Steamship Mutual Underwriting Association, Limited v. George H. Landry, Libelant

281 F.2d 482, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 3868, 1960 A.M.C. 1650
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedAugust 10, 1960
Docket5613_1
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 281 F.2d 482 (Steamship Mutual Underwriting Association, Limited v. George H. Landry, Libelant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steamship Mutual Underwriting Association, Limited v. George H. Landry, Libelant, 281 F.2d 482, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 3868, 1960 A.M.C. 1650 (1st Cir. 1960).

Opinion

WOODBURY, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal by the respondent below, a marine insurance company organized under the laws of Great Britain, which we shall refer to hereinafter as Mutual, from a decree ordering that the libelant recover from it the principal sum of $4,325.23 together with interest in the amount of $267.44 and costs. There is no dispute over the facts.

On March 15, 1957, the diesel fishing vessel Mary J. Landry, owned by the li- *483 belant George H. Landry, collided with and sank the fishing vessel B & E owned by B & E, Inc. The owner of the B & E filed a libel in admiralty in the court below against the Mary J. Landry in rem and against George H. Landry, her owner, in personam. After hearing, the District Court found (1) that the Mary J. Landry was solely at fault for the collision with the B & E, (2) that on the date of the collision the B & E was worth $20,-000, its gear and supplies were worth $1,970 and its cargo was worth $1,000, (3) that the Mary J. Landry was worth more than the B & E and that, with her catch was “worth no less than $24,000,” and, (4) that the respondent in that case, the libelant in this one, George H. Landry, was entitled to limit recovery by the owner of the B & E to the value of the Mary J. Landry and its freight, meaning by that, its catch. The court then entered a decree pursuant to its findings ordering that B & E, Inc., recover from the Mary J. Landry and its owner, George H. Landry, the amount of $22,970 plus interest from March 16, 1957, in the amount of $1,355.23, making a total sum of $24,325.23, with costs.

At the time of the collision the Mary J. Landry was covered by three policies of insurance. Two of these were on its “Hull and Machinery etc. valued $20,-000,” one in the amount of $6,000 and the other in the amount of $14,000. The third policy was a P and I (protection and indemnity) policy issued by Mutual in the amount of $50,000. Both policies on the hull provided that “Subject to the conditions of American Hull Form as attached” the insurers would pay the insured up to the amount of the policy for loss of the Mary J. Landry from a number of ‘ Adventures and Perils” with none of which we are here concerned, for that vessel was not damaged in the collision. These policies also provided coverage for liability in the following language quoted in material part from a rider attached to the policies entitled “American Institute Time (Hulls) December, 1955”:

“And it is further agreed that if the Vessel hereby insured shall come into collision with any other Ship or Vessel and the Assured * * * in consequence of the insured Vessel being at fault shall become liable to pay and shall pay by way of damages to any other person or persons any sum or sums in respect of such collision, we, the Underwriters will pay the Assured * * * such proportion of such sum or sums so paid as our respective subscriptions hereto bear to the value of the Vessel hereby insured, provided always that our liability in respect to any one such collision shall not exceed our proportionate part of the value of the Vessel hereby insured. And in cases where the liability of the Vessel has been contested, or proceedings have been taken to limit liability, with the consent in writing of a majority (in amount) of Hull Underwriters, we will also pay a like proportion of the costs which the Assured * * * shall thereby incur, or be compelled to pay * *

This provision embodies what is known as the “four-fourths running down clause” to be referred to hereinafter. 1

The P and I policy written by Mutual with which we are here primarily concerned covered the “ ‘Mary J. Landry’ *484 Wood Diesel Fishing Vessel (Valued $20,000)” up to the policy limit of $50,-000 “in respect of the Protection and Indemnity Risks covered under the Rules specified within * * Rule 1(d) under the heading “Risks Covered,” reads:

“1. —The Member is protected and indemnified as Shipowner in respect of liabilities and expenses which he shall have become liable to pay and shall have in fact paid in respect of the vessel named herein for the following:—
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“(d) Loss of or damage to any other vessel or craft or to the freight thereof or property thereon, caused by collision with the vessel named herein, in so far as such liability would not be covered by insurance under the standard form of policy on hull, machinery, etc., issued by the American Marine Insurance Syndicate (including the four-fourths Running Down Clause.)”

In addition Rule 2, under the heading “General Conditions,” excepts from the insurers liability:

“Claims for any loss, damage, liability, or expense which would be payable under an insurance under the present standard form of policy of the American Marine Insurance Syndicate on hull and machinery, etc. * * * and sufficient in amount to pay such loss, damage, liability or expense in full.”

The hull insurers paid the limits of their policies' amounting together to $20,000 in satisfaction of the judgment obtained by the owner of the B & E against the Mary J. Landry and George H. Landry, her owner, and George H. Landry himself paid the balance of the judgment. He then brought the present libel against Mutual to recover the amount he had paid over and above the $20,000 paid by the hull insurers, and also other sums, which he claimed were due and owing to him by Mutual under the terms of its P and I policy.

The court below was not only concerned with the question whether Mutual was liable to Landry at all under its policy but, if it answered that question in the affirmative, with the question of the amount of that liability, that is, whether certain items of loss claimed by Landry were properly collision losses. We, however, do not have any problem as to the amount of Mutual’s possible liability. We are concerned only with whether Mutual is liable for anything at all, for the only question posed in its brief is “Whether the excess of collision liability paid under the Four-Fourths Running Down clause of a standard form of hull policy issued by the American Marine Insurance Syndicate is payable under the collision clause of a P & I policy?” 2 The District Court answered this question in the affirmative and we agree.

The appellant’s basic contention in the court below and in this court is that its P and I policy does not operate as an excess collision policy; that clause 1(d) of the risks covered quoted above should not be construed as providing liability coverage in excess of the liability coverage provided in the hull policies. Stated another way, the contention is that clause 1(d) has reference to a type or kind of liability, not to an amount which might be recovered; that it provides coverage for liabilities of the shipowner-insured not covered at all by such insurance as would be provided by insurance under the American standard form of hull policy, not that it covers liability for amounts in excess of the coverage provided by such policies.

The District Court we think quite correctly rejected this contention. It first ruled that English law governed

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Bluebook (online)
281 F.2d 482, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 3868, 1960 A.M.C. 1650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steamship-mutual-underwriting-association-limited-v-george-h-landry-ca1-1960.