Breland v. Great States Ins. Co.

150 So. 313
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 1933
DocketNo. 1230.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 150 So. 313 (Breland v. Great States Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Breland v. Great States Ins. Co., 150 So. 313 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

*314 ELLIOTT, Judge.

The facts of this case are as stated in our original opinion (147 So. 714). At the time our former opinion was handed down Wm. M. Breland was not a party to the suit. He had been eliminated by a ruling of the lower court on an exception of no cause of action, but after the case was decided on appeal, and a rehearing had been granted, he obtained an appeal from the judgment of dismissal, which by consent of defendant, when the appeal was resubmitted, the submission included, and brought up his appeal at the same time, as one of the issues in the case.

Wm. M. Breland and his wife Mrs. Reda Wheat Breland brought the suit as joint plaintiffs alleging that Great States Insurance Company is indebted unto them in the sum of $950, and their prayer is for judgment accordingly.

In the last article of their petition they aver: “Your petitioners now show that there is some doubt as to whether or not this property is community, but aver that this is of no concern to the defendant since a receipt from either will acquit the defendant.”

Defendant’s answer avers with emphasis that the goods insured under the policy was community property, and urges that fact as one of its reasons why the policy should be declared void and of no effect. Wm. M. Bre-land and Mrs. Reda Wheat Breland take the position that the property covered by the policy was acquired by and belonged to Mrs. Breland, in whose favor it was made payable.

Defendant contends that it belonged to the community of acquets and gains that existed between Mr. and Mrs. Breland, and, as the husband is the head and master of the community, nobody but him can sue on the policy. Defendant’s contention on this subject was one of the questions on which we acted in our former opinion.

The question is before' us again, this time with Wm. M. Breland before us as a party to the appeal. ' :

The presumption is that the property acquired during the marriage belongs to the community. The law says: “This partnership or community consists * * * of the produce of the reciprocal industry and labor of -both husband and wife, and of the estates which they may acquire during the marriage * ⅜ ⅜ by purchase, or in any other similar way, even although the purchase be only in the name of one of the two and not of both, because in that case the period of time when the purchase is made is alone attended to, and not the person who made the purchase.” Civil Code, art. 2402. The furniture of most value was purchased by Mrs. Breland from Breland’s Furniture Company and Cohen Furniture Company after her marriage. The only evidence which indicates that this furniture may have been partly paid for by her with money which belonged to her and not to the community is found in the testimony of Wm. M. Breland:

“Q. How many bills of furniture were purchased from the Breland Furniture Company? A. I bought one, and after I got married my wife didn't want the cheap stuff I had then; her father had given her Three hundred dollars and she wanted to buy something better.” Objection made.

After a ruling he resumed: “She told me she didn’t want this cheap furniture, most of it was second hand cheap stuff, and asked me could she take her money and buy some more stuff, and I told her yes, and she went to Breland Furniture Company and bought some more stuff.”

Mrs. Breland testified:

“Q. You did purchase furniture from the Breland Furniture Company on the installment plan? A. I paid some down when I got it and I told them I would pay the balance as I could in weekly payments. ⅞ v *
“Q. How did you make these weekly payments? A. I would pay some as I could: If I couldn’t pay it, my husband would pay it.”

The above is about all she says on the subject. Her father was not a witness in the ease. Mr. Breland testifies that his wife’s father gave her $300, but the evidence shows that the furniture was bought partly on credit ; the credit price payable in installments. The amount paid in cash does not appear; neither does it appear that the $300, which Mr. Breland says his wife’s father gave her, was actually used for that purpose. The fact that the wife did the bargaining does not indicate that the furniture was purchased for her separate account, nor that the credit was extended to her personally.

Our review of the evidence on rehearing has convinced us that the furniture and other articles purchased by Mrs. Breland from Bre-land Furniture Company and Cohen Furniture Company was a community purchase, the property community property, and that the policy procured thereon in the name of Mrs. W. M. Breland, and upon which suit has been brought, is an asset of the community. Having concluded that the property was a community purchase, and the policy an asset of the community, this suit cannot be. maintained unless Wm. M. Breland is restored as the plaintiff in the case.

We hold that the husband, head and master of the community, when present and not suffering under any incapacity of mind, is the only person who can sue to recover a community asset.

Act No. 283 of 1928, due to the provision made in section 5, did not change the law on that subject. Ducre v. Milner (La. App.) 140 So. 161; Grantham v. Smith, 18 La. App. *315 519, 132 So. 805, 810; Coker v. Harper, 8 La. App. 402. There are numerous decisions of the Supreme Court to the same effect.

Our former holding herein was influenced by our opinion in the case of Brumfield v. Mutual Benevolent Ass’n, 11 La. App. 547, 123 So. 408. In that case the evidence showed that Mrs. Brumfield was a married woman living with her husband; that the legal community of aequfits and gains existed between them; that Mutual Benevolent Association justly owed the debt represented by the policy sued on by Mrs. Brumfield; but it appeared impossible to satisfactorily determine under the evidence in the case whether the policy was an asset of the community or the separate property of Mrs. Brumfield. Mutual Benevolent Association contended that she could not sue on nor recover under the policy; that the suit should have been brought by Mr. Brumfield. The policy sued on in the Brumfield Case was' an unusual arrangement; that acts of Mutual Benevolent Association’s agent was a matter which the opinion took into account. The present case has some of the features of the Brumfield Case, but'in others it is different, and there is not the same uncertainty as to the community status of the policy. In the Brum-field Case we declined to follow a course that would have resulted in the defeat of a claim that was justly due. In Paul v. Arnoult, 164 La. 841, 114 So. 706, the Supreme Court in the same way declined to follow a course that would have resulted in the defeat of a just claim.

It follows from our .conclusion herein that the lower court erred when it dismissed Wm. M. Breland from the suit on the ground that he was not a party to the contract of insurance. Pie- was the beneficiary under the contract with right to sue thereon as head of the community. The judgment of dismissal is therefore annulled, avoided, and set aside. Wm. M. Breland is now restored as the plaintiff in the case, and recognized as the only person who has a right to sue on the policy and contest the issues raised by the defendant insurance company.

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Bluebook (online)
150 So. 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breland-v-great-states-ins-co-lactapp-1933.