Industria E. Comercio De Minerios, S.A. And United States of America v. Nova Genuesis Societa Per Azioni Per L'IndustrIa Et Il Commercio Maritimo

310 F.2d 811, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 3680, 1963 A.M.C. 109
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 9, 1962
Docket8610_1
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 310 F.2d 811 (Industria E. Comercio De Minerios, S.A. And United States of America v. Nova Genuesis Societa Per Azioni Per L'IndustrIa Et Il Commercio Maritimo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Industria E. Comercio De Minerios, S.A. And United States of America v. Nova Genuesis Societa Per Azioni Per L'IndustrIa Et Il Commercio Maritimo, 310 F.2d 811, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 3680, 1963 A.M.C. 109 (4th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

*812 SOPER, Circuit Judge.

The appeal in this case is taken by the libellant, Industria E. Comercio de Mín-enos, S. A., a Brazilian corporation, hereinafter called ICOMI, from a decree of the District Court wherein the court granted the motion of Nova Genuesis Societa Per Azioni Per LTndustria Et II Commercio Marítimo, the respondent, an Italian corporation, to decline jurisdiction under the doctrine forum non conveniens because all the parties interested in the subject of the suit are foreign corporations. The libellant also appealed from a portion of the decree which denied a motion of the United States to intervene as a party libellant. This raises the most important question before the court since jurisdiction would not have been denied by the District Judge, as his opinion indicates, if the United States were a proper party. 1

The controversy grows out of the loss at sea on February 2, 1958 of the steamship Bonitas, an Italian vessel, which was owned by the Italian corporation which is the respondent in this case. She was carrying a cargo of manganese ore from Santana, Brazil, to Baltimore, Maryland, which had been shipped by ICOMI in fulfillment of a contract of June 7, 1953 between ICOMI and the United States, wherein ICOMI agreed to obtain large quantities of the ore and to ship it in vessels from Brazil to such ports as the United States might designate. The agreement provided that ICOMI was to have the cargo insured and the policy of insurance which covered the lost cargo in this case was issued by the Eagle Star Insurance Company, a British corporation, and purported to cover ICOMI and such other persons as their interests might appear.

The libel was originally filed in per-sonam by two New York corporations which had arranged for the shipment and the insurance as the agents of ICOMI. It was brought against the respondent owner of the Italian ship on the ground that the vessel was unsea-worthy and hence her owner was liable to the libellant in the sum of $650,000 for the damages sustained in the loss of the cargo. A few days after the libel was filed it was amended by order of court to substitute ICOMI in place of the original libellants since it was shown that they served only as agents for ICOMI in bringing the suit. Service of process was made upon certain persons alleged to be officers of the owner of the ship who were temporarily in Norfolk, Va., attending funeral services for members of the crew of the ship. A motion to quash the service of process was filed on the ground, amongst other things, that the respondent was not engaged in any business within the jurisdiction of the court. The District Judge did not find it necessary to pass on this question.

After the ship was lost the United States first took the position that it had no interest in the cargo or in the insurance since the cargo had not been delivered. Thereupon, ICOMI’s agents collected the insurance in the sum of $593,-019.28 from the British insurance company and, with the consent of the United States, paid $144,582.62 out of the moneys received to the Export-Import Bank pursuant to a contract between the bank and ICOMI. Subsequently, the United States discovered that under the terms of its contract with ICOMI delivery of the cargo was made to it at the time that it was loaded on board the ship at Santana and, therefore, it had title to the cargo and was entitled to the insurance money. This claim was recognized by ICOMI and the money which it had received from the insurance company, less the sum of $144,582.62, was paid by it to the United States.

By reason of these circumstances the complexion of the case has changed. It is no longer a suit by the owner of the cargo against the owner of the ship for losses incurred by the failure to furnish a seaworthy vessel. United States claims the right to come into the case as the *813 representative of the insurance company-in order to recover on its behalf the value of the cargo lost through the shipowner’s default. The insurance policy contained provisions which entitled the insurer to any recovery that might be had from the shipowner if it should be shown that the loss was attributable to its negligence; and ICOMI in support of the motion of the United States to intervene, therefore, contends that under the specific terms of the policy the United States is bound to prosecute the claim against the shipowner in order to enforce the insurance company’s rights and must be let into the case for this purpose. The policy of insurance issued by the British company to ICOMI’s agent to cover the shipment contains the following passage on which ICOMI bases its contention:

“It is also agreed that * * * this Company in these and all cases of loss or damage by perils insured against shall be liable and owe actual payment for (only) what cannot (and could not in the absence of this insurance) be collected from carriers and/or bailees of property lost or damaged, and/or their insurers, and also shall be chargeable with the direct pecuniary loss to the assured temporarily arising from delay in collection from said carriers * * * and the advancing (for the purpose only of avoiding such pecuniary loss) of funds to the assured for his protection pending such delay shall in no case be considered as affecting the question of the final liability of this Company, and as soon as collection is made from ■carriers * * * the assured shall retain only such proportion of the sum or sums so advanced by this Company as will, with the amount •collected from carriers and/or bailees * * * make up the sum of the assureds loss, and the balance of such sum or sums as may have been advanced by this Company shall thereupon be paid back. to this Com■pany * *

This language is not a model of lucidity but the meaning becomes more clear from the meaning put upon it by the parties to the contract in a loan receipt signed by ICOMI’s agent upon the receipt by it of the payment by the insurance company. This document recited that ICOMI had borrowed and received from Eagle Star Insurance Company the sum of $598,019.28 as a loan repayable out of any recovery ICOMI might make from anyone by reason of any claim for loss of the property described in the policy and as security for such repayment ICOMI delivered to the insurance company the bill of lading and other documents of title to the property.

Then comes the following language which sets out the obligations which the insured assumed upon receiving payment of the loss:

“In Further Consideration of the said advance, the undersigned hereby guarantees that it is entitled to enforce all rights under the documents aforesaid covering said property; and hereby appoints the officers or designee of the said Eagle Star Insurance Company, Ltd., their successors, severally, its agents and attorneys-in-fact, with irrevocable power to collect any such claim or claims and to enter and prosecute in its name, compromise or withdraw any and all legal proceedings which they may deem necessary to enforce such claim or claims against any person or persons, corporation or corporations, government or governments; and to execute in its name any documents which may be necessary to carry into effect the purposes of this agreement; and to indorse and collect any cheek, bill of exchange, or other instrument received in settlement or compromise of any claim or legal proceeding.

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Bluebook (online)
310 F.2d 811, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 3680, 1963 A.M.C. 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industria-e-comercio-de-minerios-sa-and-united-states-of-america-v-ca4-1962.