Dorsey v. Ashford

177 So. 88
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 15, 1937
DocketNo. 16476.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 177 So. 88 (Dorsey v. Ashford) 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
Dorsey v. Ashford, 177 So. 88 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

This case presents a most unusual situation. A householder, Mrs. Ashford, who had secured a policy of fire insurance containing a clause under which not more than 10 per cent, of the face of the policy might be considered as covering property of guests and servants, sustained a loss by fire in which property of certain persons, plaintiffs here, living in the said premises, was also damaged. In adjusting the loss with the insurer, the defendant, insured, included $274 as the damage sustained by property of servants, and collected the full amount ol her own claim and also the full amount of the claim for $274, and then refused to pay over to the servants the said sum collected for the property loss or damage sustained by them. They now sue for $254, alleging that, although defendant collected the full amount of their loss, $274, she has paid them but $20 on account of the amount received by her and due to them.

The matter was tried under an agreed stipulation of fact, which now follows:

“* * * the following facts are stipulated and agreed to:
“1. In making proof and adjustment of loss resulting from the fire which occurred in premises 7812 St. Charles Avenue in February, 1934, a valuation of $274.00 was placed on the personal effects and property belonging to plaintiffs herein, and settlement was made with the Insurance Company on that basis, said amount having been received from said Insurance Company, by defendant herein.
“2. Without the necessity of filing a supplemental answer to support such proof, it is stipulated and agreed that the total amount received by defendant from the Insurance Company was $1,110.00; that said amount of $1,100.00 was based on an itemized list of personal effects- and property (including the personal effects and property of plaintiffs) determined and found, as of the date of settlement, to have been damaged and/or destroyed; that, however, since said settlement it has been determined and discovered that additional personal property and effects belonging to the defendant in the amount of $107.00 were damaged and/or destroyed by said fire.
“3. While it is stipulated and agreed that additional personal property and effects were damaged and/or destroyed as above set forth, counsel for plaintiff reserves the right to object and does object to the materiality and relevancy of such fact. Defendant, on the other hand, contends that even if a judgment could be rendered, which is denied, the same, in the alternative, should be subject to a credit of $107.00.”

It is asserted by defendant that the plaintiffs were not servants, and therefore have no right to make any claim for the proceeds, and also that the plaintiffs were in no way protected by the policy provision permitting the allocation of a certain part of the coverage to property of guests and servants; that that contract is purely personal to the insured; and that collection thereunder does not create any obligation to make pay *90 ment to the owners of the property damaged or destroyed.

Plaintiffs, conceding that they had had no part in the procuring of the insurance and had not paid any portion of the premium, contend that they are, nevertheless, protected by the policy provision, which, it is asserted, should be considered as a stipulation “pour autrui” to such an extent as to create in them the right to recover from the insured so much as was paid over by the insurer as the loss sustained by them.

There was judgment for defendant, and plaintiffs have appealed.

Defendant cannot be heard to raise the question of whether plaintiffs are servants within the contemplation of the policy provision which permitted not more than 10 per cent, of the face thereof to cover property of guests and servants because it was only by virtue of the fact that they were considered as servants that the defendant received from the insurer the $274 payment which is involved here. Since, admittedly, the property for the loss of which this amount was paid did not belong to defendant, and since, so far as the record shows, there was no other provision under which she could recover for the loss of property not her own, it must be assumed that it was under that provision that the collection was made. Therefore, when defendant availed herself of that provision to collect the amount, she estopped herself to contend that the plaintiffs were not within -the protection of that provision.

Defendant next maintains that the policy provision is not to be construed as a stipulation “pour autrui,” and she relies, in support of this argument, largely upon the wording of the clause itself. It reads as follows: “Not exceeding 10% of the amount of this policy shall also cover, as per above form, property of guests and servants, loss, if any, to be adjusted with and payable to the insured named in this policy.”

The fact that the loss, where it is sustained by guests or servants, is to be paid to the insured and not to the servants or guests, is claimed to be significant of the intention of both the insurer and insured that the guest or servant is not concerned in the proceeds of the policy, which, it is contended, become, in full and complete ownership, the property of the insured.

The words of the clause need not necessarily be so construed. All that we think the parties must be' held to have intended is this: That the insurance, within the limit set forth, was to cover property of guests and servants, but that the insurer was not to be required to make adjustments with them and need only settle the loss with the one insured, who, to the extent of the property of others, should .be considered as acting for the others.

We have no doubt at all that the inclusion of such a clause in a standard fire policy does not indicate intention on the part of those who framed it and on the part of those who have subsequently approved it that the insured should be given-the right to recover on a loss which he Has not sustained. If that was the intention, then to that extent such a policy would plainly be a gambling contract pure and simple. The making of such a contract would, obviously, be contrary to public policy. It would not do to permit “A” to insure, for his own account, goods belonging to “B” and in which “A” has no insurable interest. Since, therefore, to interpret the clause as giving “A” that right would be to make out of it an agreement reprobated by law, it follows that some other legal interpretation should be given to it if any other interpretation is possible (R.C.C. art. 1951), and it appears to us that it can be given a completely legal interpretation if it be considered as a stipulation “pour autrui”.

Nor can we interpret the clause from the point of view of the parties to the contract after the loss has occurred. We must look at it as they must have looked upon it had they given it consideration prior to the occurrence of the fire. Had the defendant, before the fire took place, been apprised of the fact that there was in her policy a provision to the effect that, in case of fire, the loss of the goods of her servant could be included in the claim, we entertain not the slightest doubt that she would not for an instant have given thought to the possibility that she might collect for their loss and retain for herself that collection. So much for the insured.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Franks v. Harper
141 So. 2d 690 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1962)
Dorsey v. Ashford
200 So. 176 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 So. 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorsey-v-ashford-lactapp-1937.