Scarburgh Co. v. American Manufacturers Mutual Insurance

107 Misc. 2d 772, 435 N.Y.S.2d 997, 1979 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2967
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 107 Misc. 2d 772 (Scarburgh Co. v. American Manufacturers Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scarburgh Co. v. American Manufacturers Mutual Insurance, 107 Misc. 2d 772, 435 N.Y.S.2d 997, 1979 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2967 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1979).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Richard W. Wallach, J.

Like Banquo’s ghost, the famous “salad oil swindle” will not down. Sixteen years after the collapse of Allied Crude Vegetable Oil Refining Corporation (Allied), it continues to generate litigation such as the case at hand.

Plaintiff (Scarburgh) brings this action to recover upon an excess marine insurance policy issued by defendant (AMMI) which is alleged by Scarburgh to cover losses sustained by it in the Allied debacle. Scarburgh asserts that at the time of Allied’s bankruptcy filed on November 19, 1963, Scarburgh was the holder for value of an excess of $23 million worth of fraudulently issued and subsequently worthless warehouse receipts taken as collateral security in vegetable oil financing transactions with Allied.

[773]*7731. Scarburgh’s Failure to Disclose Material Facts

Scarburgh’s right to recovery of this loss against AMMI is premised upon a fraud and crime coverage indorsement dated November 25, 1963, affixed to an original marine insurance policy dated August 28, 1963. In AMMI’s answer to Scarburgh’s amended complaint herein, AMMI has raised affirmative defenses that the indorsement was obtained under circumstances amounting to both fraud and mistake. The court now holds that defendant has successfully established its affirmative defenses of fraud and mistake by an overwhelming preponderance of credible evidence. Accordingly, it follows that plaintiff’s complaint must be dismissed, with costs.

The genesis of the insurance coverage upon which this action rests occurred on July 2, 1963 when Scarburgh’s parent company, Isbrandtsen & Co., Inc. (Isbrandtsen) was seeking a marine “bumbershoot” (Ang. umbrella) excess policy to replace one issued by British Insurers which was expiring. At that time, Isbrandtsen’s insurance matters were entirely in the hands of Frank B. Hall & Co., Inc., insurance brokers. Personally in charge of the Isbrandtsen insurance account at Hall was B. Lytton Johnston, assisted by John D. Lucey, a broker with marine risk expertise.

On July 2, 1963, Johnston and Lucey met with John Blackman, AMMI’s marine underwriter, at which time Lucey delivered to Blackman a written application for standard excess insurance marine coverage with a $10 million limit. In that application which listed several other affiliates, divisions, and subsidiaries, Scarburgh was described as a subsidiary (over 70% controlled) whose business was, as a principal or agent, the import or export of commodities, with a further reference to “short and medium term commercial finance business financing against commodities, accounts receivable, etc.” This application sought marine excess coverage over underlying hull and protection and indemnity policies pertaining to two specifically named vessels and marine time charter liability. In the course of this meeting, Johnston orally requested additional coverage for fraudulent title document insurance.

[774]*774At that meeting, Johnston knew but did not disclose that Scarburgh was then financing Allied against the security of warehouse receipts issued by American Express Warehousing, Ltd. (Warehousing) and Harbor Tank Storage Co., Inc. (Harbor Tank) at Bayonne, New Jersey, and that this financing activity, amounting to millions of dollars, constituted virtually the entirety of Scarburgh’s financial operations.

The July 2 meeting ended inconclusively and Johnston and Blackman then met at the latter’s office on July 23, 1963. At that time, Johnston was in possession of a memorandum dated July 5, 1963, prepared by Isbrandtsen’s president, A. S. Abdirkin, stating that over-all loans of his company secured by warehouse receipts and other title documents “now run about 25 million dollars.”

Johnston did not apprise Blackman of the volume or character of Scarburgh’s loan activity at this meeting. At that time, Blackman agreed to issue the marine excess policy, but he declined to provide any primary insurance coverage for fraudulent title document risks. AMMI’s ocean marine excess policy was dated and issued on August 28, 1963 pursuant to the earlier binder.

Prior to the next critical meeting of the insurance negotiators at Blackman’s office on Friday afternoon, November 15, 1963, certain calamitous events had occurred with respect to plaintiff’s loan transactions with Allied and the financial collapse of Allied, all of which were carefully concealed from Blackman, who did not have the slightest intimation that Scarburgh was even remotely involved with Allied. These events included:

1. Plaintiff’s loans to Allied secured by warehouse receipts were now approximately $24 million.

2. Allied was known by plaintiff and its brokers to be insolvent and unable to pay its debts. Plaintiff had knowledge that an Allied draft for $250,000 deposited the previous day would be dishonored for insufficient funds. (Even this loss, concededly known and incurred prior to the earliest conceivable attachment of defendant’s coverage, is included in plaintiff’s proof of loss and claim.)

[775]*7753. Anthony De Angelis, who controlled Allied, was known by plaintiff to be untrustworthy and had already caused Isbrandtsen a $466,000 loss for fraud in connection with an oil cargo shipment.

At this November 15 meeting, plaintiff was represented not only by the Hall marine expert, Lucey, but another Hall officer, Edwin G. Stephens. The day before Jacob Isbrandtsen, the board chairman of plaintiff’s parent company, had instructed Abdirkin to collect and see all the insurance policies with Abdirkin’s “own eyes”. What was available for Abdirkin’s eyes on November 14, 1963 was rather meager. There was simply the ESLI primary policy insuring against fraudulent title documents of $1 million on any one loan, with a further limitation of $1 million on all losses arising or resulting from transactions with any one borrower. Even as to this coverage, plaintiff was a 10% coinsurer, so that all that stood between Scarburgh and a $23 million plus loss was the integrity of the Allied warehouse receipts.

It is against this backdrop of plaintiff’s well-founded panic that the conduct of its insurance representatives at the November 15 meeting must be evaluated. Into those negotiations was thrust a new figure, Stephens, whose participation was explained to Blackman by Lucey as called for by reason of Stephens’ familiarity with the primary ESLI coverage.

Stephens came to that meeting armed with a draft of a so-called “step-down” indorsement which, if agreed to, would create fraudulent document coverage in an unlimited amount. This coverage was to be accomplished at an annual premium of $7,500, in contrast to the $40,000 annual premium of the highly limited ESLI “primary” coverage.

On November 19, the same day that Allied filed its bankruptcy petition in the Federal court at Newark, New Jersey, Stephens wrote a letter to Blackman which purported to confirm as agreed all of the operative terms of the unlimited step-down coverage. Although Stephens, in a deposition read in evidence, contended that full agreement was reached on November 15, this court credits [776]*776Blackman’s testimony in open court to the contrary, and holds that Stephens’ letter is an entirely self-serving and unreliable assertion of an agreement where none was in fact reached.

Stephens’ letter shows a receipt stamp by the Blackman office on Thursday, November 21. After routing it to Bu-glass, Blackman left the office early.

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Bluebook (online)
107 Misc. 2d 772, 435 N.Y.S.2d 997, 1979 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scarburgh-co-v-american-manufacturers-mutual-insurance-nysupct-1979.