Susquehanna Silk Mills v. Rebora

238 A.D. 100, 263 N.Y.S. 858, 1933 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9431
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 21, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 238 A.D. 100 (Susquehanna Silk Mills v. Rebora) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Susquehanna Silk Mills v. Rebora, 238 A.D. 100, 263 N.Y.S. 858, 1933 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9431 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinions

Merrell, J.

The present action is brought by a number of insurance companies who joined as nominal parties plaintiff their respective assureds. Plaintiffs, in the complaint, attempt to set forth facts which plaintiffs claim entitled them to equitable relief and for a judicial accounting by defendants of their acts as general average adjusters under an agreement entered into between the appellants’ assureds as consignees of certain merchandise dehvered to them by the defendant Navigazione Generale Italiana. The defendants in this action are Emilio Rebora and Eho Tarabotto, as general average adjusters for Navigazione Generale Itahana, and as trustees. Navigazione Generale Itahana is also made a party defendant, as is Itaha-America Shipping Corporation and Angelo Ruspini, the manager of the latter corporation, as the American [102]*102agents of Navigazione Generate Italiana and Homer L. Loomis, and Homer L. Loomis, Reginald B. Williams and Philip A. Donahue, doing business under the firm name and style of Loomis, Williams & Donahue. The latter individuals are made parties defendants as the legal representatives of said general average adjusters and of said shipping corporations in this country. The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint under rule 106 of the Rules of Civil Practice for want of jurisdiction and failure to allege facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action appearing on the face of the complaint. This motion was granted at Special Term, and it is from the order entered on said motion that the present appeal is taken.

The complaint in this action brought by the insurance companies impleaded with their respective assureds discloses that the assureds have no interest in the subject-matter of the action, but that the action is prosecuted by the insurance companies. The said insurance companies were and are unsuccessful parties defendant or the confederates of unsuccessful parties defendant in a long series of litigations at law in the New York State courts and in the Federal courts growing out of actions brought by the defendants herein as general average adjusters for the collection of general average due from said plaintiffs pursuant to a general average agreement entered into between the assureds and the Italian steamship company growing out of the wreck of the steamship Casería, owned by said company, which sailed from Genoa, Italy, for New York in February, 1920, laden with a large quantity of valuable merchandise consigned to various American consignees. One of these actions, which recently passed through this court, was brought by the defendants Rebora and Tarabotto, as general average adjusters and trustees for Navigazione Generate Italiana against British & Foreign Marine Insurance Company, Ltd. In that action the defendant was represented by the same attorneys who now are appearing for the plaintiffs, appellants. The action was to recover the amount determined by said adjusters to be payable upon two shipments of merchandise consigned to Yve. Guerin & Fils, of New York, and B. Altman & Co., of New York, and for which the defendant insurance company in that action had guaranteed payment of general average pursuant to said general average agreement entered into by the various consignees of merchandise shipped on said steamship Casería. At the trial of that action the jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiffs and against defendant upon which judgment was entered in plaintiffs’ favor and against defendant for $51,463.25. Upon appeal to this court the judgment rendered at Trial Term was unanimously affirmed (Rebora v. British & Foreign Marine Ins. Co., Ltd., 232 App. Div. 730). Application was then made to this court [103]*103by the defendant in that action for leave to appeal to the Court of Appeals, and said application was denied. Thereupon the defendant applied for and received permission from the Court of Appeals to appeal to that court from the unanimous affirmance by this court of the judgment rendered as the result of the trial at Trial Term. The Court of Appeals, however, unanimously affirmed this court, Judge Lehman writing for the Court of Appeals (258 N. Y. 379). Thereupon the defendants moved in Court of Appeals for a reargument of said appeal, and said motion was denied. (259 N. Y. 507.) On the day following the entry of the order of the Court of Appeals denying said motion for reargument the present action was brought by the various insurance companies impleaded with their assureds for equitable relief.

The order appealed from was right and should be affirmed upon several grounds:

First This court is bound by its decision on a former appeal herein (Susquehanna Silk Mills v. Rebora, 236 App. Div. 651) where the sufficiency of the plaintiffs’ complaint was directly involved, and upon which appeal this court held that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action for equitable relief. Not only was the sufficiency of the plaintiffs’ complaint directly involved upon the prior appeal, but the determination of the appeal required this court to pass upon the sufficiency of the allegations of the complaint. Therefore, the question presented upon the present appeal is res adjudícala, so far as this court is concerned.

Second. Plaintiffs do not come into a court of equity with clean hands. Their previous conduct has been so inequitable as to deny them the right to ask the intervention of a court of equity. This court may take judicial notice of facts disclosed in this and prior suits involving the same subject-matter.

Third. The allegations of the complaint fail to show any grounds for requiring an accounting by the defendants.

Fourth. Plaintiffs’ action is premature, and in no event can the plaintiffs require an accounting by the general average adjusters appointed by all of the assureds and upon whose findings the assureds agreed to abide.

Fifth. No demand for an accounting was made prior to the commencement of the present action.

Finally. An accounting at the present time is quite impracticable.

An intelligent appreciation of the questions presented by this appeal requires a somewhat extended narrative of the circumstances resulting in the appointment of the defendants as general average adjusters, the duties cast upon them, and their performance thereof.

[104]*104The steamship Caserta, flying the Italian flag and bound from Genoa to New York by way of Naples and Palermo, loaded with a cargo of freight and carrying passengers, when leaving the harbor of Palermo stranded in said harbor during a hurricane and remained upon the rocks a period of eleven days. During this period a large amount was expended by the shipowner in attempting to float the steamship from the rocks and in the interests of the common safety of both the steamship and its cargo. This expenditure for the common good was largely the expense of tugs and lighters used in an effort of salvaging the steamship and its cargo. Forty per cent of the cargo was either thrown overboard or damaged to such an extent that it was not practicable to reship the same to the destination to which it was intended, and the same was either lost or sold and disposed of at a low price. An attempt was made, after the vessel was free from the shoals, to repair the same with a view of continuing its voyage to New York.

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Bluebook (online)
238 A.D. 100, 263 N.Y.S. 858, 1933 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/susquehanna-silk-mills-v-rebora-nyappdiv-1933.