Export Leaf Tobacco Company v. The American Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey, the American Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey, Third-Party v. Export Leaf Tobacco Company, and Park Bernard and W. W. Bernard, Partners Trading as Burley Bee Warehouse, Export Leaf Tobacco Company v. Park Bernard and W. W. Bernard, Partners Trading as Burley Bee Warehouse

260 F.2d 839, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5144
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedOctober 14, 1958
Docket7664
StatusPublished

This text of 260 F.2d 839 (Export Leaf Tobacco Company v. The American Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey, the American Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey, Third-Party v. Export Leaf Tobacco Company, and Park Bernard and W. W. Bernard, Partners Trading as Burley Bee Warehouse, Export Leaf Tobacco Company v. Park Bernard and W. W. Bernard, Partners Trading as Burley Bee Warehouse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Export Leaf Tobacco Company v. The American Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey, the American Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey, Third-Party v. Export Leaf Tobacco Company, and Park Bernard and W. W. Bernard, Partners Trading as Burley Bee Warehouse, Export Leaf Tobacco Company v. Park Bernard and W. W. Bernard, Partners Trading as Burley Bee Warehouse, 260 F.2d 839, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5144 (3d Cir. 1958).

Opinion

260 F.2d 839

EXPORT LEAF TOBACCO COMPANY, Appellant,
v.
The AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEWARK, NEW JERSEY, Appellee.
The AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEWARK, NEW JERSEY, Third-Party Defendant, Appellant,
v.
EXPORT LEAF TOBACCO COMPANY, Plaintiff, and Park Bernard and W. W. Bernard, Partners trading as Burley Bee Warehouse, Defendants, Appellees.
EXPORT LEAF TOBACCO COMPANY, Plaintiff, Appellant,
v.
Park BERNARD and W. W. Bernard, Partners trading as Burley Bee Warehouse, Defendants, Appellees.

No. 7460.

No. 7664.

United States Court of Appeals Fourth Circuit.

Argued June 18, 1958.

Decided October 14, 1958.

COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED Wm. A. Stuart, Abingdon, Va. (Penn, Stuart & Phillips, Abingdon, Va., on brief), for Export Leaf Tobacco Co.

Robert B. Davis, Bristol, Va., and Stuart B. Campbell, Wytheville, Va. (Campbell & Campbell, and Stuart B. Campbell, Jr., Wytheville, Va., on brief), for American Ins. Co. of Newark, New Jersey.

Wm. H. Woodward, Bristol, Va. (Jones, Woodward, Miles & Greiner, Bristol, Va., on brief), for Park Bernard and W. W. Bernard, Partners trading as Burley Bee Warehouse.

Before SOBELOFF, Chief Judge, SOPER, Circuit Judge, and PAUL, District Judge.

SOBELOFF, Chief Judge.

In these consolidated appeals a dealer who had purchased a quantity of tobacco at an auction warehouse in Abingdon, Virginia, seeks to recover for loss sustained in a fire which occurred at the warehouse before the tobacco was removed. We are called upon to decide whether the loss falls upon the warehouseman or its insurer or on the plaintiff's insurers.

The tobacco purchaser was Export Leaf Tobacco Company ("Export Leaf"), a Delaware corporation. The Burley Bee Warehouse ("Burley Bee") was owned and operated by Park Bernard and W. W. Bernard, now deceased. The warehouse, with all its contents, was destroyed by fire on the night of December 12, 1955. The American Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey ("American") had issued to Burley Bee, as the named insured, a standard fire policy entitled "Form 61V-Virginia," "Tobacco in Sales Warehouse (Auction Form)." This policy was in effect on the date of the fire and provided Burley Bee with coverage

"* * * on leaf, loose, scrap and stem tobacco, the property of others while in the custody of the insured for auction * * * while on the premises of the above described tobacco sales warehouse or while located within 100 feet thereof whether in the open or in vehicles." (Emphasis supplied.)

Three days before the fire, on Friday, December 9, 1955, and on the next sale day, Monday, December 12, 1955, the very day of the fire, Export Leaf had made its auction purchases, aggregating 45,000 pounds of tobacco. When the fire occurred, a small portion of Export Leaf's tobacco had been removed. The remainder, placed in burlap sheets, had been taken from the sales area and put in another location in the warehouse preparatory to shipment. The fire was of unknown origin and without fault of Burley Bee.

The Two Suits

Suit (No. 7460) was instituted in the United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia against American, on the theory that as the warehouseman's insurer, it was solely liable to the purchaser. After trial, the District Court took the view that American's policy issued to the warehouseman under Form 61V did not cover the tobacco in question, and dismissed the suit, 148 F.Supp. 303.

Export Leaf then filed a new suit (No. 7664), this time against Burley Bee, the warehouseman, on the theory that it had made itself liable by failing to effect the insurance coverage required by Section 61-132 of the 1950 Code of Virginia, which is set out in the margin.1 Burley Bee impleaded American as third-party defendant. At this trial the District Judge, reversing the position he had taken in No. 7460, held, "in light of the fuller state of facts developed in this case," (7664) that Form 61V in American's policy to Burley Bee, construed in connection with the coverage requirement of Code Section 61-132, did insure Export Leaf's tobacco. Accordingly, he exonerated the warehouseman and entered judgment against American in favor of Export Leaf, 161 F.Supp. 97.

In each case the defeated party appealed, and in this court the appeals were heard together.

Applicability of Section 61-132

A chief contention of the warehouseman, Burley Bee, and American, its insurer, is that Section 61-132, which imposes certain obligations on warehousemen to provide fire insurance, or themselves become liable, does not apply to tobacco auction warehouses, but only to storage warehouses. It is pointed out that the first sentence of this section requires the sampler2 to pay the warehouseman all money owing to the warehouseman but received by the sampler. The second sentence contains the requirement for insurance. From this it is argued that the section cannot refer to auction warehouses, for there have been no samplers in auction warehouses for over twenty years. However, this argument loses force when it is noted that samplers have been non-existent for many years in any tobacco warehouses, auction or storage.

The warehouseman's argument continues that, as the only money received by samplers which is owing to warehousemen is for storage fees, the first sentence can apply to storage warehouses only; and since the second sentence is linked to the first by the conjunction "and," its application is also limited to storage warehouses.

It is to be observed, however, that Chapter 4 of Title 61 of the Code is entitled "Tobacco Warehouses and Regulations in General," the first section of which declares that "Tobacco warehouses * * * shall * * * at all times, Sunday excepted, be open for receiving, storing, selling and delivering tobacco. * * *" (Emphasis supplied.) Thus, the statutory definition of tobacco warehouses contemplates not only the function of storing but also that of selling. Moreover, the parties concede that among planters, the prevailing method of marketing tobacco is in auction warehouses. Planters rarely, if ever, deal with storage warehouses. If the statute does not apply to auction warehouses, then not only purchasers would be excluded from the insurance benefit, but also planters, whose primary business is with auction warehouses. Unless the language of the statute clearly evidences such a purpose, it is not to be supposed that the Virginia legislature meant to except from the purview of the statute the type of warehouse which has become so predominant in the state's tobacco industry.

Again it is urged on this point that the phrase "stored therein" in Section 61-132 should be read in light of the two preceding sections in Chapter 4 which establish fees for tobacco stored in warehouses. There is no compelling reason, however, so to limit the construction, since numerous sections in the same chapter relate to auction warehouses.

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260 F.2d 839, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/export-leaf-tobacco-company-v-the-american-insurance-company-of-newark-ca3-1958.