First Nat. Bank of Ottawa v. Lloyd's of London

116 F.2d 221, 132 A.L.R. 599
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 19, 1940
Docket7218, 7219
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 116 F.2d 221 (First Nat. Bank of Ottawa v. Lloyd's of London) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nat. Bank of Ottawa v. Lloyd's of London, 116 F.2d 221, 132 A.L.R. 599 (7th Cir. 1940).

Opinion

KERNER, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff, First National Bank of Ottawa, sued Lloyd’s of London upon a policy of insurance. Lloyd’s denied liability and filed a third-party complaint seeking contribution from Franklin Fire Insurance Company of Philadelphia and five other in *223 surance companies, claiming the six companies were co-insurers. The District Court, upon a trial without a jury, held, against Lloyd’s, denied their right to contribution from the six insurance companies, dismissed the third party complaint, assessed plaintiffs damages at $60,000 and rendered judgment against defendant Arthur Burns for $3,500 and costs. (The $3,500 being Burns’ proportion of the $60,-000 Lloyd’s policy.) From this judgment both parties have appealed.

The policy for the sum of $100,000 relied upon by plaintiff, was issued by Lloyd’s of London on April 9, 1937, and by it Lloyd’s expressly agreed to pay and make good to the assured (plaintiff) all losses that the assured might sustain by reason of any money being stolen while in transit in the custody of any of the assured’s servants or messengers.

October 3, 1938, while the policy was in full force and effect, plaintiff, whose place of business is at Ottawa, Illinois, requested the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, Illinois, to forward to it $60,000 in currency. October 4, 1938 the Federal Reserve Bank made up two packages of paper currency aggregating $60,000, enclosed them in sealed cloth bags and deposited them in the United States registered mail in Chicago, addressed to plaintiff at Ottawa, Illinois, and debited plaintiff’s deposit account $60,000. October 5, 1938, the post office at Ottawa advised plaintiff by telephone that it had registered mail for the bank. At about one o’clock that afternoon an assistant cashier of the bank and another employee called at the post office and were there handed the two sealed bags, for which the assistant cashier signed a registered postal receipt; he and the employee then left the post office, each carryiug one bag. About 100 feet from the post office they were held up by armed robbers who disarmed the assistant cashier and escaped with both hags. The robbers were never apprehended and no part of the contents of the bags was ever recovered. Promptly following the holdup plaintiff reported the robbery by telephone to the Federal Reserve Bank, and by mail also advised defendant of the robbery.

October 8, 1938, Marsh & McLennan, representing the third-party insurance companies (hereinafter referred to as Registered Mail Underwriters) delivered to the Federal Reserve Bank six drafts, issued by the Registered Mail Underwriters aggregating $60,000 and payable to the Federal Reserve Bank, six forms of loan receipts, 1 loss affidavits, a copy of a rider attached to each of the six policies, and forms to be completed by plaintiff. In their letter to the P’ederal Reserve Bank, which accompanied these documents, Marsh & McLennan stated that they were enclosing loan receipts and loss affidavits which must be executed and the forms completed by plaintiff and requested that the drafts be held until all the documents had been returned. The Federal Reserve Bank on October 10, 1938 endorsed the drafts (the drafts stated that they were in full satisfaction of all claims and demands, under the respective policies for the loss which occurred on October 5, 1938), collected the amounts thereof, and transmitted the loan receipts and loss affidavits to plaintiff, requested the documents be executed and returned to the Federal Reserve Bank, and advised plaintiff that “upon receipt of these affidavits and receipts, we shall credit your account $60,-000, as the checks from the underwriters have already been delivered to us.” Plaintiff answered this request thus: “We are *224 holding the loan receipts, which you asked us to execute, * * * until the adjuster for London-Lloyds has the opportunity of examining the wording of the receipt.” October 13, 1938, Donald Gray, defendant’s attorney, wrote plaintiff that defendant had no objection to plaintiff’s signing the loan receipts upon receiving the $60,000. October 17 the executed documents were returned to the Federal Reserve Bank and it thereupon credited plaintiff’s deposit account $60,000.

It appears that prior to the mailing of the $60,000 on October 4, 1938, the Registered Mail Underwriters had issued to the Federal Reserve Bank their respective policies of insurance, insuring the Federal Reserve Bank “for account of whom it may concern.” They covered all shipments by registered mail from the time of leaving the office of the Federal Reserve Bank until delivered at the place of business of the consignee, including risks by messengers from the post office to the place of business of the consignee.

It further appears that at the time of the shipping of the $60,000 the Federal Reserve Bank declared it was shipping'under these policies, the policies providing that the property of others which the Federal Reserve Bank might elect to insure were insured thereunder.

Each of the Registered Mail Underwriters’ policies also provide that “with respect to losses for which this company may be liable on property insured thereunder, while in transit by messenger to or from the Post Office * * * shall attach as an excess policy covering only for the excess over any amount which may be recoverable from any other insurance * * *; but the amount of any such loss shall nevertheless be advanced promptly by this company and shall be refunded to this company * * * only as and when recovered by the insured from such other insurance.”

The trial court in passing on the question of liability found that the registered mail policies only insured against messenger losses of currency in excess of any other insurance covering the particular loss; that the drafts issued and delivered to the Federal Reserve Bank by the Registered Mail Underwriters were intended as a loan covering- and not as a payment of the amount lost by the plaintiff in the holdup, and concluded as a matter of law that plaintiff was the owner of the $60,000 when it was stolen and thereby suffered a loss in that amount within the terms of the-Lloyd’s policy; that the Federal Reserve Bank received from the Registered Mail Underwriters the sum of $60,000 to be advanced to plaintiff as a loan upon the signing by plaintiff of loan receipts evidencing the loan; that the crediting of the plaintiff’s deposit account by the Federal Reserve Bank with $60,000 upon receiving the signed loan receipts from plaintiff was a loan to plaintiff, and not a payment of the loss; that plaintiff has not been reimbursed for its loss and is entitled to recover $60,000 from the defendants; that plaintiff carried no insurance covering the loss in question other than the Lloyd’s policy and that Lloyd’s were not entitled to contribution from the Registered Mail Underwriters.

The policy in suit constituted primary insurance, Automobile Ins. Co. v. Springfield Dyeing Co., 3 Cir., 109 F.2d 533, 536. That employees of plaintiff have been robbed of $60,000 there can be no question. However, unless the money so stolen was covered by the policy sued on, there can be no recovery by plaintiff. The policy covered all losses that the plaintiff might sustain by reason of any money being stolen while in transit in the custody of plaintiff’s messengers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 F.2d 221, 132 A.L.R. 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-ottawa-v-lloyds-of-london-ca7-1940.