Marine Ins. v. McLanahan

5 F.2d 773, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2752, 1925 A.M.C. 756
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 1925
DocketNo. 2312
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 5 F.2d 773 (Marine Ins. v. McLanahan) 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
Marine Ins. v. McLanahan, 5 F.2d 773, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2752, 1925 A.M.C. 756 (4th Cir. 1925).

Opinion

WADDILL, Circuit Judge.

This is an equity cause, instituted by appellees against the appellants in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, involving the right to certain moneys now in the hands of the appellee the Equitable Trust Company, as trustee, arising from funds paid by the insurance underwriters upon the steamship Augusta by reason of the sinking of the barge Detroit. A brief summary of the facts in the case is necessary to a correct understanding of the issues:

The West India Sugar Corporation, of which appellee J. Craig MeLanahan is ancillary receiver, duly incorporated under the laws of the state of Virginia, was engaged in the business of transporting molasses and other goods and merchandise between Cuba and the United States. It owned the steamship Augusta and the barge Detroit, the latter being without motive power of its own. [774]*774On or about the 27th of April, 1919, while the Augusta was towing the Detroit, laden with sugar, up the Mississippi bound for New Orleans, she came into collision with the vessel Capitaine de Beauchamp, seriously injuring the latter, and the Augusta, in the endeavor to extricate herself from the Beau-champ, ran into and struck the barge Detroit, sinking the same immediately, and which, with its cargo, became a total loss.

'fhe Augusta was libeled by the Capitaine de Beauchamp in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana, and her owners filed limitation of liability proceedings. The Augusta was held solely at fault for bringing about the collision, and limitation of liability was allowed, the ship’s value ascertained, and the amount paid into court. At the time of .the collision both the Augusta and the Detroit were insured, and the owners of the barge received from its insurers the sum of $25,932 ón account of the loss of the barge. The policies of insurance upon the Augusta and Detroit each contained, in addition to the general collision and “running down clause,” the provision in eases of common ownership of vessels known as the “sister ship clause,” an extract from which is as follows:

“ * * * And it is further agreed that the principles involved in this clause shall apply to the case where both vessels are the property, in part or in whole, of the same owners or charterers, all questions of responsibility and amount of liability as between the two ships being left to the decision of a single arbitrator, if the parties can agree upon a single arbitrator, or failing such agreement, to the decision of arbitrators, one to be appointed by the managing owners or charterers of both vessels, and one to be appointed by the majority (in amount) of underwriters interested in each vessel; the two arbitrators chosen to choose a third arbitrator before entering upon the reference, and the decision of such single, or of any two of such three arbitrators appointed as above to be final and binding.”

Disagreements having arisen between the parties in respect to the amount payable under said policies, notice was duly given, pursuant to this clause, to the underwriters of the Augusta, that loss was. claimed by the owners of the Detroit under said clause in the policies on account of the barge’s loss, in addition to the claims under the general collision and particular average clauses. Thereupon, by consent, Hon. Harrington Putnam was agreed upon to arbitrate the differences between the parties, and to make proper award thereon, his finding to be final and binding. The arbitrator’s award was in effect as follows: That the liability of the Augusta’s underwriters to the owners thereof under the clause set forth in the arbitration agreement was not limited to the amount which the Augusta’s owners surrendered in the proceeding to limit that ship’s liability, and that the insurers of the Augusta were not liable for any sum whatever for the Detroit or its cargo, or to the insurers of such cargo, other than as covered by the sister ship clause of the Augusta’s policies.

Notwithstanding this award was adverse to the appellants, they at once threatened to institute leg’al proceedings by attachment or otherwise, as a result of which this suit was instituted to enjoin such action on their part. The appellants thereupon appeared and filed their answers and counterclaims, setting forth their defenses, and insisting that they were entitled to have and receive from complainants the specific sums paid by them as underwriters of the barge Detroit, viz. $25,-932, and for which the appellants, underwriters of the Augusta, received credit in settling their liabilities arising from the loss of the Detroit, and that by subrogation the underwriters of the Detroit were entitled to maintain their right of recovery for the amount so paid. The District Court decided the questions thus raised ’adversely to the appellants, and in effect adopted the arbitrator’s award aforesaid, and dismissed the counterclaim. From this action the appeal in this case was taken.

The awards of the arbitrator are most important in this case, as the same w.ere made pursuant to the provisions of the policies in question, by one chosen by consent of parties, and whose findings were final between them. Two reports and awards were made; the first dated June 16, 1923, and the second November 28, 1923. In the first, the arbitrator recited that the same turned upon the construction of the “running down” clause in marine insurance policies in connection with the provisions for vessels of common ownership, sometimes called the “sister ship” clause, and said:

“The cases arising under this clause have been infrequent. Its plain purpose was to treat common ownership as no bar to indemnity, so as to give the insured protection for his separate ships, as if there had been no common control. Although the damage and losses of these two vessels run down in the Mississippi, for purposes of limitation of liability, was a single casualty (The Creadon, 5 Aspinall [N. S.] 585), yet this does not [775]*775exclude the ‘sister ship’ principle. This is an underwriter’s undertaking to intervene between vessels of the same owner, and, by means of an arbitration, apply the indemnity principles applicable to separately owned ships. Hence, I reach the conclusion that the underwriter’s payments in the limitation proceedings did not exhaust their liability under this ‘sister ship’ clause, which by its terms is limited to the policy valuation, or more accurately by the extent that this valuation had been covered by the policies.”

In the second award, dated November 28, 1923, the arbitrator having found that the Detroit’s owners had recovered from the barge’s underwriters $25,932, and that the underwriters of the Augusta had paid on account of collision damages in the limited liability proceedings $98,241.43, and in addition were liable for $74,068, which with the $25,932 covered the full amount of the underwriters’ liability, proceeded to ascertain whether anything further was due from the Augusta’s underwriters on account of the loss of the Detroit’s cargo, or to the cargo’s underwriters, and concluded that no liability existed in favor of either. The following extract from the opinion and award of Judge Putnam, the arbitrator, will greatly tend to elucidate the entire transaction, and make clear the reasons for his rulings, and the principles controlling in the ascertainment of the rights of the parties to the litigation:

“It remains to determine what, if anything, more is due from such underwriters for loss of the cargo on the Detroit, and also for the loss of that vessel. This cargo was a collision loss.

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Bluebook (online)
5 F.2d 773, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2752, 1925 A.M.C. 756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marine-ins-v-mclanahan-ca4-1925.