Bella S. S. Co. v. Insurance Co. of North America

290 F. 992, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1577
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMay 23, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 290 F. 992 (Bella S. S. Co. v. Insurance Co. of North America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bella S. S. Co. v. Insurance Co. of North America, 290 F. 992, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1577 (D. Md. 1923).

Opinion

SOPER, District Judge

(directing verdict). Gentlemen of the jury,it is perhaps desirable that I say a word in explanation to you of the conclusion which the court has reached in this case, particularly as you have very patiently borne the burden of the case. You, of course, know that the suit is one on a policy of marine insurance, and that two defenses have been offered by the defendant. The first defense is that the vessel was scuttled. As I understand the authorities, there is evidence in this case legally sufficient to leave that matter to your determination, if it were the only thing in the case; that is to say, there is evidence upon which you might, in your discretion, find that the vessel was sunk from some peril of the sea. It is true, of-course, that the precise cause of the sinking of the vessel is not clear from the testimony. It, indeed, remains a mystery, according to the evidence, even to the owners and crew of the vessel; but that question would be submitted to you, if there were nothing else in the case. On the other hand, there is evidence legally sufficient upon which it would be possible for you to find that the vessel was sunk by the crew of the vessel with the knowledge or connivance of the management. As to whether or not the vessel was so sunk, it is not my duty to express an opinion, and I think it would be highly improper for me to do so either one way or the other.

There is, however, a second defense in this case, namely, that the policy was issued after certain false representations had been made by the owner to the insurance company. The legal question there involved is set out in the defendant’s second prayer, which it is my duty and obligation either to grant or to refuse, and so upon that matter I am obliged, as I see the law and the facts of this case, to ex[995]*995press an opinion. This prayer, which, after careful consideration I have concluded it is my duty to grant, is as follows:

“The defendant prays the court to instruct the jury that, it appearing by the uncontradicted evidence in this case that the policy sued on was issued by the defendant as the result of false representations material to the risk made to the defendant by the plaintiff, or on its behalf, the verdict of the jury must be for the defendant.”

Now the undisputed evidence in this case is that, when the question of issuing this policy was under consideration and before it was issued, the matter of the value of the steamship Bella was under specific consideration by the insurance company. When the brokers who represented the owner made application for the insurance which accompanied the letter of December 23, 1921, they stated in that letter:

“The vessel is engaged on a profitable charter in the fruit trade between the West Indies and the United States ports, principally Baltimore, and arrangements are already in progress for the renewal of the charter for another year.”

When the American Marine Insurance Syndicate received that letter, they were struck by the amount of insurance that was requested, the value of the vessel being $65,000 or $66,000. The insurance applied for was to be based on a valuation of $286,000. The underwriters, therefore, inquired why it was that so much insurance was requested and asked as to the value of the vessel. The conversation took place on December 27 between the agent of the underwriters and the agent of the owner, and it was stated to the underwriters that the vessel was deriving an income of approximately 6 per cent, on an investment of some $500,000, or an income, which must have been understood to be a net income, of $30,000 a year. That estimate, of course, could be based only on the year 1921, during which the vessel was being operated. Now, if this representation were true, it furnished a perfectly sensible reason why the owner desired insurance so much in excess of the market value of the vessel, because it would appear that, whatever the market value of the vessel was, it had a real substantial value in excess of the market value to the owner. If, on the other hand, the vessel was not being profitably operated, and if the representation then made was not true, but, on the contrary, was false, the underwriters were undertaking something in addition to the risk contemplated in the policy. They risked not only the loss of the vessel for the causes specified in the policy, but the additional risk that she might be destroyed in order to collect the insurance.

I have carefully considered and read the testimony which has been taken, and had the benefit of extended and careful arguments by counsel on both sides on this point. In my opinion the uncontradicted evidence shows that the representation that was made before the policy was issued was a false representation; it was not a correct statement of the facts as they existed at the time the representations were made, or at the time the policy was issued. When Mr. Gardner, who had the management of the vessel, was first on the stand, he testified clearly that the vessel did not make any money during 1921, and upon [996]*996being pressed further he stated that, as a matter of fact, it operated under a loss. That was the state of the testimony when the legal question now under discussion was first considered by the court and counsel in a session which was held for some three hours last Friday night. There was a considerable discussion as to the various figures that had been mentioned here, and what I am now expressing was then expressed in the presence of counsel; that it seemed to me that the effect of the testimony was that a false representation had been made. I further stated, however, that Mr. Gardner’s statements were somewhat general, and were not supported hy the detailed figures, which were or ought to be in his possession, viz. the records which constituted such books of account as were kept, and that it seemed a pity, after so much time had been taken up in this case, a case which might go to a higher court and might be followed by other similar cases on other policies, that all of the information in the possession of the owners should not be presented to the court.

Following that suggestion, the plaintiffs have attempted to produce the information suggested, and that attempt was made yesterday in your, presence by Mr. Gardner and Mr. Carozza and the other witnesses who were here. . They have produced the check stubs, bank book, canceled checks, and the receipted bills. There was some difficulty and embarrassment to the plaintiff by reason of the ruling of the court that the receipted bills were not evidence which ought to be considered. That embarrassment was more apparent than real, for the reason that the plaintiff was able to put in all of the figures, or substantially all of them, which he would have been able to produce had the bills been admitted, and in passing on this question I have considered that the-summary of the receipts and disbursements prepared by counsel for the plaintiff has been fully proved, just as if the bills were in. In other words, what counsel for the plaintiff tried to do was this: They took all of the disbursements as shown by the check book of the Bella Steamship Company, which amounted to the sum of $178,000, and then they endeavored to show that a large number of items, included in those disbursements were not properly there, because they were not expenses of the Bella, but constituted diversions — I do not mean improper diversions — but diversions of the funds of the Bella from the purposes of the steamship business to other purposes, such as cash to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
290 F. 992, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bella-s-s-co-v-insurance-co-of-north-america-mdd-1923.