Industria E. Comercio De Minerios, S.A. v. Nova Genuesis Societa Per Azioni Per L'industria Et Il Commercio Maritimo

197 F. Supp. 699, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4237
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedSeptember 18, 1961
DocketNo. 7933
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 197 F. Supp. 699 (Industria E. Comercio De Minerios, S.A. v. Nova Genuesis Societa Per Azioni Per L'industria Et Il Commercio Maritimo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia 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. v. Nova Genuesis Societa Per Azioni Per L'industria Et Il Commercio Maritimo, 197 F. Supp. 699, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4237 (E.D. Va. 1961).

Opinion

WALTER E. HOFFMAN, District Judge.

Following this Court’s opinion of April 15, 1959 (172 F.Supp. 569), libellant (ICOMI) made application for a rehearing supported by affidavits and additional [700]*700exhibits. The rehearing was granted and the matter has now been argued and submitted based upon additional facts not referred to in the prior opinion. For reasons herein stated the Court adheres to its previous ruling as supplemented by this memorandum.

When this matter was previously before the Court, it was stated by all proctors that the facts had been fully disclosed. From what has been subsequently presented, it appears that the procedure adopted in paying the insurance proceeds for the cargo loss was not completely developed. When the loss initially was paid by a draft issued by Talbot, Bird & Company, for the account of Eagle Star Insurance Co., Ltd. of London, payable to ICOMI, it was pursuant to a loan receipt executed by ICOMI. The payment under a loan receipt by the insurer is an accepted procedure in business transactions. Luckenbach v. J. W. McCahan Sugar Refining Co., 248 U.S. 139, 39 S.Ct. 53, 55, 63 L.Ed. 170. As was said in the cited case:

“If, and to the extent (less expenses) that, recovery is had, the insurers will receive payment or be reimbursed for their so-called loans to the shipper. If nothing is recovered from the carrier, the shipper will retain the money received by it without being under obligation to make any repayment of the amounts advanced. In other words, if there is no recovery here, the amounts advanced will operate as absolute payment under the policies.”

As discussed in the prior memorandum, the libellant (ICOMI) is an alien; the respondent is an alien; and Eagle Star Insurance Co., Ltd. is an alien. After Eagle Star made payment to ICOMI, it was ascertained that title to the cargo had passed to the United States prior to the sinking of the vessel. Although the Government had originally agreed to accept a withdrawal of the shipper’s tender of this cargo, and had affirmatively stated that it had no interest in the cargo, all as evidenced by its letter dated February 26, 1958, from the Director of the Charter and Routing Division, it subsequently renounced this agreement by denying the authority of its apparent agent. The Government thereupon declined to accept the substitute shipment’ of manganese ore and insisted upon its rights under the insurance contract.

Apparently Wm. H. Muller & Co., Inc., then acting as agent for ICOMI (the shipper), was successful in securing repayment of the insurance proceeds from ICOMI. We next find where, on March 28, 1958, Wm. H. Muller & Co., Inc., by the personal check of Paige A. Moore, its treasurer, paid the Export-Import Bank the sum of $144,582.62, all of which was pursuant to a contract between ICOMI and the Bank which constituted an irrevocable assignment as to the first $15 for each long ton of manganese ore sold and delivered to the Government. This payment was made with the approval of the Government after the Government concluded that delivery had been effected in Brazil. It was not made pursuant to any loan receipt. Following an exchange of correspondence, it was on June 6, 1958, that Wm. H. Muller & Co., Inc., by the personal check of Paige A. Moore, paid General Services Administration the sum of $453,436.66, which check was deposited to the credit of the Treasurer of the United States. The two payments aggregate $598,019.28, which is the exact amount previously paid by the draft of Talbot, Bird & Co., Inc., acting as agent for Eagle Star Insurance Co., Ltd., under date of March 6, 1958, which was made under a loan receipt.

The short answer to the contention advanced by ICOMI and the Government is that the payment to General Services Administration was not pursuant to a loan receipt. The fact that ICOMI executed a loan receipt cannot carry with it any suggestion that the Government accepted Moore’s check under like conditions. The payment to the Government was complete, final and binding.

Immediately following receipt of Moore’s cheek in the sum of $453,436.66, the Government paid the contractor’s [701]*701(ICOMI) invoice in the sum of $543,-653.89. Thus it appears that the Government received from the insurance proceeds an excess of $54,365.39 over and above the amount it was required to pay to ICOMI.

We are now told that Eagle Star, a foreign insurance company, had an oral pooling agreement with four other companies, and that the loss was, in reality, paid as follows:

Eagle Star Insurance Company, Ltd. 32%%
Universal Insurance Company 32% %
Buffalo Insurance Company 12%%
Caledonia Insurance Company 15%
Swiss Reinsurance Company 7%%

Two of these companies, Universal and Buffalo, are corporations organized and existing under the laws of New Jersey and New York respectively. For this reason, among others, ICOMI and the Government suggest that interests of corporate citizens of the United States are at stake and the Court should exercise jurisdiction. These interests, assuming their existence, have not attempted to intervene, unless such efforts are disclosed by the petition of intervention filed by the United States asserting an interest of the United States of America “for the account of its cargo underwriters”. So far as the Government was concerned, Eagle Star, the alien corporation, was the sole underwriter.

At the outset we are met with the contention advanced by respondent that, in an in personam action, intervention is not permitted in Admiralty. It is suggested that Admiralty Rules 34 and 42 contain the only provisions with respect to intervention. As Rule 42 pertains to claims against proceeds in the registry of the court, it is unnecessary further to consider the possible application of this rule. Libellant counters with the proposition that the procedure adopted was merely to amend the libel under Admiralty Rule 23, 28 U.S.C.A. Initially the issue was raised by the petition of intervention lodged by the United States, and it was on the motion to permit said petition to be filed that the hearing was had on April 6, 1959, which resulted in the court’s memorandum of April 15, 1959 (172 F. Supp. 569). This petition for intervention concludes with the following prayer t

“Wherefore petitioner prays that it may be permitted to intervene herein as if originally specifically named a party entitled to assert and prosecute the claim, demands and causes of action with respect to the cargo hereinabove described and as to which libelant, Industria e Comercio de Minerios, S. A. sued as shipper, and that petitioner jointly with said Industria e Comercio de Minerios, S. A. jointly be permitted to pursue this litigation to-final decree, and that petitioner recover the amount of its damages as aforesaid with interest and costs and disbursements separate and apart from such damages as are claimed' or might be the interest of libelant, Industria e Comercio de Minerios, S. A., and that this Court direct that the libel herein be amended so as to join both petitioner and libelant, and that all further proceedings herein be undertaken in the joint name of petitioner and libelant, and that this Court will grant such other and further relief as may be just and proper in the premises.”

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197 F. Supp. 699, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industria-e-comercio-de-minerios-sa-v-nova-genuesis-societa-per-azioni-vaed-1961.