tlie only means of communication between the plaintiffs and tbe company. When tbe company meet, tbe insured are excluded. The receiving of tbe plaintiffs’ papers by the committee for consideration and report, is an admission of the vei.cy of those papers. By article 9, they agree to submit to the decision of any one suit. The plaintiffs, therefore, may give in evidence, in this suit, the acknowledgment of any one of the underwriters — a fortiori the acknowledgments of the committee, the agents of the whole. If all are to be bound by this suit, then the declarations of [Alexander] Smith & Son (the defendants) would bind all.
    C. Simms, for defendants.
    The acts of the committee cannot hind the defendants further than they are authorized by the ar-tides of the association to bind them. A majority of all the underwriters only can hind an absent member. Although they have bound themselves to abide the event of one suit, yet it does not follow that they are all to be bound by the acknowledgments of any one. The plaintiffs may select the strongest case in their favor. The defendants have only agreed to take the risk of an acknowledgment of this one underwriter.
   THE COURT

(DUCKETT, Circuit Judge, not having heard the whole argument, declined giving an opinion)

was of opinion, that no acknowledgment by the committee of the authenticity of papers, can be given in evidence against the defendants, unless the defendants were present, and did not deny it. The committee were special agents of the defendants, for .limited purposes, and could only bind the defendants to the extent of their powers.

The plaintiffs offered to prove, that another insurance office had paid upon the same risk.

Refused by THE COURT, nem. con.

The plaintiffs then offered to prove, that other underwriters upon the same policy, had paid their proportions.

Refused, nem. con.

Mr. Youngs, for defendants, objected to evidence being given of a demand made on the committee, or of the time when the claim was made to the committee.

THE COURT, without hearing a reply, said there was no doubt that it was competent for the plaintiffs to give that evidence. • •

The defendants offered to read the record of the proceedings of' the vice-admiralty court of Antigua. The plaintiffs contended, that a certain affidavit annexed to that record, should be read also. The defendants objected to all but the record. The plaintiffs then objected to the authentication of the record. The defendants’ counsel offered to make affidavit, that it was agreed between him, as counsel for the defendants, and H. K. May, as agent of the plaintiffs, that the record should be used on the trial.

But THE COURT refused to hear such affidavit. and said that they could not admit, as evidence, what was not evidence, unless the agreement was in writing at the time, and entered upon the record. It would require that the court should decide the fact, whether there was such an agreement, and if they heard affidavits on one side, they must on the other, and there would be no end to the investigation. The parties, however, agreed to admit the record without The affidavit annexed.

Mr. Jones, for defendants, prayed the instruction of the court, <&e., that the sentence of condemnation as enemy property was conclusive.

But THE COURT decided: 1. That the seiiTence and proceedings in The admiralty were not conclusive evidence that the property was not American. 2. That it was not sufficient, but was competent evidence that it was not the property of American citizens. 3. That it is prima facie evidence of that fact. 4. That it is competent for the plaintiffs to adduce the evidence and testimony, as it is stated in the record of the proceedings of the vice-admiralty court, to invalidate the sentence. 5. That the prayer of appeal, and the order granting it upon the usual terms, were not evidence that the appeal was prosecuted, or that those terms had been complied with.  