The Regent

57 F. Supp. 242, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1915
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedOctober 2, 1944
DocketNo. 16052
StatusPublished

This text of 57 F. Supp. 242 (The Regent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Regent, 57 F. Supp. 242, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1915 (E.D.N.Y. 1944).

Opinion

GALSTON, District Judge.

This is a possessory libel suit which was tried and resulted in a decision to dismiss the libel, The Regent, D.C., 35 F.Supp. 985. A motion at the conclusion of the trial by the libellant for the issuance of letters rogatory to a competent tribunal of the United Soviet Socialist Republics was denied. Before a decree of dismissal was entered, the libellant moved for reargument of the motion for the issuance of letters rogatory, and while such motion was pending the parties entered into a stipulation, on January 14, 1941, for the reopening of the action for trial to enable trustees to be appointed to operate the vessel pending the final determination of the action. The stipulation also provided that Joseph G. Kearns and Charles Recht be appointed joint trustees to operate the vessel pending the final determination of the action; that Daniel F. Young, Inc. be appointed by the joint trustees as the operating agent of the Regent, and that depositions of Latvijas Kugniecibas Sabiedriba and its officers and directors, Karlis Jansons, Janis Freyman and Janis Zaloman, may be taken by the libellant herein, and that the action be continued for a period of six months from January 14, 1941, to permit the return of the depositions with leave to either party to ask for a continuance at the expiration thereof. It may be observed that my attention has not been called to any order of continuance since the expiration of the six months referred to.

On the consent of the parties, an order was entered on January 15, 1941, which provided for the appointment of Kearns and Recht as joint trustees, and for the appointment of Daniel F. Young, Inc., as the operating agents of the trustees. On June 26, 1942, a stipulation was entered into by the trustees, by Recht and Kearns, and Daniel F. Young, Inc., consenting to [243]*243an order appointing Irwin Kurtz, Esquire, master to hear and report “all the issues herein relating to the financial operation of the S. S. Regent by Daniel F. Young, Inc. as operating agent pursuant to the order of this court dated January 15, 1941, and report thereon to this court with all convenient speed.” That order was signed on June 29, 1942. Protracted hearings were had before the master, and on June 13, 1944, he filed his report. To this report, Daniel F. Young, Inc., as operating agent, filed exceptions on June 16, 1944, and Charles Recht as co-trustee filed exceptions on June 17, 1944.

The questions for decision, therefore, relate to those exceptions.

First there will be considered the Recht group of exceptions. It should be noted that the master’s report deals not only with the S. S. Regent, but also with the financial operations of the steamships Abgara and Ciltvaira by Daniel F. Young, Inc., as operating agents, in causes pending in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. So far as the report of the master relates to those other vessels, there is no question for decision before me. Certain of the exceptions filed by Recht relate to those other vessels and to the extent that they do so, such exceptions will not be considered in this opinion.

Proceeding then to the Recht exceptions, the first to be considered is that numbered 2, to the finding of the master which disallows Recht’s requested surcharge of $181,500 for insufficient insurance Recht, in this exception, fails to state how much of this requested surcharge resulted from under-insurance of the S. S. Regent. No evidence was adduced by Recht bearing on the insurable value of the Regent at the time that she was sunk, on June 14, 1942. To be sure, the accountant’s report to Kearns and Recht, as co-trustees, concerning operations of the three vessels (Exhibit 72) gives some data about the Regent. War risk insurance on the S. S. Regent as at March 1, 1941, was in the sum of $250,-000. During the period of the trusteeship to the date of the sinking, repairs and betterments were effected costing $118,034.-70. Between March 1, 1941, and the date of the sinking, additional insurance was procured by the operating agents in the sum of $78,750. Thus, at the time of the sinking, there was insurance in effect amounting to $328,750. No insurance was carried for bunker coal on the Regent at the time of the sinking. Indeed such insurance was carried only to and including voyage No. 13, for which insurance premiums were paid on November 27, 1941. Apparently the contention of Recht is that the increase in insurance should at least have equalled the repairs and betterments made during the period of the trusteeship and prior to the sinking. Of course, Young, Inc., were required to use sound business judgment as operating agents, both as to the insurance and all other matters effecting operations. The firm consulted Despard & Co., Incorporated, which had been in the business of marine insurance for over sixty years. Van Name himself, vice president of the corporation, had been in the business of marine insurance for twenty-nine years. He handled the insurance on the three vessels in the early part of 1941, and through part of 1942. It was his opinion that Young, Inc. used good business judgment in keeping the insurance coverage as it did on these three vessels, taking into consideration the current rates on war risk. Van Name admitted that bunker insurance could have been procured for the Regent, but that in his opinion it was not necessary to do so since there was sufficient other insurance on the vessel to embrace such loss. Thus, so far as the record is concerned, Recht offered no evidence which would justify a finding that the Regent was not properly insured at the time of her sinking, nor indeed any evidence at all to show, if there was any insufficiency, how much that insufficiency amounted to. As has been said, he rests his case solely on the contention that the increase in insurance between March 1, 1941 and the date of sinking was short of the cost of repairs and betterments during that period. Van Name testified that of the $250,000 of insurance on the Regent in existence in March, .1941, $200,000 covered hull, machinery, etc., and $50,000 disbursements, anticipated profits and excesses. That was the amount, it may be noted, that the owners had in 1940. At that time the insurance apparently was figured, according to Van Name, at $60 per gross ton. In the later insurance the tonnage insurance was increased to $80 because of general marine and war conditions. It should be noted here also, for the matter will be referred to in the consideration of another of Recht’s exceptions, that the war risk in[244]*244surance was in an amount equal to the marine insurance on .the hull, plus an allowance for anticipated profits.

I think, on the whole, it must be concluded that there was no showing of lack of prudence on the part of the managing .agents. However, it must be noted .that in reaching this conclusion I cannot accept the master’s observation that after Van Name concluded his testimony, “Recht states that he would accept the testimony of Van Name, the witness called by the other side, and that he would not call 'any witness of his own on the question of insurance.” Such an expression leads to the possible inference that Recht had agreed with Van Name’s opinion. What Recht did say was that calling of further witnesses on insurance was unnecessary, “since the facts as to Young, Inc.’s acts and omissions regarding their obligation to insure the ships are in the record and undisputed.”

For the foregoing reasons, and for failure .of Recht to meet the case made out by the managing agents for prudent consideration and action in taking out war risk insurance, Exception 2 is overruled.

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Related

Latvijas Kugniecibas Sabiedriba v. the Regent
35 F. Supp. 985 (E.D. New York, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
57 F. Supp. 242, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-regent-nyed-1944.