Lenfest v. Coldwell

525 F.2d 717
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 6, 1975
DocketNos. 54, 74, Dockets 74-2659, 74-2660
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 525 F.2d 717 (Lenfest v. Coldwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lenfest v. Coldwell, 525 F.2d 717 (2d Cir. 1975).

Opinion

GURFEIN, Circuit Judge:

This is an appeal from a decision by Judge Carter in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, denying plaintiffs any recovery on their “Anticipated Profits” marine insurance policy. Plaintiff FerroBet Corporation was the time charterer of the vessel S.S. PANOCEAN from October, 1963 until sometime in the sum[720]*720mer of 1964.1 Plaintiffs Lenfest2 and Yarrington were financiers of Ferro-Bet. All plaintiffs were insured under an “Anticipated Profits” policy issued by a group of London marine insurers who have designated Harold Coldwell as their nominee in this action. The question presented on appeal is whether the district court erred in finding that plaintiffs failed to prove the vessel either an actual total loss, a constructive total loss, or a compromised total loss, as the policy required, and were hence not entitled to recover.

I

A. The Policies and Other Preliminaries

When the charter was arranged, the owners of PANOCEAN (not parties to this suit) had insurance policies on the hull and machinery of the vessel for $240,000. Under such policies, not directly in issue, the owners were insured against the partial or total destruction or loss of the vessel’s structure and machinery (e. g., engines, auxiliaries and boilers).3

The “Anticipated Profits” “hon- or” 4 insurance policy issued to the plaintiffs was to run for a twelve-month period beginning on October 29, 1963. The policy provides for payment to the plaintiffs “On — Anticipated Profits — Amount $150,000.”5 The insurers were

“to pay the above sum in the event the vessel becomes a total and/or constructive and/or arranged and/or compromised total loss as a result of Marine or War perils” (emphasis added).

The “Institute T.L.O.” or “Inchmaree” clause, to which these insurance contracts were also subject, further provides that

“1. This insurance covers only: — Total Loss (Actual or Constructive) of the Vessel (including total loss directly caused by:—
“. . . Bursting of boilers, breakage of shafts, or latent defect in the machinery or hull
“. . . Negligence of Master, Officers, Crew or Pilots)
“provided such loss or damage has not resulted from want of due diligence by the Assured, Owners or Managers.”

The policy provides further that

“[i]n ascertaining whether the Vessel is a constructive total loss nothing in respect of the damaged or [721]*721break-up value of the Vessel . ‘ . shall be taken into account. No claim for constructive total loss based upon the cost of recovery and/or repair of the Vessel shall be recoverable hereunder unless such cost would exceed the insured value in the policies on hull and machinery.”6

By the terms of the policy, plaintiffs could recover on “anticipated profits” in the event that the vessel became a) an actual total loss; b) an arranged or compromised total loss; or c) a constructive total loss, as a result of marine or war perils, or crew negligence (unless due to lack of due diligence by owners or insureds). For the ship to become a constructive total loss, the costs of recovery and/or repairs to the ship would have had to exceed $240,000 (the insured value on hull and machinery).

B. The Calamitous Voyage

The PANOCEAN’s charter began comfortably enough. In late November 1963 the vessel proceeded in ballast from Curacao to New Orleans where a cargo under a Cook Grains, Inc., subcharterparty was loaded and carried to Marseilles.7 She went on to Seville where baryte ore destined for New Orleans was loaded. At Leixos, Portugal, she took on other cargo. She then proceeded to London to discharge cargo and incurred some minor damage while in her berth. After loading at Immingham steel coils destined for Baltimore, PANOCEAN proceeded to Flushing, Netherlands, for bunkers.

In the subsequent passage between Flushing and Baltimore it was stipulated that the vessel encountered heavy weather, and that the voyage lasted from February 24 to April 3, 1964. The stipulation continued:

“Damages and/or equipment losses occurred on the forecastle deck, the main deck, the upper bridge deck, the boat deck, the ‘02’ deck, and the poop deck; and in the engineering spaces of the vessel. The vessel’s Scotch Boiler was subjected to heavy accumulation of salt, scale and soot from use of raw sea water; and both the starboard and the port Lamont boilers were subjected to use of raw sea water, and heavy accumulation of salt, scale and soot. It was necessary for the vessel to put into Azores and Bermuda as ‘ports of refuge’ before Baltimore could be reached.”

Stipulation # 8.

Under the charterparty, the PANOCEAN was “off hire” while the owner had her repaired in Baltimore, for about two months, until June 5, 1964, when she was tendered back to the time charterer as ready. She sailed out of Baltimore on June 12, 1964, but within two hours suffered a steering engine telemotor control system failure (apparently due to negligently made repairs), and was forced to anchor for repairs.8

After further repairs were made, the voyage resumed on June 16, but the ship again ran into trouble, and was forced to drop anchor off Port Everglades, Florida, to make repairs on account of boiler carryover problems unconnected with earlier damage. On June 22, the vessel stranded while at anchor off Port Everglades, suffering numerous bottom “setups” and indentations from the sand and coral bottom. She was refloated with the assistance of a tug on June 26 and docked the next day at Port Everglades for repairs.

[722]*722She did not arrive in New Orleans until July 18, 1964, almost a month later. There she was drydocked for engine repairs which were effected by July 31. Various permanent hull repairs costing some $40,000 should have been made at this time, but were deferred by the owner. After she arrived at New Orleans and before she departed, a dispute arose between the charterer and the owner, and the status of the charterparty went to arbitration. The vessel left New Orleans again, off charter, and sustained additional serious injuries in the Gulf of Mexico in September 1964. The owners sold the vessel as scrap in late 1964.

On June 26, 1964, while the vessel was in drydock for repairs at Port Everglades, Tradax Export cancelled a sub-charter with plaintiff Ferro-Bet, pursuant to its option to cancel if the PANOCEAN was not ready to load soybeans in New. Orleans by June 20. Plaintiffs claim that they also lost the Cook Grains subcharter when Ferro-Bet’s chief financiers, Marine Midland Bank, refused to permit substitution of a vessel, forcing an abandonment of the enterprise.

C. The Course of Adjustment

On May 20, 1964, while the vessel was under repair in Baltimore and after serious expressions of anxiety by its sub-charterers and lenders, Ferro-Bet made its first demand for payment under the Anticipated Profits policy.9 On February 25, 1965, the owners

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525 F.2d 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lenfest-v-coldwell-ca2-1975.