Gulf Ins. Co. v. Robins

15 So. 2d 552
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 15, 1943
DocketNo. 2584.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 15 So. 2d 552 (Gulf Ins. Co. v. Robins) 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
Gulf Ins. Co. v. Robins, 15 So. 2d 552 (La. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Plaintiff instituted this suit as the alleged subrogee under an insurance policy, for damages which it claims it had to pay on a certain Plymouth automobile, under a loss payable clause to the mortgagee of the alleged assured, who, it claims, retained an insurable interest in the car notwithstanding a certain arrangement entered into between himself and another party by which the latter had possession and custody of the car.

The alleged assured, Jessie L. Strickland, purchased the car from McConnell Motors Company on May 14, 1941. He paid $125 cash and for the balance of the purchase price executed his note for $427.68, payable in eighteen monthly installments of $23.76, beginning June 14, 1941. As security for the payment of the installment note, the seller retained a vendor's lien and chattel mortgage on the automobile. On May 16, 1941, Strickland had the car insured against loss by collision, by plaintiff insurance company, subject to a $50 deduction under a special clause of the policy. The policy also contained a loss payable clause in favor of McConnell Motors Company as its interest might appear. The deferred installment payments represented by the note held by McConnell Motors Company included the usual carrying charges involved in a transaction of this kind among them being the insurance premium due on the policy.

At a time when the purchaser, Strickland, still owed a balance of $300 or a little more, he became a bit pressed financially and went to his friend, Lawrence J. Arbour, for assistance. Under an arrangement which was finally agreed upon, Arbour took possession of the car, used it himself and began to make the payments due on it as they matured each month.

He had an old automobile which he turned over to Strickland and occasionally the latter, if he had a long trip to make, *Page 553 used the Plymouth which he had turned over to Arbour. Whenever he made payments of the installments due, Arbour took a receipt from McConnell Motors Company but the same was always issued in the name of Strickland. It seems to have also been a part of their agreement that if at any time (apparently no limit having been placed) Strickland could and would reimburse Arbour the amount of money he had paid, the latter would redeliver the car to him. Nothing however seems to have been understood or agreed about the old car Arbour had turned over to Strickland, that is, whether the latter would return that car to Arbour in the event the latter would have been reimbursed the payments made by him on the new car.

On March 24, 1942, while Arbour had possession of the Plymouth car and was driving it north on South 10th Street in the city of Baton Rouge, he collided with another Plymouth car owned and being driven at the time by Neonetta Robins, one of the defendants, in the intersection of that street with America Street, the Robins' car going in a westerly direction at the time. The car insured by the plaintiff insurance company was damaged in the collision to the extent of $343.63. The plaintiff, feeling that it was obligated under its policy to pay the loss, issued its check in payment to the joint account of Jessie L. Strickland and McConnell Motors Company, in the sum of $293.63, that being the amount of the loss less $50 deductible under the policy.

Claiming to be the subrogee of the alleged insured, Strickland, it has brought this suit against Neonetta Robins and Great American Indemnity Company, liability insurance carrier on her car, to recover the amount which it alleges it was obligated to pay. The demand against the defendant is based on the ground that the loss for the damage to the car it had insured was caused through the fault and negligence of Neonetta Robins. This negligence is alleged to consist in her operating her car at approximately forty miles per hour in violation of the City ordinance of the City of Baton Rouge, in not keeping a proper lookout, in failing to accord Arbour the right of way over the intersection which he had preempted and in driving the front end of her car into the right side of the Arbour car when it had almost completely crossed the intersection. In the alternative plaintiff pleads that even though Arbour may have been guilty of any negligence, Neonetta Robins had the last clear chance to avoid the accident by passing to the rear of the Arbour car and failed to avail herself of it.

The defendants filed a joint answer in which they put all the allegations of plaintiff's petition at issue by denying practically all of them and then affirmatively averring that in the event plaintiff should be held to be legally subrogated to the rights of the owner of the Arbour car, it cannot recover for the reason that the accident was caused solely and entirely through the gross negligence of Arbour, which negligence is imputable to the plaintiff. In the alternative they plead that should Neonetta Robins be shown to have been guilty of any negligence, then Arbour's contributory negligence in the following respects bars the plaintiff's recovery: That he was driving in excess of twenty five miles an hour, the maximum speed as fixed by the city ordinance of the City of Baton Rouge and by the laws of the State of Louisiana, that he was not keeping a proper lookout and that he failed to accord to the Robins' car the right of way which it had obtained over the intersection by virtue of having preempted the same and also having entered it to the right hand side of his car. A few days after having filed their answer the defendants filed exceptions of no right and no cause of action.

The case was tried before Judge J. Caldwell Herget but before he disposed of it he was elected to the position of District Judge. It was then submitted to his successor Judge Leslie J. Fitch, who after assigning written reasons overruled the exceptions which had been referred to the merits by Judge Herget and on the merits, ruled in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff, dismissing the latter's suit at its costs.

The plaintiff has taken and perfected the present appeal and the defendants have answered the same asking that the judgment be amended by maintaining the exceptions and in the alternative that it be affirmed.

We find but little difficulty in agreeing with the trial judge on his findings on the facts presented on the merits of the case, as we are satisfied that the accident was caused solely by the negligence of the driver Arbour and that Neonetta Robins did not have the last clear chance of avoiding the same, and since we have concluded *Page 554 to affirm the judgment on the merits, it is unnecessary for us to consider and pass on the many complicated questions of law and of fact that arise under the exceptions.

The accident occurred at about five o'clock in the afternoon. Neonetta Robins, as we have already stated, was driving her car west on America Street and the car Arbour was driving was going north on South 10th Street. The drivers of the respective cars were the only two witnesses who testified concerning the actual happening of the accident.

Neonetta Robins is a colored woman, a registered trained nurse by profession. She has been a nurse for twenty-five years and we judge that she must be a middle-aged woman and above the average in intelligence among the people of her race. She testified that she was going between fifteen and twenty miles per hour, holding her car on the right hand side of America Street and that as she approached the intersection at South 10th Street she slowed down her speed, looked each way on South 10th Street and saw the Arbour car coming from the south. At that moment she definitely placed it at a driveway back of a house on the southwest corner of the intersection, facing north on America Street.

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Bluebook (online)
15 So. 2d 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-ins-co-v-robins-lactapp-1943.