Arrow Trucking Co. v. Continental Ins. Co.

465 So. 2d 691
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 1, 1985
Docket84-C-1453
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 465 So. 2d 691 (Arrow Trucking Co. v. Continental Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arrow Trucking Co. v. Continental Ins. Co., 465 So. 2d 691 (La. 1985).

Opinion

465 So.2d 691 (1985)

ARROW TRUCKING COMPANY
v.
CONTINENTAL INSURANCE COMPANY.
Philip R. O'CONNOR, Director of Insurance for the State of Louisiana as Liquidator of Reserve Insurance Company
v.
CONTINENTAL INSURANCE COMPANY.

No. 84-C-1453.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

April 1, 1985.
Rehearing Denied May 3, 1985.

*692 Mack Barham, Mary Talbott, Robert Arceneaux, Barham & Churchill, New Orleans, Neil Mixon, Jr., Baton Rouge, for applicant.

David W. Robinson, Due, Dodson, deGravelles, Robinson & Caskey, Charles A. Schutte, Jr., Owen, Richardson, Taylor, Mathews & Adkinson, Baton Rouge, Harry McCall, Corinne Morrison, Chaffe, McCall, Phillips, Toler & Sarpey, New Orleans, Horace C. Lane, Baton Rouge, Harold Broussard, Lafayette, for respondent.

CALOGERO, Justice.

May an insured, having liability coverage with an insolvent insurance company, recover from the reinsurer of the insolvent company the sum paid by the insured to an injured accident victim?

Incident to this larger question in this case we must consider whether the original insured may employ Louisiana's direct action statute to sue the reinsurer in Louisiana and whether the reinsurance contract in this case contains a stipulation pour autri for the benefit of the original insured.

In the seminal Louisiana case on reinsurance (which involved a tort suit brought by the accident victim as well as by the insured against the reinsurer) we answered the two questions in the preceding paragraph in the negative. Fontenot v. Marquette Casualty Co., 258 La. 671, 247 So.2d 572 (1971). In the case under consideration the Court of Appeal reluctantly followed Fontenot on the direct action issue but allowed the insured to recover as a third party beneficiary, against the reinsurer, distinguishing this case from Fontenot as regards the stipulation pour autri.

For the reasons which follow we reaffirm our holding in Fontenot, and, reversing the Court of Appeal, hold that there does not exist against the reinsurer either a direct action or a substantive third party beneficiary claim on behalf of the original insured.

The facts giving rise to the issues presented in this case are as follows. In July, 1974, an accident occurred in Baton Rouge, Louisiana involving an Arrow Trucking Company vehicle and a pickup truck in which Roy Case and Jimmy Este were riding. Roy Case is from Gonzales, Louisiana and Jimmy Este was from New Orleans, Louisiana. Arrow is a corporation domiciled in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Arrow's commercial carrier liability coverage was underwritten by Continental Insurance Company, with policy limits of $100,000.00 per person. Reserve Insurance Company, domiciled in Illinois, was Arrow's excess liability carrier, having a policy limit of $2 million (above Continental's primary coverage). Reserve had entered into a reinsurance contract with North American Reinsurance Corporation, a New York corporation, covering $1.8 million of Reserve's $2 million risk, Reserve retaining its first $200,000.00 of exposure. The reinsurance agreement was issued by North American to Reserve. Arrow was not aware of it. Case was injured in the accident and Este was killed. Case and Este's descendants filed suit against Arrow, Continental and Reserve.[1]

*693 Trial was held and judgment rendered against Arrow, Continental and Reserve. After appeal, the judgment was affirmed, with amendments, in the total sum of $1,060,000.00.[2] This Court denied writs. Case v. Arrow Trucking Co., et al, consolidated with Dianna Cheramie Este v. Arrow Trucking Co., et al, 372 So.2d 670 (La.App. 1st Cir.1979), writ denied, 375 So.2d 944 (La.1979).

Before the judgment became final, Reserve was adjudged insolvent. On May 29, 1979, the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois entered an order of liquidation with respect to Reserve and appointed the Director of Insurance of the State of Illinois as liquidator. On June 8, 1979, ancillary receivership proceedings were commenced against Reserve in Louisiana (In the Matter of the Liquidation of Reserve Insurance Company, Nineteenth Judicial District Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge). Thus, upon finality of the $1,060,000.00 judgment, Continental paid its policy limits of $200,000.00 ($100,000.00 per person) and, because of Reserve's insolvency at that time, Arrow paid $560,000.00.[3]

In November, 1979, the liquidator of Reserve formally demanded that North American pay him $660,000.00 under the provisions of the North American/Reserve Reinsurance agreement.[4] The liquidator's demand was supported by an Illinois court order issued under the Uniform Insurers Liquidation Act, a uniform statute in effect in both Illinois and Louisiana. On June 4, 1980, North American transmitted to the liquidator its check in the amount of $660,000.00 payable to Reserve Insurance Company in Liquidation in payment of North American's liability under the North American/Reserve reinsurance contract.

The initial action in the instant consolidated matters was a suit filed by the Illinois liquidator against Continental for failure to settle the underlying tort action within the policy limits. Philip O'Connor v. Continental Insurance Co., Nineteenth Judicial District Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge. Arrow, in a separate proceeding, sought recovery from Continental on the same grounds. The two cases were consolidated. Subsequently, on January 13, 1981, Arrow filed a Petition of Intervention and a Third Party Petition naming both North American and Reserve's liquidator as third party defendants. Arrow sought recovery of the $560,000.00 which it had paid the Este and Case claimants, "from either the liquidator or North American Reinsurance or both."

North American filed an Answer to the Petition denying liability to Arrow and claiming that any responsibility and obligation it had under the Reserve/North American reinsurance contract was satisfied by the payment of $660,000.00 by North American to the liquidator of Reserve following the liquidator's formal demand for payment. North American also filed Peremptory Exceptions of No Cause of Action, No Right of Action, and an Alternative Motion for Summary Judgment.

A hearing was held in the 19th Judicial District Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge. The trial judge ruled: (1) that Arrow was not a third party beneficiary under the North American/Reserve reinsurance agreement; indeed, the court specifically stated that both the reinsurance contract and well-settled Louisiana law provide that an insured of the ceding company is not a third party beneficiary to a reinsurance contract; (2) consequently, that Arrow had no right of action and no cause of *694 action against North American; (3) that North American's $660,000.00 payment to the liquidator was a valid defense to Arrow's action; and (4) that North American's Motion for Summary Judgment should be, and was granted. The court relied on Fontenot v. Marquette Casualty Co., supra, in so ruling, and noted that the Legislature had had ample opportunity (14 years) to overrule the Fontenot decision which had decreed that an insured of the ceding company was not a third party beneficiary. Since the legislature had not done so, the court followed the dictates of Fontenot.

On June 6, 1983, judgment was rendered on North American's exception and on the alternative summary judgment motion, dismissing North American from this litigation. From this judgment, Arrow appealed.

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Bluebook (online)
465 So. 2d 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arrow-trucking-co-v-continental-ins-co-la-1985.