de R. L. v. Home Insurance

207 Misc. 84, 136 N.Y.S.2d 574, 1954 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3470
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 207 Misc. 84 (de R. L. v. Home Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
de R. L. v. Home Insurance, 207 Misc. 84, 136 N.Y.S.2d 574, 1954 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3470 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1954).

Opinion

Stetjer, J.

This action involves sixty bales of goatskins which were purchased by plaintiff from Edmond Weil, Inc., while in transit by steamer from Rio de Janeiro to New York. On arrival in Hoboken the plaintiff’s forwarding agent bad them transferred to a steamship docked in New York which delivered them to Tampico, Mexico, from whence they were taken by truck to plaintiff’s plant at Mexico City. Upon arrival there the surface of every bale was found to be infested with the larvae of beetles which had eaten the skins to such an extent that approximately half of them were rendered worthless. Suit is against the Torm Line, the operator of the steamship on the voyage from Brazil to Hoboken; The Home Insurance Company which issued a policy of insurance on the skins for that voyage; New York and Cuba Mail Steamship Company which operated the vessel on the voyage from New York to Tampico, and Fulton Fire Insurance Company which insured them on that voyage.

It is possible from the above statement that the bales could have become infested at any one of five stages in their shipment — prior to leaving Brazil, on the steamship voyage to New York, while being transshipped, on the voyage to Tampico, or while being trucked to Mexico City. Recourse to additional facts is necessary to determine the place indicated by the proof. The bales comprised approximately 20,000 skins, between 300 and 350 to a bale. The bales were made up of the skins themselves, folded in half along the line of the animal’s spine and bound together, with a spread skin used as a cover on the ends. The total shipment which had been assembled by a Brazilian dealer for Weil consisted of 222 bales. The dealer purchased them in lots in several villages where the natives procured the skins and prepared them according to the dealer’s directions. These directions included treating the skins with an arsenical soap. The purpose of impregnating the skins with this soap is that, if beetle larvae commence to feed on a skin so treated, the arsenic kills them immediately and before they can do any appreciable [87]*87damage. The sixty bales in suit were the total output of two villages and, though they were inspected and passed by a representative of the dealer and again spot checked in the warehouse at Eio de Janeiro, it is clear that the arsenical soap was not properly applied. Had it been, the beetle larvae could not have made the headway they did unless the soap had been washed off. There was no claim that this had happened. From this, the defendants have argued that the skins were destroyed from inherent vice. This argument is not sound. There was no obligation to any of these defendants to prepare the bales in any particular way. Nor does the fact that the arsenic treatment was improperly done prove that the bales were infested when loaded. It merely leaves the question open.

The beetle in question is known to science as dermestes maculatus. It starts as an egg about the size of the period at the end of this sentence. Five days later the egg hatches, producing a small grub which starts to eat immediately. The grub continues to eat and grow for a period of fifty-seven days, during which time it outgrows and casts its shell case four times. During this time it moves no appreciable distance even to procure food. At the conclusion it changes into a flying beetle which roams around, seeking a hospitable place to lay its eggs. After a few days the eggs are laid and the cycle begins again.

The bales were on the steamer coming to New York for twenty days and on the pier in custody of the defendant Torm Line for nine days more. They were a total of two days in transport to the New York and Cuba Mail Steamship Company and were in the latter’s custody for fifteen days. The exact time of trucking from Tampico to Mexico City does not appear but it was a short period.

From this, it is obvious that the eggs could not have been laid and hatched and the skins eaten in the last leg of the journey, the truck ride from Tampico to Mexico City, so that possibility is eliminated.

While the skins were being transported by truck from Hoboken to New York, the truck driver noticed a beetle in one of the bales. He reported that to plaintiff’s forwarding agent who, in turn, requested a report from the New York and Cuba’s dock superintendent. This officer looked at a few of the bales and could find nothing wrong. He was not an expert and made no careful examination. But had the condition been such as it was when the bales reached the plaintiff, that something was wrong would have been evident on the most cursory examination. This would have been true even if the eating and destruction had not reached [88]*88the advanced stage that it did. If the bales had been infested when loaded in Brazil, the destruction must necessarily have reached an obvious stage when they were delivered to the steamship company in New York. As it had not, it follows that they were not so affected when they left South America.

"While there is no scientific evidence as to how far dermestes maculatus will travel in its flying stage in a search for a suitable place to lay its eggs, the proof is that the distance is generally short, and in transit this is generally to the nearest cargo that will furnish food to its larvae. Infestation therefore presupposes a nearby infested cargo. The cargo plan of the

5.5. Yucatan on the voyage from New York to Tampico shows that in the near vicinity of these bales there was no cargo on which larvae could have subsisted, hence none from which an egg-laying flyer could have migrated. It follows that all probability of the damage originating in that part of the journey is also eliminated.

As for the period when the goods were in the custody of the trucker between Hoboken and New York, it appears that the bales constituted three truckloads. They were the only goods carried in each load. If contamination occurred during this passage, it must have come from some goods on another truck. For this to happen three separate times is so remote a chance as to be ruled out as a possibility. Note that if one load was infested, sufficient time for the cycle did not elapse after this for the larvae to develop and the resulting egg-layers to infest the bales of the other truckloads.

This leaves the period when the bales were in the hold of 5.5. Agnete Torm as the only remaining period. In addition to the conclusion which this elimination implies, there is some positive evidence that the damage was started during this voyage. There is that already noted fact of a flying beetle being seen on one of the bales plus the absence of other findings; this would indicate that at the time of transfer the eggs were hatching and, because of their minuteness, were not readily visible to an untrained eye. In addition, damage to some of the bales constituting the balance of the shipment of 222 bales was reported. Upon inspection it was found that this damage was minimal, being a slight scuffing of the exposed portions of skins. This insignificant damage is what would result if the larvae started eating on properly arsenieated matter. They died before they had done any real damage. Nevertheless, this tends to establish that beetles were in the hold of the S.S. Agnete Torm and laid eggs during that voyage.

[89]*89These findings relieve the defendants, New York and Cuba Mail Steamship Company and the Fulton Fire Insurance Company, from liability.

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Bluebook (online)
207 Misc. 84, 136 N.Y.S.2d 574, 1954 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-r-l-v-home-insurance-nysupct-1954.