Standard Marine Ins. v. Westchester Fire Ins.

19 F. Supp. 334, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1599
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 26, 1936
StatusPublished

This text of 19 F. Supp. 334 (Standard Marine Ins. v. Westchester Fire Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Marine Ins. v. Westchester Fire Ins., 19 F. Supp. 334, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1599 (S.D.N.Y. 1936).

Opinion

KNOX, District Judge.

Throughout the period of the Great War, plaintiff, Standard Marine Insurance Company, Limited, a British corporation, and defendant’s predecessor, United States Lloyds, an American corporation (hereinafter called the defendant), were largely engaged in the business of insuring marine and war risks. Owing to the hazardous nature of the business, it was desirable that one company should not aloné carry the entire- liabilities for the risks covered by its policies. Thus it was that on numerous occasions, the parties became mutually interested in the same risks. In some instances in which the defendant had become a direct underwriter or reinsurer, it ceded to plaintiff by way of reinsurance or retrocession, respectively, a proportionate part of the liability that had been assumed., In such cases plaintiff obligated itself to pay a specified proportion of any loss defendant might suffer pursuant to its contracts of insurance or reinsurance respectively. Similarly, there were instances in which plaintiff had become a direct underwriter or a reinsurer, and ceded to defendant by way of reinsurance or retrocession, respectively, a proportionate part of its burden. Thereupon, defendant became obligated to cover a specified proportion of any loss the plaintiff might sustain. In still further instances, the plaintiff became an insurer or reinsurer concurrently with, or in conjunction with, defendant. Under such arrangements plaintiff and defendant became coinsurers, and obligated themselves to bear the burden of any losses in proportions determined by the provisions of the contracts.

The war and its attendant circumstances inflicted losses, both of life and property, on the nationals of many countries, neutral and combatant. Those losses •which the parties herein had insured wefe [336]*336paid, and each party fully discharged the obligations it had assumed toward the other. Upon the termination of the war, an attempt was made to require the vanquished nations to pay the losses that were properly chargeable to- their hostile activities To effectuate this plan, the neutral countries, e. g., Holland, Sweden, Norway, negotiated separate treaties with Germany. The Allied nations, with the exception of the United States, became parties to the Treaty of Versailles, under which they were entitled to claim reparation for all damages suffered by1 their nationals.

Officially, the war between the United States and Germany did not end until July-2, -1921, when its cessation was declared in a Joint Resolution adopted by the American Congress (42 Stat. 105). This resolution specified that the Treaty of Peace to be negotiated between the two countries should provide that all property of the Imperial German Government, or of its successor, and of all German nationals under the control of the United States, should be retained until Germany should make suitable provision for the satisfaction of claims of persons who owed permanent allegiance to the United States, and who had suffered loss or damage through the acts of the Imperial German Government subsequent to July 31, 1914.

The treaty contemplated by the Joint Resolution was signed at Berlin on August 25, 1921, and was proclaimed by the President of the United States on the 14th of the following November. Under the treaty provision, Germany undertook to accord to the United States, all the rights, privileges, indemnities, and reparations specified in the Joint Resolution of July 2, 1921. In August of the following year, an executive agreement between the two governments was consummated. Pursuant to its terms, a tribunal known as the Mixed Claims Commission was established, being composed of one commissioner from each country, and an umpire chosen by the commissioners. This commission was authorized to adjudicate such claims of American citizens against the German Government as might be asserted, a procedure for settling claims similar to that adopted between Germany and the other Allies. The nationals of each country who claimed a right to reimbursement for losses sustained were relegated to the tribunal which their respective governments had set up for the determination of such claims, e. g., the Anglo-German Mixed Arbitral Tribunal, the Franco-German Mixed Arbitral Tribunal, etc.

In due course, defendant filed with the Commission Memorials of its claims against Germany, amounting in the aggregate to $2,173,601.66. These Memorials represented the full amount that had been paid by defendant upon account of losses, without deducting therefrom any sums that had been received from plaintiff as rein-surer.. They did not include, however, any sums paid by defendant to plaintiff under contracts in which the defendant was the reinsurer. After argument before the Commission in July, 1923, the agent of the United States required defendant to disclose all amounts received from foreign reinsurers, and also all amounts paid by defendant as reinsurer to foreign insurance companies. This disclosure apparently was predicated upon an agreed statement by the American and the German agent, adopted June 23, 1924, as to the character of the claims to be presented.

Inter alia, the statement set forth that : * * * no underwriters, other than corporations incorporated under the laws of the United States or any State thereof * * *, and partnerships and/or individuals other than such as owe permanent allegiance to the United States, are to share in any manner whatsoever in the distribution of the awards involved in this settlement.” Upon the basis of the Memorials and this additional data, the Commission, on September 18, 1924, decreed that, under the terms of the treaty the Government of Germany was obligated to pay to the Government of the .United States on behalf of the defendant the sum of $1,-396,881.41, with interest. The amount of the award was calculated by taking 83 per cent, of all sums paid by defendant on account of contracts of marine and war risk insurance which had been reinsured by the plaintiff, and deducting therefrom all sums received from foreign reinsurers. To the resulting figure was added 83 per cent, of all sums defendant had paid plaintiff on risks in which the former was reinsurer, and also 83 per cent, of sums paid by defendant to plaintiff on contracts in which the parties were co-insurers. By reason of the award, the defendant has thus far received payments of substantial amounts.

In the meanwhile, on August 10, 1922, plaintiff, in company with other foreign underwriters, presented to the Commission [337]*337a Memorial claiming $550,000. The claims were dismissed by the Commission on the ground that, under the Treaty of Berlin, the United States was not entitled to claim reparations on behalf of non-American corporations. The British Government proceeded to press the claims of its own nationals before the Anglo-German Mixed Arbitral Tribunal and has received from the German Government various awards based on the claims thus asserted. Unlike the United States, the British Government has adopted a policy of discretionary distribution of sums awarded to it, turning over portions of such recovery only to such of its nationals who are “necessitous.” Under such circumstances, the plaintiff has been the recipient of none of the awards recovered by its sovereign upon behalf of plaintiff’s losses.

Being thus deprived of any recoupment by reason of the procedures that have been outlined, plaintiff has brought this action in equity for an accounting, and for the recovery of the ¿mount, to be determined by a special master, by which it claims defendant has been unjustly enriched at plaintiff’s expense.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. Supp. 334, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-marine-ins-v-westchester-fire-ins-nysd-1936.