Hartford Fire Ins. v. Bonner Mercantile Co.

56 F. 378, 5 C.C.A. 524, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2073
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMay 18, 1893
DocketNo. 72
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 56 F. 378 (Hartford Fire Ins. v. Bonner Mercantile Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartford Fire Ins. v. Bonner Mercantile Co., 56 F. 378, 5 C.C.A. 524, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2073 (9th Cir. 1893).

Opinion

GlLBEIiT, Circuit Judge.

The Hartford Fire Insurance Company united with a number of other insurance companies in bringing a bill to set aside an award of arbitrators which was made in pursuance of an agreement between tbe insurance companies and the Bonner Mercantile Company, to determine the amount of loss incurred by the latter on account of a certain lire. The property injured by the fire consisted of a large stock of general merchandise, of the value of more than $200,000. The damage was partly from the fire, and the water used to extinguish the same, but was chiefly claimed to consist in injury from smoke.

Under an agreement of arbitration, the terms' of which are referred to hereafter, two arbitrators were selected by the respective parties, — Gr. E. Bockwood, by the mercantile company, and Joseph P. Treaner, by the insurance companies. These two made selection of IT. Schurmeier, of St. Paul, to act as the third party mentioned in the agreement. Pending the arrival of Schurmeier, Treaner and Bockwood began the inspection of the stock. Treaner found the smoke damage to be practically nothing, while Bockwood began by estimating such damage at 8 or 10 per cent., but a day or two later, as the examination proceeded, placed his estimate of such damage at an average of about 50 per cent, on the cost of the goods. The evidence would indicate that there was little or no discussion between these two appraisers concerning the estimates thus given. Treaner’s testimony is that he frequently, and from the first, called upon his associate to specify wherein the damage claimed by him consisted, and that he often called Bockwood’s attention to the fact that the goods claimed by him to be injured were in fact wholly uninjured, but that Bockwood refused to discuss the points of difference, and answered all arguments by saying, “We will leave it to the third man.” Bockwood, on the other hand, admits that there was no discussion, but attributes that fact to the insulting language and demeanor of Treaner towards Mm, which he says rendered amicable discussion between them impossible. The two appraisers continued in this manner going over the stock and’causing their widely divergent estimates to be entered in books of inventory, until the arrival of Schurmeier.

When Schurmeier arrived, Ms attention was called to what had been done, and the failure of the two appraisers to agree. He [380]*380thereupon went over with Treaner the goods that had been examined up to date, and then proceeded with both Rockwood and Treaner to examine the remainder of the stock. During the whole of the examination, Schurmeier persistently refused to discuss the matters in controversy, or to express an opinion upon the damage to any item of the goods, or upon the opposing claims of the other two, although often called upon by both to decide the points upon which they differed. I-Ie allowed them to proceed to the end in the manner in which they had begun. The goods were overhauled. Clerks wrote in books, in separate columns, the cost price, the quantity, the damage estimated by Treaner, and the damage estimated by Rockwood. During the examination, Schurmeier generally stood by, and saw the goods. At times, he examined them closely. At other times, he was paying little or no attention. Occasionally, he made some memoranda of his own in a small notebook. The examination was c(Included late upon a Saturday night. Upon the following Monday morning, Schurmeier took the books containing the entries of the appraisers to his room at an hotel, and requested that the two appraisers remain within convenient call, and that he have a clerk to assist him, stating that he intended to get through, and leave for St. Paul, that afternoon. Later in the day he sent for one more clerk, and still later for four more. With these six clerks he remained in his rooms, with locked doors, until Wednesday afternoon. He then called in the appraisers, and read to them his award. The estimate of the total loss, as found by Treaner, was $5,000. The estimate of Rockwood was, in the aggregate, over $115,000. The total award found by Schur-meier was $60,624.73. As soon as the award of Schurmeier was declared by him, the insurance companies, through their representatives, made protest against his method of arriving at • his award, and his refusal to discuss the items of the loss with the other arbitrators, and made demand that such discussion and consideration of the elements of tbe damage be had. Schurmeier made no reponse to the protest or the demand. Rockwood agreed to accept the award of Schurmeier as conclusive, and the same was signed by Schurmeier and Rockwood as the award of arbitration.

The allegations of the bill, upon which-it is sought to set aside the award, and which are claimed by the appellants to be sustained by the evidence, are, in substance, the following:

(1) That the award was excessive, and that the actual loss did not exceed $5,000.

(2) That Rockwood, in placing his estimate upon the damage, did not act upon his own judgment, or upon any investigation made by him, but acted under the direction of the defendant, with the intent that the defendant should receive a larger award than was justly due.

(3) That Schurmeier did not act with Rockwood or Treaner, or with either of them, in appraising the-loss, or in deciding any of the matters submitted to arbitration, but that Schurmeier, having obtained the result of the estimation and determination of the others, separated himself from the said arbitrators, and [381]*381by himself, without the advice, counsel, or assistance of said arbitrators, or either of them, proceeded to determine arbitrarily, and without examination of the property, the loss to the same, and arbitrarily aud unjustly did determine said loss to be $60,-624.73.

(4) That Eoclcwood, at the instigation of the defendant, united with said Hclnmneier in rendering an award, but that in fact they did not examine into the loss, and did not consider the condition of the property at the time of the fire, and did not make proper deduction for depreciation of property saved.

The determination of the validity of the award must depend upon whether Schurmeier was an umpire to decide points of difference between the arbitrators, or was a third arbitrator to act with the others in arriving at a determination of the loss. If his relation was that of arbitrator, the irregularity of his proceeding was clearly such as to invalidate the award. lie refused to discuss the evidence, or to act with the other arbitrators. He separated himself from the others, to make his award, in the seclusion of his room, without access to the damaged goods, and without other data than the estimates of Eoclcwood and Treaner, and the cost price; of the goods. He evidently arrived at his results by dividing tbe difference between the two arbitrators. There is evidence that he occasionally consulted some meager memoranda of his own, written upon a sheet of paper, or upon a poclcet notebook. But when the vast number of the items of the stock is considered, and the impossibility of retaining in the memory, unaided by memoranda, a recollection of the extent of the injury 'to each parcel of the goods, it is impossible to arrive at any conclusion other than that Sehurmeier arbitrarily adopted an estimate that practically lay midway between the estimates made by Eoclc-wood and Treaner.

The agreement under which the loss was submitted to arbitration provided that the amount thereof should he “estimated, determined, and appraised in detail by O. E. Roclcwood and Joseph 1*.

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Bluebook (online)
56 F. 378, 5 C.C.A. 524, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2073, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartford-fire-ins-v-bonner-mercantile-co-ca9-1893.