Century Ins. Co. v. First Nat. Bank

133 F.2d 789, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3896
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 17, 1943
DocketNo. 10248
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 133 F.2d 789 (Century Ins. Co. v. First Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Century Ins. Co. v. First Nat. Bank, 133 F.2d 789, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3896 (5th Cir. 1943).

Opinion

HOLMES, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from a judgment for appellee upon two policies of fire insurance on 2438 bales of cotton pledged to appellee to secure a loan of money. Both policies were taken out by the bank as additional insurance, the cotton being primarily insured by the owner of the warehouse in which it was stored.

In event of the destruction of the cotton by fire, one of the policies sued on (known as the difference-in-value policy) bound appellant to pay the bank the difference between the loan value plus accrued charges and interest and the actual market value, where lower, of the cotton pledged as security. The other (known as the errors- and-omissions policy) insured the bank against damage by fire to the insured’s interest in the cotton resulting from “errors and/or omissions” in effecting sufficient specific insurance.

The appellant contends that both of said policies are invalid because appellee took out other insurance with the Hartford Fire Insurance Company covering the same property. We think this defense is without merit, since the letter of October 5, 1937, written by appellee to the Commodity Credit Corporation, did not complete a contract of insurance with the Hartford Company, but merely requested information regarding insurance that the writer desired to obtain. No other attack is made upon the validity of said policies, and the remaining issues relate solely to the method of arriving at the amount due appellee by appellant.

On October 7, 1937, a fire occurred which destroyed the above 2,438 bales and other cotton in the same warehouse, aggregating about 4,000 bales. The warehouseman held a policy of insurance that covered all of the cotton stored in the building burned. This policy on its face was for $125,000 less the amount of unpaid premiums due thereon. The policy was for the protection of the warehouseman’s interest in the cotton as well as that of all owners and pledgees thereof. The warehouseman’s interest was a lien thereon to secure accrued charges, which admittedly amounted to $723.82 at the time of the fire. The bank also had a lien on the cotton for its debt, which was subordinate to the warehouseman’s lien. When the cotton was destroyed the liens thereon, by operation of law, were transferred to the insurance proceeds and the bank’s lien remained subordinate to that of the warehouseman. We so held in a prior case involving this same fund.1 Nevertheless, it indisputably appears that the trustee in bankruptcy was not paid [791]*791the warehouse charges out of said fund, and that no part of the trustee’s interest in the fund was distributed to the bank.

The insurer admits that the warehouse charges have not been paid, and argues that they cannot be recovered in this suit. The argument would have the insurer escape payment of this item altogether, although expressly covered by the difference-in-value policy. It does not appear why the trustee was not permitted to recover the warehouse charges in the suit on the. primary policy, but it does appear that in distributing the primary insurance fund there was deducted from the payment otherwise due appellee an amount in excess of the total of these charges. Of course there may be only one recovery of this item, but there has been none at this time. It is not a prequisite to recovery that the charges should have been paid by any one. The important thing is that the insurer, which is expressly liable for them, has not paid them. The difference-in-value policy insured against the difference between two sums, the greater of which included accrued warehouse charges. In other words, warehouse charges, like loan value and interest, were elements in the measure of damages when the cotton was lower in value at the time of the fire than the sum of said elements.

The prior suit is res judicata as to the interest of the parties in the inter-pleader fund and as to the liability of the appellant upon the primary policy, but not as to the amounts due upon the policies sued on in this case. These policies provide new kinds of insurance, unknown to the business world before the adoption of the crop-loan program afforded by the Commodity Credit Corporation. They were devised to protect a federal lending agency, such as the appellee, against loss by fire when the warehouseman had failed to keep the cotton insured for its full market value, and when its market value was lower than the loan value plus accrued interest and charges. The validity of insurance upon property for more than its market value is sustained by the fact that the insured was guaranteed, within a given time, that so long as the loan remained secured by the warehouse receipts, and the cotton was in existence, the paper evidencing the loan would be purchased at face value plus 4% interest (less a small fee) by the Commodity Credit Corporation, an agency of the federal government.

The appellee, First National 'Bank of Hughes Springs, made loans to cotton producers in accordance with instructions issued by Commodity Credit Corporation, and on notes and pledge forms approved by said corporation. From the time of making the loans to the farmers until the time of the fire, the bank retained title to the notes evidencing the loans, which were secured by pledges of the warehouse receipts. These pledges were called insured negotiable warehouse receipts because the warehouseman was required to certify that the cotton covered by his receipt was insured against loss or damage by fire for the full market value and would be kept insured so long as the receipt remained outstanding.

Under the C. C. C. plan of loans to producers, the borrowers were not personally liable for any deficiency upon the sale of the thing pledged; and, as the Commodity Credit Corporation did not purchase paper after injury to or destruction of the property pledged, it is apparent that the appellee, while it retained title to the producers’ notes, waá subject to two distinct risks of loss by fire of the cotton pledged to it: (1) The failure of the warehouseman to provide adequate insurance; (2) inability to recoup the difference between market value (where lower) and loan value plus interest and charges by selling its paper to the Commodity Credit Corporation. As the market value at the time of the fire was lower than its loan value, plus interest and charges, the cotton was worth more to appellee than it was to any one else, because if the cotton remained in existence the bank could recoup its debt in full by transferring it to the Commodity Credit Corporation. The cotton therefore had a special value to appellee, which it sought to protect by the policies in suit.

In these circumstances, the appellant’s efforts to escape liability must fail, because the policies in suit supplemented the primary policy and each other and were issued by the same insurer. We agree with appellant that none of the policies provided indemnity against the warehouseman’s insolvency; and nothing has been awarded on that account.

The rights of the parties must be determined as of the date of the fire. At that time the appellee was protected from loss of its debt, interest, and the warehouse charges by three valid policies of insurance, all issued by appellant: the [792]

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Bluebook (online)
133 F.2d 789, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/century-ins-co-v-first-nat-bank-ca5-1943.