Marine Bank Trust Co. v. Home Ins. Co.

127 So. 598, 170 La. 193, 1930 La. LEXIS 1691
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 5, 1930
DocketNo. 30342.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 127 So. 598 (Marine Bank Trust Co. v. Home Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marine Bank Trust Co. v. Home Ins. Co., 127 So. 598, 170 La. 193, 1930 La. LEXIS 1691 (La. 1930).

Opinion

ROGERS, J.

The Marine Bank & Trust Company and the Gulf Naval Stores Company, Inc., jointly brought separate suits against four insurance companies to recover, in the aggregate, $36,-259.10, with interest and penalties, for the alleged loss by fire of 42,484 gallons of turpentine stored in three tanks leased by the Southern Bonded Warehouse Company from the naval stores company. Subsequently, the plaintiff bank was merged with the Canal Bank & Trust Company, and the latter was substituted for the former as a party plaintiff.

The suits were consolidated and tried as one case in the court below, resulting in a judgment in each case in favor of the plaintiff bank as prayed for. This appeal is by the Home Insurance Company, one of the defendants, from the judgment against it in the sum of $25,849.77, with interest, 10 per cent, additional on the principal and interest as attorney’s fees, and an additional 12 per cent, on the principal as damages, together with costs.

The Canal Bank & Trust Company, the judgment creditor, has answered the appeal, asking that the statutory damages of 12 per cent, be awarded on the interest as well as on the principal of its judgment, and that the award of 10 per cent, on the amount of the judgment as attorney’s fees be increased to 15 per cent.

*196 No question is made by the appellant of the issuance of the policy nor as to the proofs of loss being seasonably furnished' by the «appellees. The sole defense relied on to defeat plaintiffs’ claim is that the turpentine .for the alleged loss of which recovery is sought was not on the premises owned by the naval stores company in the tanks leased by the warehouse company and, consequently, was not destroyed by the fire. Therefore the issue presented for determination is essentially one of fact.

The salient facts, with our comments thereon, are as follows, viz.:

The Gulf Naval Stores Company, Inc., prior to 1926 was a borrower on collateral, from time to time, of various sums of money from the Marine Bank & Trust Company. The collateral pledged to secure these loans consisted of warehouse receipts issued by the Southern Bonded Warehouse Company, a subsidiary of the naval stores company ¡ covering oil stored in tanks situated in the square bounded by Bernadotte, Baudin, Julia, and St. Patrick streets, in the city of New Orleans. This square of ground was owned by the naval stores company, and both the plant of that company and the plant of the warehouse company were located on the property.

• On September 13, 1926, a fire occurred, ■which destroyed a quantity of turpentine stored ,on the premises in question. At the time of this fire the naval stores company .owed the Marine Bank & Trust Company on notes the sum of $51,068.68. These notes were secured by the pledge of the receipts of the .warehouse company, calling for 51,106 gallons of turpentine, and by the policies of the -defendant and other insurance companies in;suring the,turpentine in the sum.of $61,000, with a loss payable clause thereto attached in favor of the bank as it's interests might appear. .

Plaintiffs claimed a loss by reason of the fire of 42,484 gallons of turpentine, which was pledged to the Marine Bank & Trust Company, of the value of 85 cents per gallon, or a total monied loss of $36,249.10, which was found to be correct by the court below.

The turpentine that was consumed by the fire was stored in tanks Nos. 2, 4, and 5, each of , the capacity of 15,000 gallons. This was gqm .turpentine. There were also on the yard, in tank No. 3, at the time of the fire, 13,000 gallons of wood turpentine belonging to the Gay-Hammell Company. Tank No. 1 was filled with pine tar which had 'been stored therein some time during the previous summer.

Due to the fact that the business in which it was engaged had become unprofitable, the naval stores company virtually ceased operations subsequent to the year 1925. About the middle of the year 1926, the company had practically disposed of all its turpentine not covered by the warehouse receipts. These receipts had been held by the bank under its pledge for a considerable period of time, and, because of unfavorable market conditions, it was deemed advisable by the interested parties that they should hold the turpentine covered by the receipts in- storage until the market price of the commodity would advance. .

Pending the expected rise in the market, in order to facilitate the handling and checking of the turpentine, which was distributed about the storage yard'in various containers ■used for the purpose by the warehouse company, the bank requested that the turpentine be collected and refined, some of it being a .little off-color, and placed in the storage •tanks. There is direct testimony in the record showing this was done and that the tur *198 pentine was placed in tanks Nos. 2, 4, and 5. The witnesses who testified to this effect were Dunwoody, the president of both the naval stores company and the warehouse company, who supervised the work, and two negro employees who actually did the work. According to these witnesses, the task of collecting and refining the turpentine was begun in June, 1926. The filling of tank No. 5 was completed about three weeks prior to the fire. The filling of tanks No's. 2 and 4 was almost completed some time before the fire, and was actually completed on September 11, 1926, two days previous to the fire. The three tanks were gauged by Dunwoody while they were being filled and after the filling had been completed, and each was found to contain on strict measure not less than 14,500 gallons of turpentine.

The testimony of Dunwoody as to the quantity of turpentine that was collected and placed in the tanks and which was on hand at the time of the fire is corroborated by the testimony of W. N. Fisher. This witness, as the representative of the New Orleans Clearing House, of which the plaintiff bank was a member, examined and cheeked the turpentine stored on the yard of the warehouse company in the month of May, 1926. This was something less than four months before the fire occurred. The report of Mr. Fisher under date of May 25, 1926, is in the record. This report and the testimony given in connection therewith show that the witness checked the warehouse receipts against the turpentine, which was stored at the time in various tanks, tank cars, and drums on the premises of' the warehouse company, 'and that the amount of turpentine on hand at that time was 48,905 gallons.

Further corroborative evidence of the amount of turpentine on hand when the fire took place is ¡furnished by an audit made of the books of the naval .stores company by Archie M. Smith, a certified public accountant. This audit was made in March, 1928, at the request of the plaintiff bank, and covered a period of two years, namely, from September 13, 1924, to September 13, 1926, the date of the fire. The audit, which was based on the original documents, shows that the quantity of turpentine on hand on the date last mentioned was 46,255.44 gallons. ; .

The defendant insurance company contends that the books of the naval stores company do not reflect the true situation regarding the amount of turpentine stored in the tanks at the time of the fire.

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Bluebook (online)
127 So. 598, 170 La. 193, 1930 La. LEXIS 1691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marine-bank-trust-co-v-home-ins-co-la-1930.