General Finance Co. of Louisiana, Inc. v. Universal Automobile Ins. Co.

139 So. 48, 19 La. App. 333
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 11, 1932
DocketNo. 13940
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 139 So. 48 (General Finance Co. of Louisiana, Inc. v. Universal Automobile Ins. Co.) 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
General Finance Co. of Louisiana, Inc. v. Universal Automobile Ins. Co., 139 So. 48, 19 La. App. 333 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J. •

This is a suit by a finance company, which deals in notes secured by chattel mortgages on automobiles, against an insurance company, claiming that it is the beneficiary under a “loss payable clause” in a policy of theft insurance issued by the defendant on December 10, 1929, to one Michael F. Cross, covering an 8-cylinder Gardner automobile, upon which plaintiff holds a chattel mortgage in the sum of $1,057.72. The petition alleges that the automobile was stolen on December 15, 1929, and prays for judgment against the defendant for the amount of its chattel mortgage note of $1,057.72, with legal interest from judicial demand, and 25 per cent, as damages because of the defendant’s illegal refusal to pay plaintiff within sixty days after proof of loss was filed, and also a reasonable attorney’s fee, under the provisions of Act No. 59 Extra Sess. of 1921.

Defendant admits the existence and issuance of the policy of insurance, but denied all of the other allegations of the petition. Defendant also specially pleaded that the policy is null and void, due to the fact that it was obtained by fraud, as the insured made [49]*49false statements of fact of a material character, which constituted a breach of warranties ; that the false statements were made for the purpose of inducing defendant to issue the policy, and that, had defendant known that the statements of the said insured were untrue, the policy would not Ijave been issued; that the said misstatements were that the car insured was a new ear, purchased during December, 1929, for $2,195, when in truth the automobile was a secondhand one, purchased during November, 1929, for the sum of $1,550.

The judge of the trial court dismissed plaintiff’s suit on the ground that it was the duty of Cross, the insured, when the policy came into his possession, to have read it and to have advised the insurance company of the errors contained in the policy, and, having failed to do so, he thereby lost all rights under it, and that plaintiff enjoyed no greater right than the insured. Plaintiff has appealed.

The record shows that Michael Cross was a trainman by occupation and had a friend by the name of G. B. Black, who was an automobile salesman, and formerly engaged as a life insurance salesman. Black was also a friend of one John Maher, who was an insurance salesman connected with the office of Miller & King, insurance brokers. . When Black sold an automobile, he advised the purchaser to place the insurance of the car with Mr. Maher, who attended to the details of issuing the policy for the company. Black owed Cross $370, and had transferred to him a Chevrolet car in liquidation of the debt. Subsequent thereto, Black saw what he considered a good bargain in an S-eylinder Gardner ear and, on November 16, 1929, Cross, on Black’s suggestion, purchased the car from the Gardner Sales Company for the sum of $1,550, paying $100 cash, and being allowed on the purchase price a further credit of $550 for the used Chevrolet car. Cross signed a note secured by vendor’s lien and chattel mortgage for the difference, plus finance charges, or $1,057.72. The total amount that Cross paid for the car, including the finance charges, was $1,707.

It appears that the representative of the Gardner Sales Company called up an officer of the plaintiff company for the purpose of determining if the finance company would be interested in purchasing Cross’ note. Investigation into Cross’ credit standing and an inspection of the automobile proved satisfactory to the plaintiff’s officer, and the note was purchased by the plaintiff from the Gardner Sales Company. Black suggested to Cross that the insurance be placed on the car through John Maher. There was some delay in effecting the insurance, and the officer of the finance company was constantly admonishing Cross that the insurance should be placed on the car. Cross directed Black to have Maher insure the car. Maher called at Black’s employer’s place of business and, after inspecting the ear, issued the policy in question on December 10, 1929. The finance corn-pany paid the premium on December 12,1929. The automobile was stolen from the driveway at Cross’ home on the night of December 14, 1929, or the morning of December 15, 1929.

The controversy arose over what Maher states that Black told him at the time that the application was made to secure the insurance. Maher testifies that Black called him on the telephone about insuring the car, and that he took one of the company’s application blanks and went over to Black’s employer’s place of business; that Black stated the car was a new one, purchased during December, 1929, and that Cross paid the sum of $2,195 for it; that he wrote down the information as Black gave it to him; that he and Black went and looked at the automobile in order to obtain the serial and motor numbers; that an inspection of the engine and the car, inside, and outside, convinced him that it was a new car; and that, based on Black’s repre- ■ sentations, he caused the policy to be issued for the sum of $1,500. He admits he fixed the amount of the insurance.

Black denies that he stated the automobile was a new car and that it had been purchased by Cross during December, 1929, for $2,195, but says he told Maher that the car was delivered for that price in December, 1929. He also states that, at the time he and Maher examined the car, the speedometer showed that it had traveled approximately 2,000 miles, and consequently was not a new car.

It further appears from the record that the automobile had been sold by the Gardner Sales Company to one of its salesmen by the name of Sam Bird on September 23,1929, and thereafter it again became the property of the Gardner Sales Company, which used it as a demonstrator; that the automobile was sold to Cross on November 16, 1929, and had been used by him.

The law is clear that defendant had the burden of establishing its special defense. Valesi v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 151 La. 405, 91 So. 818; Boisblanc v. Louisiana Equitable Ins. Co., 34 La. Ann. 1167; Corpus Juris, Vol. 33, page 107, par. 827.

As we view the record, we have a situation where the defendant seeks to establish by one witness the alleged fraudulent misrepresentations which are denied by the party who is said to have made the statements. It is significant that Maher admits that he inspected the car, but, when asked if he looked at the speedometer and saw that the car had traveled about 2,000 miles, denied that he had observed the speedometer. This, to say the least, is very unlikely. He further states that he did not ask Mr. Black the day of the month that the car was purchased; that it was customary merely to get the month that the car was purchased, and that, if it was purchased in any one month and used in that month, it would he considered a new car, without any' inspection. He is uncorroborated in this state[50]*50ment, and it is difficult for us to believe tbe correctness of bis testimony in tbis respect, because if a party purchased an automobile on tbe first of tbe month and abused it by failing to properly lubricate tbe machine and subjected it to rough driving, by tbe end of tbe month tbe car would have considerably depreciated. Furthermore, tbe young lady, who was placed on tbe stand for tbe purpose of corroborating Maher that Black bad ’phoned in tbe information concerning tbe motor and serial numbers, on cross-examination stated that she did not remember whether tbe application, filled-in by Maher in bis own bandwriting, stated that tbe car was a new one.

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Bluebook (online)
139 So. 48, 19 La. App. 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-finance-co-of-louisiana-inc-v-universal-automobile-ins-co-lactapp-1932.