Tokio Marine & Fire Insurance v. M/V L. Jalabert Bontang

624 F. Supp. 402, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12485
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 20, 1985
Docket84 Civ. 1053(MP)
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 624 F. Supp. 402 (Tokio Marine & Fire Insurance v. M/V L. Jalabert Bontang) 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
Tokio Marine & Fire Insurance v. M/V L. Jalabert Bontang, 624 F. Supp. 402, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12485 (S.D.N.Y. 1985).

Opinion

DECISION AND OPINION

MILTON POLLACK, Senior District Judge:

This admiralty case arises from water damage to a shipment of fifty-four pallets (or crates) of SIR-20 (Standard Indonesian Rubber, grade no. 20) rubber from Padang, Indonesia to New Orleans, Louisiana, F.O.B. Padang. The issues were presented to the Court at a Bench trial.

BACKGROUND

Who The Parties Are

P.T. Kilang Lima Gunung (of Indonesia) (“seller”) sold fifty-four pallets of rubber to Marubeni America Corporation (“Marubeni”) (“buyer”), 200 Park Avenue, New York, N.Y.; the invoice was consigned to “Order of Bank Dagang Negara Padang” for the account of Marubeni. The rubber was shipped from Padang to New Orleans on the M/V L. Jalabert Botang, a vessel owned by defendant P.T. Trikora Lloyd (“carrier”), an Indonesian corporation with a place of business at Two World Trade Center, New York, N.Y. (c/o Kerr Steamship Company). After the arrival of the rubber in New Orleans, the buyer sent a letter to the carrier indicating that the rubber ordered was damaged and that it was holding the carrier liable for the damage. Plaintiff, The Tokio Marine & Fire Insurance Co., Ltd. (“Tokio Marine”), paid buyer $21,632.42 under an insurance policy for damage to the shipment. Plaintiff insurance company sues as a subrogee on the buyer’s claim against defendant carrier.

How Rubber Is Initially Processed Into Blocks

Defendant’s witness James Burley, a rubber processing specialist, and plaintiff’s rebuttal witness Henry Schmeltzer, a chemist/laboratory specialist, testified as experts at length regarding the processing of rubber from the tree through to the finished product (e.g., a rubber tire). In short, the initial rubber processing is as follows:

The natural latex solution (“dry rub ber” — i.e., latex — content of approximately 30-40%) that oozes from the rubber tree is collected in cups and then emptied into larger five gallon milk cans.’ These cans are then emptied into a stainless steel truck to be taken to the processing area. At the processing plant, this substance is placed in stainless steel process tanks and a coagulant is added. Excess fluid is drained off. The remaining substance is approximately 65% dry rubber content. Excess water is squeezed out; the substance then is put through a hammer mill, is chopped and placed in pans that are approximately the size of a finished block (or bale) of rubber.

The substance is then heated at approximately 200-225 degrees Fahrenheit (the boiling point of water is 212 degrees Fahr *405 enheit) for four to six hours in a drying oven. Before entering the drying oven the substance is completely white like cheese and upon exiting the oven it is a shade of brown. Many of these blocks (approximately 75 pounds, or approximately 22 of them) are then compressed in a baler press under hydraulic pressure (approximately 20-25 tons of pressure per square inch) to make one block {i.e., the final product after initial processing). Samples of the rubber are then taken to determine its moisture content.

These seventy-five pound finished blocks are stood upright and allowed to cool for eight to twelve hours. A polyethylene bag is then slipped over them; this bag is sealed at one end and partially open at the other; three spot thermal welds are placed on the open end. Any moisture present in the environment is sealed within the bag; Indonesia has a very humid climate.

How Rubber Is Packed, Shipped and Processed Again

Thirty of these seventy-five pound, individually wrapped, blocks are stacked in five tiers, six blocks to each tier. The rubber itself thus weighs approximately 2250 pounds.

Between each tier of six blocks is placed a sheet of polyethylene (an “interleaf”). The long ends of these interleaf sheets are folded together loosely, not fastened, and another interleaf, colored blue, is laid over the top as a cap. These thirty blocks are then forced into a wooden pallet (or crate), held together by metal bands, and the top to the pallet is nailed down. Thus, there are three layers of polyethylene sheets, inside the pallet, covering the rubber.

This pallet is then shipped abroad from Indonesia. Upon arrival, it is inspected, either accepted or rejected, and if accepted sold to a company that will, through further processing, turn the natural rubber into a finished product.

The first stage of manufacturing the rubber into a finished product is to drop blocks from various lots of rubber into a Banbury mixer {i.e., blending). The Ban-bury runs for a specified time at approximately 350-400 degrees Fahrenheit. Any excess moisture, i.e., light spots, is driven off as steam. This rubber mixture is dropped on a mill, sheeted out, and allowed to cool. Samples are sent to the laboratory and if the tests are satisfactory, a release slip is sent back to the factory. Further processing into the finished product then begins.

Chronology of Events

The shipment of the fifty-four pallets of SIR-20 rubber was sampled for quality tests in Indonesia between December 15 and 27, 1982. The rubber at that time had just slightly more than one-third of one percent water content (noted as “volatile matter” on the inspection report). Defendant carrier issued bill of lading number eleven on February 28, 1983, for this fifty-four pallet shipment, each said to contain thirty blocks, or a total of 1,620 blocks. According to the shipping invoice, the price for these fifty-four pallets of rubber, F.O.B. Padang, was $46,457.50. Adding prepaid freight, the total cost came to $51,-911.50.

The fifty-four pallets covered by bill of lading number eleven were carried in hold number three of a four-hold ship. Hold number three was loaded in Padang on March 1 and 2, 1983. On March 1, rubber was loaded in hold number three from 17:30 (5:30 p.m.) to 18:20 (6:20 p.m.) and again from 19:30 (7:30 p.m.) until 20:05 (8:05 p.m.). At 20:05 the hatches for all four holds were closed “due to rain and gangs off [sic].” 1 There was “[n]o cargo activity during the night due to heavy rain.”

On March 2, rubber was loaded into hold number three from 08:30 (8:30 a.m.) to 11:30 (11:30 a.m.) and again from 13:30 (1:30 p.m.) to 21:30 (9:30 p.m.). At 21:30, the Captain “[c]losed all the hatch [sic] and no cargo activity during the night due to heavy rain.”

*406 The ship left Padang on March 5, 1983, and arrived in Norfolk, Virginia on April 1, 1983. At that time, additional cargo was loaded; intermittent rain was experienced during loading. The ship arrived in New Orleans sometime in April 13-15, 1983.

An employee of R.H. Keen & Co., Mr. Gene Colley, at some time prior to April 25, 1983, inspected the rubber on behalf of the buyer Marubeni. 2

On April 17 and 18, 1983, at the request of Kerr Steamship Company (“Kerr”) (a company related to defendant carrier), S & T Marine Surveyors Inc. surveyed the ship and its entire cargo while the cargo was still in stow. Although various kinds of “contamination”

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800 F.2d 1128 (Second Circuit, 1986)

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Bluebook (online)
624 F. Supp. 402, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tokio-marine-fire-insurance-v-mv-l-jalabert-bontang-nysd-1985.