Elba v. Thomas
This text of 59 So. 2d 732 (Elba v. Thomas) 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
ELBA
v.
THOMAS et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.
*733 Bienvenu & Culver, P. A. Bienvenu, New Orleans, for Insurance Co. of Texas, defendant-appellee.
Martin Kranz, New Orleans, for defendant-appellee, Harold Thomas.
Prowell, & Viosca, Arthur C. Reuter, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.
REGAN, Judge.
Plaintiff, Mrs. Maria Elba, wife of Joseph Tupper, a guest passenger in a 1950 Ford Sedan, owned and operated by her husband, instituted this suit against the defendants, The Insurance Company of Texas, her husband's insurer, and Harold Thomas, the owner and operator of a 1950 Ford automobile, in the sum of $20,000 representing damages for personal injuries incurred by plaintiff on November 11, 1950 at 2:30 a. m., as the result of a collision between the two vehicles.
Defendant, Harold Thomas, filed exceptions of no right or cause of action and vagueness, which were overruled, and then answered denying that he was guilty of any negligence in the premises and that the *734 proximate cause of the accident was the gross negligence of Tupper, the driver of the automobile in which plaintiff was a passenger and, in the alternative, pleaded the independent contributory negligence of the plaintiff, the guest passenger.
Defendant, The Insurance Company of Texas, answered and denied the material allegations of the petition and pleaded, in the alternative (a) that if the court should find Tupper guilty of negligence then, in that event, the plaintiff was guilty of independent and contributory negligence in riding with her husband when she possessed knowledge of the fact that he was intoxicated; and (b) it further urged that the insurer, Tupper, violated the assistance and cooperation clause of the policy.
The Board of Administrators of the Charity Hospital of Louisiana at New Orleans intervened and requested that, in the event of judgment in favor of plaintiff, it have judgment in solido against both defendants and plaintiff for the sum of $12 with attorney's fees.
There was judgment in the court, a qua, in favor of both defendants dismissing plaintiff's suit, hence this appeal.
We have carefully analyzed the transcript and the conclusions predicated thereon by the trial judge in his written reasons for judgment and, we are convinced that these reasons encompass both the factual and legal aspects of the case so fully that we adopt them as our own.
"Plaintiff sues the corporate insurer of her husband and the driver of another automobile, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by her in an intersectional automobile collision, while a passenger and guest in her husband's automobile.
"The accident occurred in early November, 1950, about 2:30 a. m. at the intersection of North Rampart and Esplanade Avenue in New Orleans. Both streets are wide thoroughfares with double traffic lanes separated by elevated neutral grounds.
"Plaintiff charges the usual acts of negligence which defendants deny and, in the alternative, plead plaintiff's contributory negligence, independent negligence or assumption of risk in riding with her husband with the knowledge that he had been drinking and was intoxicated.
"The defendant insurer urges a separate and distinct defense against plaintiff's recovery, in that the insured violated the assistance and cooperation clause of its policy contract. There is no proof of such violation. Nor could it be urged that the insured, had he testified favorably for his wife, would have violated this clause. As was held in Levy v. Indemnity Insurance Co. [La.App.], 8 So.2d 774 and cited in State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co. v. Koval [10 Cir.], 146 F.2d 118, the purpose of the cooperation clause is to require the insured to disclose all of the facts within his knowledge, and otherwise aid the company to determine its liability under the policy. It is not the obligation of an insured to assist the insurance company to defeat its liability. The obligation of the company is to pay the damage if liable. and not to refuse to pay it, regardless of liability. Further the lack of cooperation that would defeat recovery must be in some substantial and material respect that results in prejudice to the insurer. The confusion of an insured, for whatever cause, in not properly stating the exact location within an intersection where the accident occurred, is not lack of cooperation causing prejudice, where the insured actually had the correct information from another source.
"The burden of proof of violation of the cooperation clause is an affirmative one and rests with the insurer. Lindsey v. Gulf Insurance Co. [La.App.], 7 So.2d 757.
"The events that preceded the accident and exactly how it actually occurred, have not been satisfactorily explained. If the suit were between the principal actors, the husband and defendant Thomas, this Court would either dismiss plaintiff's suit for failure to sustain the burden of proof, or hold *735 both principals guilty of negligence and contributory negligence respectively.
"Defendant Thomas admitted that he, too, was on his way home from a night-club party where he had been drinking.
"However, as the plaintiff was a guest and passenger of her husband, his negligence can not be imputed to her and she should recover unless guilty of the contributory or independent negligence, or assumption of risk charged to her, to-wit, that she was with him for a long period before the accident, saw him drinking and knew or should have known of his condition; and when she entered his automobile to go home she assumed the risk of any accident that might result from his acts of omission or commission, due to his drinking.
"Plaintiff and her witnesses (all personal friends) testify that from 8:00 p. m. to 2:30 a. m. they were drinking at plaintiff's home at a birthday celebration, and that liquor was freely served. Effort was made to show that the effect of the liquor was reduced or softened by food served during the party. The husband is admitted to have had at least three or four highballs. When the party broke up about 2:30 a. m., plaintiff and her husband took some guests to a night club, but they did not enter themselves but continued on home. It was while returning home from the night club that the accident occurred.
"Plaintiff testified that she had a bottle of beer and was asleep when the accident occurred.
"This Court holds that the husband's negligence was due to his drinking, and reaches this conclusion from the following evidence.
"(1) That neither plaintiff nor her husband knew at which one of the four corners of the intersecting boulevards the accident occurred. When plaintiff filed this suit, she gave the wrong location, which was corrected by a supplemental petition only after the discrepancy was made known in defendants' answer. Plaintiff and her husband's senses were too dulled from drinking to have remembered just where the collision took place.
"(2) The husband failed to deny the testimony of Thomas that his headlights were not burning and that he was traveling at an excessive speed. The husband and Thomas were the only witnesses to the accident because plaintiff was asleep beside her husband when it happened.
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59 So. 2d 732, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elba-v-thomas-lactapp-1952.