American Ins. Co. v. Pickering Lumber Corporation

87 F. Supp. 512, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2062
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedDecember 23, 1949
Docket27299-H
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 87 F. Supp. 512 (American Ins. Co. v. Pickering Lumber Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Ins. Co. v. Pickering Lumber Corporation, 87 F. Supp. 512, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2062 (N.D. Cal. 1949).

Opinion

ERSKINE, District Judge.

In determining the issues involved herein several considerations should be borne in mind:

1. That there is no claim that the referees appointed to make the appraisal or arbitration were guilty of any fraud, actual or constructive, misconduct, bias, or partiality; or, that they did not attempt to be fair and equitable and do full justice in the task assigned to them; or that they lacked competence or sufficient qualifications to deal with the complexities involved in such task. It is clear from the record that they were well qualified and competent to undertake this work.

■ 2. That the award made was not only joined in but advocated by the referee appointed by the defendant.

3. That the presumption is that the decision and award of the referees was correct and valid.

4. That the proof of loss filed by the defendant claimed a loss in excess of $742,000 and set forth numerous items, only five of which are involved in this action, none of which five exceeds 7% of the claim involved, and the total of which does not exceed 15% of the total claim.

5. That each of the parties was given a full and fair opportunity to present, and did in fact present, to such referees all the evidence, views, and arguments deemed relevant on all disputed points.

6. That not every disputed item was determined by the referees in favor of the insurers, the plaintiffs herein. While they decided against the assured on several of the disputed items in the proof of loss, which decisions the assured here claims vitiate the award, the referees at the same time decided in favor of the assured on several additional disputed items.

Bearing these considerations in mind, it is necessary to set forth the items which defendant claims were erroneously or inadequately decided by the referees, thereby vitiating the award. These claims are as follows:

I. That the referees, in determining the profit from the box factory operations, carried on during the loss period for the purpose of reducing the loss to the extent of such profit, as required by paragraph 10 of the policies, costed the lumber used in such operations at OPA ceiling prices, and that this was an error of law and of good accounting practice. (Defendant claims that this alleged error reduced the award to which it is entitled by $73,000, but the evidence tends to show that the difference between the figure claimed by defendant and that reached by the referees was approximately $49,000, after adjustment for expense items not claimed by defendant);

*514 II. That the referees compromised, at the sum of $25,000, defendant’s claimed losses (a) for excessive logging cost, (b) for log depreciation, and (c) for increased cost of yard and mill operations, including decking; and

III. That in fixing the “annual value”, a necessary element in the computation of recoverable loss under the policy, the referees erred in including depreciation on the destroyed saw mill for the year following its destruction, thereby reducing the award to which the defendant was entitled by the sum of approximately $8,000.

The basis for defendant’s contention that these alleged mistakes of the referees invalidated the award is (a) that this was an appraisement and not an arbitration, (b) that as appraisers the referees could not determine questions of law or construe the terms of the policy, and (c) that in the decisions on the disputed issues they erroneously determined questions of law, erroneously construed the terms of the policy, acted outside the scope of the submission, and failed to pass upon matters included in the submission to them.

In discussing these three disputed items I do not believe it necessary to determine whether the reference was an appraisal or an arbitration. The policies under consideration covered the actual loss sustained by the insured by reason of the total or partial suspension of business caused by fire, consisting of the net profits of the business thereby prevented and fixed charges and expenses to the extent they would have been earned had no fire occurred. These policies provided in general that the loss should be reduced by profits earned during a total or partial resumption of business.

These policies were different from the usual fire polices which cover the value of property destroyed by fire. Under the latter type of policy, it is merely the duty of appraisers or arbitrators to determine that value, which is generally purely a question of fact. Under the policies in question, if a reference were required, the referees were of necessity to determine the profits made by the partial resumption of operations and the fixed charges and expenses; if questions of accountancy or of law were implicit in or incidental to such determination it was the clear intent of the provisions for reference in said policies that the referees should make such determinations, whether they were appraisers or arbitrators.

I.

Costing Lumber Used in Box Factory Operations at O.P.A. Ceiling Prices.

At the time of the fire defendant owned and operated a large lumber manufacturing plant consisting of a saw mill, planing mill, dry kilns, box factory and similar structures, and owned and operated extensive forests in connection with said plant and for the supply of logs thereto. The operations consisted of felling the trees, bringing the logs to the mill, and putting them through the saw mill, thereby producing different grades of lumber, some of which were sold, some of which were run through the box factory, and some of which were put through other processes. At the time of the fire there were on hand at the mill site milled lumber and logs. There were also felled logs in the forest. After the fire the defendant continued to fell logs, bring them in from the forest, and put them in the mill pond. When the pond was filled, any additional logs were decked. Some of the milled lumber on hand was damaged by the fire. Some of the remainder on hand was apparently processed through the box factory, and some was apparently sold as lumber. The lumber processed through the box factory consisted of 8,828,644 board feet. The source of this lumber was 11,814,000 board feet produced from the latest operations of the saw mill immediately preceding the fire and 3,619,000 board feet taken from the inventory existing on March 31, 1945. In determining the cost of this lumber that was put through the box factory operations, the defendant computed a cost of $39.86 per M, which it describes as average or true cost; in general this was computed by taking all of the lumber from which this 8,828,644 board feet were -taken and dividing it by the cost of production including administration and overhead costs allocated to its production, thereby obtaining the average cost, regard *515 less of grade, of $39.86 per thousand board feet. The defendant contends that its entire operation was an integrated whole, and since no profit would be realized until the box shook produced by the box factory was sold, which was done, this was the only method of costing the lumber into the box factory to determine the profit realized by its operations.

The insurers contend and the referees agreed that such average cost was an improper method of costing the lumber into the box factory and did not conform to general theory and practice of accountancy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 F. Supp. 512, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-ins-co-v-pickering-lumber-corporation-cand-1949.