301 So. 2d 830 | Fla. Dist. Ct. App. | 1974
Plaintiff-appellant seeks review of that portion of an adverse final judgment, entered pursuant to directed verdicts for defendants, denying plaintiff’s claim for damages for water damage to aluminum extrusions.
Plaintiff, Oran Limited, arranged for the shipment by the defendant-appellee Seaway Lines, Inc. of aluminum extrusions, aluminum rivets and corrugated cartons from the Port of Miami to Barbados. The aluminum extrusions which were packed for shipment by the manufacturer were sold to Comfort Craft in Miami which in turn sold them to the plaintiff. Defendant-appellee Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company had issued a policy of marine all risk insurance for the shipment which insured “against all risks of physical loss of damage from any external cause irrespective of percentage . . . (but) free from any claims arising out of the inherent vice of the goods insured.” Seaway’s vessel arrived in Barbados on August 17, 1971. Plaintiff’s goods, with the exception of 101 pounds of aluminum rivets, which were lost, were unloaded and delivered to customs. Between August 25 and August 31, 1971 the cargo was picked up by the plaintiff and brought to its warehouse, where, upon inspection, 80% of the aluminum extrusions were found to have black water spots on them which made them useless except for salvage. Plaintiff filed the instant action to recover $353 in damages for the loss of 101 pounds of aluminum rivets and $12,000 for the water damages to the aluminum extrusions against Seaway Lines, Inc. and Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company. At the trial no evidence was presented as to the condition of the aluminum extrusions upon their leaving the manufacturer in the north or upon their arrival in Miami, nor was there
In order that plaintiff recover on his claim for water damage to the aluminum extrusions, it was incumbent upon plaintiff to prove, inter alia (1) the good condition of the aluminum extrusions prior to the shipment and attachment of the risk,
An examination of the record on appeal illustrates that plaintiff-appellant failed in its burden of proving the above two elements by a preponderance of the evidence and thus we conclude that the trial judge was eminently correct in granting defendants’ motion for directed verdict on the claim for the damage to the aluminum extrusions.
Accordingly, the judgment herein appealed is affirmed.
Affirmed.
. Monarch Industrial Corp. v. American Motorist Ins. Co., 276 F.Supp. 972 at 985 (S.D. N.Y.1967).
. Greene v. Cheetham, 293 F.2d 933 (2nd Cir. 1961).