Ducote v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.

130 So. 2d 649, 241 La. 677, 1961 La. LEXIS 585
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 29, 1961
Docket45484
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 130 So. 2d 649 (Ducote v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty 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
Ducote v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 130 So. 2d 649, 241 La. 677, 1961 La. LEXIS 585 (La. 1961).

Opinion

*679 FOURNET, Chief Justice.

The plaintiff, Adrast Ducote, doing business as Orleans Tile Works, brought suit against his insurer, defendant United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., to recover $656.45, the cost of repairing a truck insured under a comprehensive liability policy issued to the plaintiff by the defendant. The answer denied liability under the policy because of certain exclusion clauses. The judgment •of the lower court, in favor of plaintiff, was reversed on appeal to the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal and the plaintiff’s suit dismissed at his cost. See 125 So.2d 176. The case is now before us for review on certiorari granted upon plaintiff’s application.

The facts as found by the Court of Appeal and which are not in dispute are that plaintiff during a short period of time permitted his employee Lamar Franklin, whose duties included those of warehouseman and truck driver, to keep the truck he customarily drove at his home overnight and on week-ends as a convenience of transportation, but the privilege was withdrawn following discovery that the employee had been using the vehicle for his own pleasure; the truck was thereafter left at the warehouse when not in business use and the employee was forbidden to drive it except during business hours and for business purposes. On a subsequent Saturday night in March, 1958, when the business was closed for the week-end, the employee used his key to enter the building in which the truck was kept and departed with it on a venture of his own; he was intoxicated at the time and later ran into the back of a parked vehicle causing the damage to the truck for which recovery is sought herein. 1 His arrest followed, and on arraignment he pleaded guilty to the criminal charges of unauthorized use of movables, operating a vehicle while intoxicated, and reckless operation of a vehicle.

Under the policy of insurance relied upon, comprehensive coverage applied to loss or damage to the automobile except by collision or upset, but including fire, theft and windstorm, with special declaration that loss occasioned by certain perils, among which are “malicious mischief or vandalism * * * shall not be deemed loss caused by collision or upset.” (Coverage E) 2 The plaintiff did not carry col *681 lision insurance because of the high rate but if, as he contends, the loss in the instant case could be said to have been occasioned by theft, vandalism or malicious mischief, since none of these would constitute collision, the policy would cover the loss.

The Court of Appeal ruled out theft, since there was no intent on the part of the employee to permanently deprive the owner of the vehicle; and also rejected malicious mischief and vandalism, using the test of intent in weighing whether the •damage to the truck was caused by those • acts and concluding no evidence had been ■offered nor was any before the Court which would even suggest that the employee intended to damage or destroy the truck -or that he drove it in a manner to in- ■ dicate such intent.

Counsel for plaintiff assign as error that the Court of Appeal applied criminal law principles and concepts in this civil action ex contractu, despite the “great wealth” of jurisprudence cited to the Court which would have enabled it to decide the one issue of the case on civil law principles, and argue “It is true that this employee may not have had the specific intent to commit the crime of theft as defined by our State statutes, 3 but certainly his conduct was far outside the ordinary course of human conduct, and from these facts it could and should be concluded that there was present the general intent provided for in R.S. 14:10 4 to commit the three crimes to which he' pleaded guilty, and hence more than sufficient evidence to warrant recovery under the comprehensive coverage policy.” As a further development of his argument, counsel submit that since the employee did, either with general criminal intent or through criminal negligence, 5 during the perpetration of the crimes to which he pleaded guilty, damage another’s property, the damage inflicted under such circumstances should be considered to be either malicious mischief or vandalism; that in any event the employee’s conduct in his reckless damage to the property of another *683 was unconscionable and under rules of strict construction against the insurer and liberal construction in favor of the insured, in absence of a policy definition of malicious mischief and vandalism his actions should be held to constitute either one or the other, or both — for which insurance protection was afforded. Cited in support of the last proposition are Vol. 5A, Am.Juris. 62 et seq., Verbo Automobile Insurance, Secs. 64 and 65.

The fallacy of much of the argument rests on the inconsistency of the positions taken, for counsel, though protesting that criminal law principles are inapplicable to this civil action on a contract, himself invokes criminal law precepts (a) to supply intent or (b) to apply the test of the reasonably careful man — a test which, in its civil counterpart, is found in the “gross negligence” of tort law and the ensuing liability for consequences. 6

There can be no serious contention that recovery can be had because the employee’s acts constituted theft. As was aptly observed by the Court of Appeal in its opinion, all of the evidence, including the testimony of the errant employee who was called as a plaintiff witness, makes abundantly clear that there was no intent to permanently deprive the owner of the vehicle. Without such intent, under the well settled jurisprudence of this State, and in view of the widely accepted meaning of the term, there can be no recovery under the policy provisions insuring against theft. 7

The word “malicious” is characterized by or involves malice; the word “malice” in common speech means ill will or a purpose to harm. Any unlawful act done wilfully and purposely to injure another is malicious as to that person. 8 And malicious mischief has-been well defined as the wanton or reckless destruction of or injury to property, implying in some cases a wrong inflicted on another with an evil intent or purpose, or motivated by black and diabolical revenge. 9 It is therefore clear that the act in the case of malicious mischief must proceed from malice, and according to the general doctrine the malice is against the owner of the property, rather than against another person or the prop *685 erty itself; it is the wilful injury to or destruction of property motivated by ill will or resentment toward the owner thereof. 10 Vandalism is a term of less definite meaning.

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Bluebook (online)
130 So. 2d 649, 241 La. 677, 1961 La. LEXIS 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ducote-v-united-states-fidelity-guaranty-co-la-1961.