Cooper v. Louisiana Farm Bureau Cas. Ins. Co.
This text of 481 So. 2d 611 (Cooper v. Louisiana Farm Bureau Cas. 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.
Opinion
Richard COOPER, Individually and on Behalf of the Minors, Susanne Cooper and Christian Cooper; and Lionel Horner, Individually and on Behalf of the Minor, Clint Horner
v.
LOUISIANA FARM BUREAU CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY.
Supreme Court of Louisiana.
*612 Robert J. Vandaworker, Taylor, Porter, Brooks & Phillips, Baton Rouge, for defendant-applicant.
Richard J. Ward, Jr., Plaquemine, Stephen H. Marionneaux, Livonia, for plaintiff-respondent.
CALOGERO, Justice.
An exception of res judicata filed by the defendant uninsured motorist carrier was overruled in the district court. After the Court of Appeal, pre-trial, ultimately denied relief to the defendant,[1] this Court granted a writ to review the same district court judgment overruling the exception of res judicata.
The pertinent legal claims are by two parents/administrators, namely Richard Cooper and Lionel Horner, for injuries sustained in an automobile accident by their minor children, Susanne and Christian Cooper, and Clint Horner. The lawsuit was filed against the other vehicle driver, Sidney B. Fisher, and his liability insurer, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, and against the uninsured/underinsured carrier with insurance coverage on Cooper and Horner vehicles not involved in the accident,[2] namely, Louisiana Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company.
After suit was filed plaintiffs settled their claims with the driver of the other vehicle, Fisher, and his liability insurer, State Farm. Coincident therewith court approval for settling the minors' claims against Fisher and State Farm was obtained in the regular manner, releases were executed and funds delivered, and a motion dismissing the lawsuit with prejudice was duly entered.
The problem which gave rise to the legal issue involved in this opinion came about because the attorney for plaintiffs, perhaps inadvertently, signed a motion which provoked a judgment dismissing with prejudice the entire then pending lawsuit, which included plaintiff's claim against the uninsured motorist carrier, Louisiana Farm Bureau.
*613 Some eighteen months later plaintiffs amended the petition in the dismissed lawsuit (No. 17,998), by increasing the quantum sought and by adding the personal claims of the parents/administrators, Richard Cooper and Lionel Horner for their own anguish and suffering arising out of the injuries to their children.
When the judge to whom that lawsuit was assigned, Judge Ian Claiborne, refused, according to defendant's counsel, to sign an order permitting the filing of the supplemental petition, plaintiffs thereupon incorporated the same claims in a separate lawsuit, No. 19,655, filed in the same Eighteenth Judicial District Court, Parish of Point Coupee. That lawsuit was allotted to a different division of the Eighteenth Judicial District Court, namely, Div. C, Judge Edward Engolia.[3]
Thereupon Louisiana Farm Bureau, in the Division C lawsuit, filed an exception of res judicata with respect to the minors' claims and a motion to strike the parents' claims.
With respect to the latter the trial judge granted the motion to strike for the asserted reason that Louisiana law does not allow recovery for mental anguish suffered as a result of an injury to another person, citing Blackwell v. Oser, 436 So.2d 1293 (La.App. 4th Cir.1983). Plaintiff parents did not seek writs from the ruling. Thus that legal issue is not before us.
With respect to the exception of res judicata the trial judge determined that it was not well founded, and overruled the exception. This latter ruling is what we review in this opinion.
Louisiana Farm Bureau does not contend that it was released by the plaintiffs in the documents executed by the minors' parents/administrators in connection with the settlements. They rely instead on the judgment in No. 17,998, which dismissed the entire lawsuit, including the claims of the plaintiffs against Louisiana Farm Bureau, "with prejudice."
La.Rev.Stat. § 13:4231. Res judicata, essential elements
The authority of the thing adjudged takes place only with respect to what was the object of the judgment. The thing demanded must be the same; the demand must be founded on the same cause of action; the demand must be between the same parties, and formed by them against each other in the same quality.
In the case under consideration, res judicata is clearly applicable as regards the second of the successive lawsuits brought on behalf of the minor children against Louisiana Farm Bureau. The object of the judgment was the recovery of money damages sustained by virtue of personal injury arising out of the same automobile accident as was involved in the first suit. Thus, the thing demanded was the same, and the demand was founded on the same cause of action. The demand was between the same parties, the administrators on behalf of the minor children on the one hand and Louisiana Farm Bureau on the other. And the demand formed by the administrators against Farm Bureau was in the same quality. See R.G. Claitor's Realty v. Juban, 391 So.2d 394 (La.1980); Welch v. Crown Zellerbach Corp., 359 So.2d 154 (La.1978). Res judicata is thus directly applicable here.[4]
*614 Plaintiffs/respondents' arguments are twofold. They contend that the dismissal with prejudice of the first lawsuit should not bar their second lawsuit because that earlier dismissal was a mistake, that there was no intention on their part or on the part of their attorney to dismiss with prejudice their underinsured motorist claims against Louisiana Farm Bureau.
In their second argument plaintiffs attempt to draw support from Johnson v. Ford Motor Company, 707 F.2d 189 (5th Cir.1983). There the United States Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals would not sanction a tacit release of Ford Motor Company (the minors' administrators had released joint tortfeasors without an express reservation of rights against the non-released tortfeasor, Ford) because the authority to settle the minors' claims, secured as required by La.Civ.Code art. 4271, encompassed only settlement of the claims against the other tort feasors, not Ford Motor Company.[5]
Responding to the arguments in reverse order, Johnson v. Ford Motor Co. is distinguishable from the case under consideration. The essential difference is that in Johnson, unlike here, there was no judgment dismissing plaintiff's suit against the defendant Ford.
With respect to plaintiffs' first argument, that there was no intention on their part to dismiss with prejudice the portion of the lawsuit which involved the uninsured motorist claims against Louisiana Farm Bureau, perhaps counsel is correct in that regard, that there was no intention to dismiss the suit against Louisiana Farm Bureau, and that such was done by mistake. But even just to establish that there was a mistake in that dismissal, there is need for evidentiary support. The record alone does not unambiguously support that conclusion.
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481 So. 2d 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-louisiana-farm-bureau-cas-ins-co-la-1986.