Cantrelle Fence & Supply Co. v. Allstate Ins. Co.
This text of 550 So. 2d 1306 (Cantrelle Fence & Supply Co. v. Allstate 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.
Opinion
CANTRELLE FENCE AND SUPPLY CO., INC., Carol Cantrelle, Norma K. Cantrelle, Wanda Cantrelle Romero, and Charmaine Cantrelle Chaisson, Individually and as Natural Tutrix of the Minor Chrystal Chaisson
v.
ALLSTATE INSURANCE COMPANY.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*1307 Keith M. Whipple, Houma, for plaintiff and appellantCantrelle Fence & Supply Co. et al.
David J. Norman, III, Houma, for defendant and appellantAllstate Ins. Co.
Before LOTTINGER, CRAIN and LeBLANC, JJ.
CRAIN, Judge.
We granted this supervisory writ to consider the trial court's decision as to whether certain records are discoverable, and the denial of an exception raising the objection of prescription.
FACTS
The plaintiffs were involved in an automobile accident on March 27, 1983. The plaintiffs brought suit against the other driver involved in the accident, his liability carrier and Allstate, the plaintiff's U.M. insurer. The plaintiffs prevailed at trial and subsequently brought this action on July 11, 1985 against Allstate seeking attorney's fees and penalties pursuant to La. R.S. 22:658.
Allstate filed an exception urging that the action had prescribed. This exception was denied by the trial court. Allstate then filed an exception urging that the plaintiffs had divided their cause of action. The Louisiana Supreme Court held that the plaintiffs could maintain a subsequent separate suit for penalties and attorney fees. Cantrelle Fence and Supply Company, Inc. v. Allstate Insurance Company, 515 So.2d 1074 (La.1987). Allstate then re-urged the exception of prescription. The exception was again denied by the trial court.
The plaintiffs filed a notice of deposition and a subpoena duces tecum seeking Allstate's entire file. Allstate filed a motion for a protective order and a motion to quash. The court ordered an "in camera" inspection of the files. After inspecting the files, the court ordered some of the documents withheld from the plaintiffs and some turned over to them.
Allstate applied for supervisory writs to this court regarding the discoverability of its file documents. The plaintiffs applied for supervisory writs to this court regarding the discoverability of those documents to which they were denied access by the trial court. Allstate additionally applied for supervisory writs to review the denial of the exception raising the objection of prescription. We decided to review both issues.
PRESCRIPTION
Allstate contends that the action prescribed two years from the date of the accident under La.R.S. 9:5629. The plaintiffs contend that the claim for attorneys fees and penalties pursuant to La.R.S. 22:658 would fall within the 10 year prescriptive period of La.C.C. art. 3499[1] or, in the alternative, that the filing of the original suit would interrupt prescription as to the suit for penalties and attorney's fees.
La.R.S. 9:5629 states:
Actions for the recovery of damages sustained in motor vehicle accidents brought pursuant to uninsured motorist provisions in motor vehicle insurance policies are prescribed by two years reckoning from the date of the accident in which the damage was sustained.
By its wording La.C.C. art. 3499 will not apply if a different prescriptive period is provided by legislation. Consequently, a determination must be made of the applicability of La.R.S. 9:5629 to an action brought pursuant to La.R.S. 22:658.
A claim for penalties and attorney fees (damages) under La.R.S. 22:658 is a separate grounds or theory of recovery *1308 from the uninsured motorist coverage. Cantrelle Fence and Supply Company, Inc. v. Allstate Insurance Company, 515 So.2d at 1078. By its wording La.R.S. 9:5629 applies to actions for the recovery of damages 1) sustained in motor vehicle accidents brought 2) pursuant to uninsured motorist provisions in motor vehicle insurance policies. The wording "sustained in" precludes applicability to the present situation. Penalties and attorney fees are not sustained in the motor vehicle accident, but derive instead from penalty provisions for arbitrary and capricious failure to pay a claim that has been presented to the insurer and is due. The legislature could have worded the statute to extend the prescriptive period of La.R.S. 9:5629 to La.R.S. 22:658 actions by the use of wording such as "damages as a result of motor vehicle accidents" but they did not do so. We do not have the authority to disregard the clear wording of the statute.
The present action involves an obligation arising out of the penalty statute, La.R.S. 22:658, which is separate and distinct from the obligation arising out of the contractual relationship under the insurance policy. Cantrelle, 515 So.2d at 1079. By its wording, La.R.S. 9:5629 restricts its ambit to actions "brought pursuant to provisions in motor vehicle insurance policies". The present action is not an action brought pursuant to an uninsured motorist provision in a motor vehicle insurance policy. It is a penalty provision separate from the provisions in the motor vehicle insurance.
Additionally, application of the prescriptive period of 9:5629, which begins at the date of the accident, would create the situation where the prescriptive period starts before the conduct which gives rise to the cause of action under La.R.S. 22:658. La. R.S. 22:658 requires that the insurer be given sixty days from receipt of satisfactory proof of loss within which to pay the amount of the claim due. If we applied La.R.S. 9:5629, the prescriptive period would begin to run from the date of the accident. However, the cause of action for penalties and attorney fees would not accrue until the insurer failed to pay in accordance with La.R.S. 22:658. It would then be technically possible for the claim to prescribe before the cause of action ever accrued. As stated in comments (b) under La.C.C. art. 3495,
Liberative prescription begins to run as soon as the action accrues, or, as Pothier said `the day on which the creditor could institute his demand'. It cannot commence sooner, because the time given for prescription should be a time during which the action can be exercised, and one cannot reproach the creditor for not having acted at a time when he did not have the right to do so. Otherwise, it could happen that the right would be lost before it could be exercised, which would be as unjust as absurd. (Cass, Civ., 11 Dec. 1918, D. 1923.1.96, P. and S. 1921.1.161).
We find the prescriptive period of La.R.S. 9:5629 inapplicable to an action for penalties and attorney's fees pursuant to La.R.S. 22:658. Finding no other prescriptive period specifically established for La. R.S. 22:658 actions, we apply the prescriptive period of 10 years, established by La. C.C. art. 3499. Since the trial court refused to apply the two year prescriptive period of La.R.S. 9:5629, we find no error in the trial court's judgment.
DISCOVERY
The plaintiffs sought, by subpoena duces tecum, the entire file of Allstate in regards to the underlying suit. The trial court ordered an in camera inspection of the files and declared that some of the files should be turned over to the plaintiffs, and some withheld. The plaintiffs have applied for writs regarding the materials withheld as not discoverable and the defendants have applied for writs regarding the discoverability of any of its files.
As stated by the Louisiana Supreme Court in Hodges v.
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550 So. 2d 1306, 1989 WL 119620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cantrelle-fence-supply-co-v-allstate-ins-co-lactapp-1989.