Fireman's Fund Insurance Co. v. Bulliard Farm, Inc.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 2, 2005
DocketCA-0005-0336
StatusUnknown

This text of Fireman's Fund Insurance Co. v. Bulliard Farm, Inc. (Fireman's Fund Insurance Co. v. Bulliard Farm, Inc.) 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
Fireman's Fund Insurance Co. v. Bulliard Farm, Inc., (La. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

05-336

FIREMAN'S FUND INSURANCE COMPANY

VERSUS

BULLIARD FARM, INC.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ST. MARTIN, NO. 02-65107 HONORABLE GERARD B. WATTIGNY, DISTRICT JUDGE

MARC T. AMY JUDGE

Court composed of Sylvia R. Cooks, Oswald A. Decuir, and Marc T. Amy, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Richard L. Crawford Newman, Mathis, Brady, & Spedale 3301 North Boulevard Baton Rouge, LA 70806 (225) 343-3456 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: Fireman's Fund Insurance Company

Keith E. Thibodeaux 422 South Main Street St. Martinville, LA 70582 (337) 394-3034 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: Bulliard Farm, Inc. AMY, Judge.

The plaintiff, a crop insurer, brought suit against the defendant farming

operation for non-payment of a crop insurance premium for the year of 2000. The

defendant filed a reconventional demand, alleging that although he had requested

crop revenue coverage from his insurance agent, the insurer had issued a policy

providing a lower level of coverage. The trial court found that a mutual mistake had

existed between the farm operator and insurance agent, and reformed the policy to

provide crop revenue coverage. For the following reasons, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

James D. Bulliard testified that he has owned Bulliard Farm, Inc. (“Bulliard

Farm”), the defendant herein,1 and grown rice thereon for approximately eight or nine

years. He stated that in 1999 he was contacted by Mr. Glenn Daigle, an agent with

Buller’s Insurance Agency of Bunkie, Louisiana. Mr. Bulliard explained that he

purchased an insurance policy through Buller’s Insurance Agency which would cover

crop damage due to listed natural causes, and that also contained a clause that would

provide Crop Revenue Coverage (“CRC”), which provides a guaranteed harvest price

per acre for a covered crop. Mr. Bulliard stated that in late January 2000, he spoke

with Stanley Buller, a different agent from Buller’s Insurance Agency, and informed

him that he would like to purchase a CRC policy again for his next harvest. Mr.

Bulliard testified that the agent forwarded him a price quote for the new policy, which

he stated that he signed and sent back to the agent in February 2000. Mr. Bulliard

testified that a few months later he received an insurance policy, which had been

issued by Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company (“Fireman’s Fund”), and began the

year’s farming operations.

1 Mr. Bulliard testified that he owns and runs Bulliard Farm and is the sole shareholder and president of Bulliard Farm, Inc. However, after beginning to harvest the rice, he reported to his agent that he

believed he may have a claim for the difference between the amount he thought he

would receive for his rice and the guaranteed harvest price. Mr. Bulliard stated that

he was then informed that he had not procured a CRC policy, but instead was only

insured under a Multiple Peril Crop Insurance (“MPCI”) policy, which would cover

certain named perils only, such as flood, drought, or excess moisture. Mr. Bulliard

asserts that because he never received the difference between the amount he finally

sold his rice for and the guaranteed harvest price, he never paid the premium price for

the MPCI policy.2

Fireman’s Fund subsequently filed suit to recover the $6,949 premium

payment. Bulliard Farm, in turn, filed a reconventional demand, seeking to recover

the guaranteed harvest price under the alleged CRC policy and damages. Following

a trial on the matter, the trial court found that there had been a mutual mistake when

Mr. Bulliard ordered the 2000 insurance policy, and reformed the MPCI policy to a

CRC policy. Mr. Bulliard was awarded $25,749.78 in damages.3 The trial court also

2 It appears from the record that the standard crop insurance payment method for Bulliard Farm was to order the insurance early in the calendar year, usually in February, and then plant the rice and/or soybeans in the spring and sell the harvest in autumn, usually in September. After the crop had been sold, the insurance premium would then be paid from the proceeds. Where there was a CRC policy, as in 1999, Mr. Bulliard stated that the insurance company would simply deduct the amount due for the premium from the amount paid out for the guaranteed harvest price and forward the farmer the difference. 3 In its reasons for judgment, the trial court described its method for determining the proper damage amount, stating:

Bulliard Farm, Inc. has also pleaded [in its reconventional demand] compensation under Civil Code Article 1893. The compensation would be set off against any sums owed by Bulliard Farm, Inc. to Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company. Under the reformed insurance policy Bulliard Farm, Inc. would owe to Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company the quoted insurance premium for the CRC policy totaling $14,073.48. Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company would owe in damages under the insurance policy for the rice crop for 2000 to Bulliard Farm, Inc. the amount of $39,823.23. When compensation is applied the net amount owed by Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company to Bulliard Farm, Inc. is $25,749.78. By the application of compensation to this is the net amount due to Bulliard Farm, Inc. by

2 dismissed Fireman’s Fund’s claims against Bulliard Farm and ordered the insurance

company to notify certain government entities that Bulliard Farm was not delinquent

in its payment of the premium. Fireman’s Fund now appeals, asserting the following

assignments of error:

1. The Trial Court committed error by reforming the insurance contract for the year 2000.

2. The Trial Court committed error by admitting defendant’s exhibit 6 as a business record hearsay exception.

Discussion

Reformation of Insurance Contract

For its first assignment of error, Fireman’s Fund asserts that the trial court erred

in reforming the crop insurance contract for 2000 from providing MPCI coverage to

CRC coverage.

A contract may be reformed as an equitable remedy, in order to correct

mistakes in a written instrument due to fraud or error and to conform the instrument

to the original intent of the parties. Capedeville v. White’s Temple of Church of God

in Christ, 99-1040 (La.App. 3 Cir. 12/22/99), 755 So.2d 923; Tate v. Charles

Aguillard Ins. & Real Estate, 494 So.2d 1240 (La.App. 3 Cir. 1986). The burden is

on the party seeking reformation to establish, by clear and convincing evidence, that

a mutual mistake has occurred. Farmers-Merch. Bank v. St. Katherine Ins., 96-1138

(La.App. 3 Cir. 4/30/97), 693 So.2d 876, writ denied, 97-1867 (La. 10/31/97), 703

So.2d 25.

Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company. Through compensation Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company has already been compensated by the deductions hereinabove and it is entitled to zero funds from Bulliard Farm, Inc.

3 A mutual mistake is a mistake shared by both parties to the instrument at the time of reducing their agreement to writing, and the mistake is mutual if the contract has been written in terms which violate the understanding of both parties; that is, if it appears that both have done what neither intended. The evidence of mutuality must relate to the time of the execution of the instrument and show that the parties then intended to say one thing and by mistake expressed another and different thing.

Teche Realty & Inv. v. Morrow, 95-1473, p.4 (La.App. 3 Cir. 4/17/96), 673 So.2d

1145, 1147 (quoting Succession of Jones v.

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