Hauser v. AMERICAN CENTRAL INSURANCE CO., ST. LOUIS, MO.

216 F. Supp. 318, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7812
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMarch 11, 1963
DocketCiv. A. 9761
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 216 F. Supp. 318 (Hauser v. AMERICAN CENTRAL INSURANCE CO., ST. LOUIS, MO.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hauser v. AMERICAN CENTRAL INSURANCE CO., ST. LOUIS, MO., 216 F. Supp. 318, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7812 (E.D. La. 1963).

Opinion

CHRISTENBERRY, Chief Judge.

The foregoing matter having been tried to the Court without a jury, and having heard evidence and argument of counsel, and having taken time to consider, the Court has made the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

FINDINGS OF FACT

I.

This is a suit by the owner of the wood diesel shrimp trawler CECILE ROSE against American Central Insurance Company, St. Louis, Missouri, on its policy of marine hull insurance No. H-3946, issued July 9, 1959, in the amount of $15,000.00.

II.

On the morning of August 9, 1959, the CECILE ROSE exploded, burned and sank in Bayou Segnette, Louisiana, while enroute from Westwego to Barataría to attend the blessing of the shrimp fleet. No persons were injured and the vessel’s wreckage had a value of $50.00.

III.

The defendant insurer denied liability for the loss on the grounds that the policy was void because plaintiff deceived it as to the presence in the engine room of a butane stove prohibited by defendant, and alternatively, that the CECILE ROSE, at the time of the explosion, was in violation of the policy’s continuing warranty of seaworthiness because the stove was unsafe.

IV.

The vessel was surveyed for insurance purposes in defendant’s behalf by United States Salvage Association, Inc., on April 8, 1958. The association’s surveyor found a butane stove in the engine room below the main-deck line and considered its presence hazardous and a violation of requirements of the National Fire Protection Association stated in the Association’s Bulletin “Fire Protection Standards for Motor Craft”, of record herein. The surveyor furnished plaintiff written recommendations, stating requirements which, if met, would make the vessel insurable, including removal of the stove. Plaintiff agreed to comply, otherwise the insurer’s general agent, Godchaux & Mayer, Ltd., neither could nor would have proceeded with computation of rates and the preparation of the hull policy on the vessel, which it issued and signed on May 12, 1958. This policy, the predecessor of the policy in suit, was delivered to plaintiff by Jefferson Insurance Agency, Inc., the broker with which plaintiff dealt.

V.

At all material times, Jefferson Insurance Agency, Inc., acted for plaintiff, merely placing the insurance with God-chaux & Mayer, Ltd., for a commission. There was no agency agreement and Jefferson Insurance Agency, Inc., had no power to waive or alter any requirements of the insurer or the surveyor.

VI.

In June and July, 1958, Godchaux & Mayer, Ltd. inquired repeatedly in letters to Jefferson Insurance Agency, Inc., whether plaintiff had complied with the *320 surveyor’s recommendations. Finally, in a letter dated July 9, 1958, it stated that the matter was serious and “we do not feel that we can continue on this risk unless we have the assured’s immediate confirmation that they have been complied with”. Jefferson Insurance Agency, Inc. advised plaintiff of these inquiries, and he appeared at the office of Jefferson Agency and signed a letter stating: “This is to advise that the recommendations suggested by your surveyor have been carried out.” The letter was then mailed to Godchaux & Mayer, Ltd. Plaintiff, a businessman, experienced in marine affairs, admits that when he signed the letter he had not removed the stove and had no intention of doing so.

VII.

Plaintiff continued to operate the vessel with a butane stove in the engine room, although he replaced the existing stove with another, which he personally installed. He admitted that he had no skill or training in making such installations. The stove he installed, and its fuel fittings, butane tank, and valves, were not in any way certified or marked for marine use. There was no pressure gauge on the tank for use in detecting leaks by indicating pressure drops, nor was there any pressure relief valve. No signs were posted giving instructions for the operation of the stove, although if the main valve on the tank, which was mounted on deck, was closed while the stove was lighted, the stove would go out. It would then be necessary to enter the engine room and shut off the burners, or when the main valve was again turned on, butane would escape into the vessel. No periodic inspections of the equipment were made, and the stove was below the main-deck line. The stove was thus, in substantial particulars, not in compliance with the requirements of the National Fire Protection Association.

VIII.

The insurance reached the end of the policy year on May 12, 1959. Plaintiff, having laid up the vessel, did not seek to renew the insurance until the first week in July, 1959. The insurance was then renewed by a policy in the same form and on the same terms and conditions, except that the name of a bank was deleted from the loss-payable clause. The records of Godchaux & Mayer, Ltd. and Jefferson Insurance Agency, Inc., indicate that a mere renewal occurred.

IX.

On July 15 or 16, 1959, plaintiff received the policy in suit, and accordingly was aware that it was in the name of the same insurer which had previously prohibited the use of the butane stove. He made no protest and, on the contrary, proceeded to Jefferson Insurance Agency, Inc. and made payment of $100 and $200 against a total premium of $881.25. No information was ever conveyed to defendant or Godchaux & Mayer, Ltd. to indicate that the stove was still on board.

X.

Plaintiff admits, and a search of the wreck showed, that the stove was on board at the time of the explosion, which was accompanied by a cloud of white smoke. Marine Surveyor J. C. Long, of United States Salvage Association, investigated the explosion to determine its cause, which he attributed to butane, a product which gives off white smoke in combustion. An explosion of diesel fuel would have produced a black smoke; the vessel’s fuel tanks were not ruptured; the small containers of gasoline on boai*d were on deck and were not ruptured; and the bilges had recently been cleaned. This left the butane system, the tank of which had disappeared, as the only remaining causative agency.

XI.

Notwithstanding the testimony of plaintiff’s master and his minor son, that the butane tank had been taken to the store of Jack Valance for refilling prior to the accident, plaintiff and the master, in company with Marine Surveyor Long, made an unsuccessful search of the wreckage for the tank. Certainly they would not have made this search if the *321 tank had not been on board. Witness Valance did not remember seeing the master or the boy, and had no record of receiving or recharging the tank. Nor is it likely that plaintiff would have failed to obtain a replacement tank.

XII.

The Court finds that the butane tank was on board at the time of the explosion, which, other possibilities being reasonably excluded, was a butane explosion; and that the vessel was unseaworthy, not by reason of the mere presence of the butane stove, but by reason of its unsafe, untested installation. A safer stove such as an alcohol stove could have been installed.

XIII.

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Bluebook (online)
216 F. Supp. 318, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hauser-v-american-central-insurance-co-st-louis-mo-laed-1963.