Gulfstream Cargo, Ltd. v. Reliance Insurance Company

409 F.2d 974, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 13493, 1969 WL 29934
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 28, 1969
Docket23109
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 409 F.2d 974 (Gulfstream Cargo, Ltd. v. Reliance Insurance Company) 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
Gulfstream Cargo, Ltd. v. Reliance Insurance Company, 409 F.2d 974, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 13493, 1969 WL 29934 (5th Cir. 1969).

Opinion

JOHN R. BROWN, Chief Judge:

The question in this case is whether nondisclosure by the prospective assured of known facts reflecting spectacular unseaworthiness of the vessel existing at the time the policy attaches constitutes concealment vitiating the AITH (Hulls) time policy. The District Judge, long *975 experienced in maritime matters, on fact findings 1 that are not challenged, concluded that there was concealment and its consequence was the avoidance of the policy. From this it inevitably followed that he held the Insurer 2 not liable for the total loss of the vessel ten months later from a peril otherwise covered under the Inchmaree clause, 3 for negligence of the master in imprudently abandoning ship after development of leaks not shown to have been causally related to the earlier unseaworthiness. We affirm.

In October 1961, the Assured 4 sought insurance on the M/V Papoose, a wooden-hull vessel then “coming to the twilight of her life.” 5 Built in 1933 to. a length of 69 feet, she was rebuilt in 1936 by lengthening her to 73 feet. In terms somewhat inelegant and certainly lacking in nautical flavor, it was this tail end which is Assured’s undoing.

At the time of her purchase by the Assured in October 1960, a detailed condition survey report was made by marine surveyor Havenner. It showed M/V Papoose to be generally in good shape. 6 Whether she was so in fact is now open to serious question as the Assured’s action as owner attests. 7

The policy was issued to take effect on October 12, 1961. The Assured dealt with its agent Thomas Burckes of Wash *976 ington, D. C., whose familiarity with wet marine insurance was presumably limited. He in turn dealt with Mr. Tierney of Thomas J. Fisher & Co., Washington agents of Insurer, who in turn dealt with Insurer’s Baltimore office (William Becker and his assistant Charles Hall), who in turn dealt with the Philadelphia home office (McTott, in effect, manager of the marine department).

In response to a request of Insurer’s Baltimore office, Tierney obtained and transmitted a copy of the Havenner survey report (note 6, supra), which he obtained from Burckes who in turn got it from Mrs. Wilken. In his transmittal letter Tierney added the comment that “I understand the ship is in better condition than when the [Havenner] survey -x- x x Was made. * * *” 8 [R. 115]. Thus the picture painted was the rosy one of a fine craft then in tip-top shape.

But this was far from the truth as the Assured knew only too well. This knowledge went back at least to the preceding June (1961) when the vessel’s Master reported that on.the trip from Maryland to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, the stern of M/V Papoose had unusual rhythmic vibrations and that she leaked excessively. But it didn’t end there, nor did it end with imputed knowledge from reports made to the owner by the Master. For after an interlude in a shipyard, M/V Papoose with the Wilkens aboard set out on a voyage to and from Fort Lauderdale and Nassau in the Bahamas. On that trip the vessel again leaked excessively. On return to Fort Lauderdale, the vessel was again put into shipyard at Broward Marine.

The shipyard was alarmed at the sag in her stern, so much so that they feared she would hog or break while on the ways. They recommended that a surveyor be employed to advise the owners concerning handling her on the dry dock and the repairs needed. At this point, now about September 15, 1961, enters Chadwick, a marine surveyor of unquestioned competence, his recommendations for repairs, 9 and his report to the owners. With a simplicity of understatement the Trial Judge characterized this two-page report as revealing “extensive repair work necessary in the stern of the vessel due to rot.” But it was more than that. In the very opening paragraph of his report, Chadwick takes note of the Havenner survey, a copy of which he was furnished, and points out the deficiencies of that survey and the probable cause of them. 10 And then in detail his report reveals starkly the things which made M/V Papoose unfit “for any use offshore” or for “carrying cargo even on the Intercoastal Waterway. 11

*977 But this report, except for putting it in more technical and specific terms, did not really teach the Wilkens anything they did not know. They were fully aware of the facts the report revealed and of the vessel’s condition. 12 And as proof positive that they were aware that the Havenner survey report — within a few days *978 known by them to be in the hands of Insurer considering issuing hull coverage on M/V Papoose — did not reflect the true condition of the vessel at that time, and for that matter probably in 1960 at the time of purchase, the Wilkens fired off two hot letters on September 7 and September 25, 1961, to the sellers in Maryland complaining vociferously of misrepresentation by the seller. 13 That this was no off-the-cuff, spur-of-the-moment, impetuous complaint made in the passion of anger is shown by the fact that these claims soon resulted in lawsuits against both the seller and surveyor Havenner (see note 7, supra). Devastating as was this information, now known both by persona] experience, observation, and from the detailed Chadwick survey, the Chadwick survey was not sent to Insurer nor, for that matter, even to Burckes. Nor is there any testimony from either of the Wilkens that either of them relayed all or part of the Chadwick survey report by word of mouth to Burckes. Although Burckes claims to have passed on information to Tierney, and we credit that fully as the trial Judge did arguendo, nothing approaches the specificity or spectacular nature of the deficiencies or, more significant, Chadwick’s informed categorical expert opinion of basic unfitness, that is unseaworthiness, for the proposed trade — a factor of the first magnitude to a marine underwriter. 14

*979 With this approach, little detail is needed concerning how Insurer’s witnesses Tierney, Becker, and Hall described the information received by each of them from Burckes. First, being a factual matter resting almost altogether on recollections of informal telephone and oral communication, the Judge’s fact findings have the heavy insulation of F.R.Civ.P. 52(a). Second, these representatives could hardly learn more than they were told, and Burckes makes clear that he learned little and told them no more (see note 14, supra).

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Bluebook (online)
409 F.2d 974, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 13493, 1969 WL 29934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulfstream-cargo-ltd-v-reliance-insurance-company-ca5-1969.