Hansen v. Hickenbotham
This text of 61 So. 2d 620 (Hansen v. Hickenbotham) 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
HANSEN et al.
v.
HICKENBOTHAM.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.
*621 Bienvenu & Culver, H. F. Foster, III, New Orleans, for plaintiffs and appellants.
Herman & Herman, New Orleans, for defendant and appellee.
JANVIER, Judge.
On March 4, 1951, at about 8:10 o'clock in the morning, there was an automobile accident in which two cars were involved on Louisiana Highway No. 51, about two miles west of LaPlace, Louisiana. The cars were going in the same direction towards Ponchatoula. The 1949 Ford of the plaintiff, Frederick H. Hansen, driven by him, was in front and following it was the 1939 Plymouth belonging to and driven by Austin Hickenbotham. As the two cars were attempting to pass around a third car which was standing stationary, apparently partly on the paved highway and partly on the right shoulder, the car of Hickenbotham crashed into the rear of the leading Hansen car, and both cars sustained damage.
Mr. Hansen had secured from Houston Fire & Casualty Insurance Company a policy of "collision" insurance under which the said company had agreed that should Mr. Hansen's car be damaged in collision, it, the insurer, would pay for such portion of the necessary repair bill as should be in excess of $100, and, accordingly, when the repairs to the Hansen car were made, he himself paid $100 on account of the bill and the insurance company paid the remaining portion of the bill, which bill totaled $247.60.
In connection with a written statement given to the insurer by Mrs. Hansen, she executed a written subrogation in which she undertook to grant to the insurer a subrogation pro tanto to any rights Mr. Hansen may have had against any person responsible for the said loss.
This suit was then filed by Mr. Hansen and the said insurer, Houston Fire & Casualty Insurance Company, Mr. Hansen claiming the $100 paid by him and the insurer claiming the balance of the repair bill to-wit $147.60, which had been paid by it.
The plaintiff alleged that Mr. Hansen, while driving his car at a reasonable speed along the right side of the highway, following other traffic in front of him approached a car parked on the side of the road and that it became necessary that he and the other cars which were ahead of him reduce speed as there was traffic approaching on the other side of the road and there was not sufficient room to pass between the parked car and the other vehicles going in the other direction. Plaintiffs then alleged that while the traffic ahead of Hansen and the Hansen car were still moving slowly towards the parked car, the Hansen car was suddenly struck in the rear by the Hickenbotham car with the resulting damage.
Hickenbotham answered, denying that there had been any negligence on his part, and averring that the accident had resulted solely from negligence on the part of Hansen. He averred that as his car approached the point at which the accident occurred, he noticed the Hansen car standing stationary on the right of the road and that he. *622 Hickenbotham, seeing that the highway ahead was clear, the traffic going in the other direction having already passed, attempted to pass to the left of the stationary Hansen car and the parked car ahead of it, when the Hansen car "suddenly and unexpectedly and without any notice or warning whatsoever * * * pulled out of the lane of traffic * * * directly into the path of plaintiff-in-reconvention's automobile."
Hickenbotham then assumed the position of plaintiff-in-reconvention and prayed for judgment against Hansen and his liability insurance carrier, Houston Fire & Casualty Company, in the sum of $126.55, averring that to be the cost of repairing the damage sustained by his Plymouth automobile.
During the trial, when plaintiffs sought to introduce the subrogation executed by Mrs. Hansen in favor of Houston Fire & Casualty Insurance Company, counsel for Hickenbotham objected on the ground that the subrogation had been executed by Mrs. Hansen instead of by Mr. Hansen, saying in reference to the subrogation:
"* * * inasmuch as this is a claim in part by the husband, as owner of the automobile, and as head and master of the community, and also in part by the Houston Fire and Casualty Insurance Company, the alleged subrogee of Mr. Hansen, and since the said insurance company is not the subrogee of Mr. Hansen but of Mrs. Hansen, we do not think that said exhibit should be taken in evidence."
"* * * it is signed by Mrs. Frederick Hansen and this suit is filed by Frederick Hansen, and the suit is also filed by the Houston Fire and Casualty Insurance Company, as the alleged subrogee of Frederick Hansen, and not Mrs. Frederick Hansen; * * *."
After a trial on the merits, there was judgment dismissing both the main and reconventional demands, and plaintiffs, Hansen and Houston Fire & Casualty Insurance Company, have appealed. Hickenbotham neither appealed nor answered the appeal. Consequently, there is before us only the question of whether there may be recovery by either or both of the plaintiffs.
The question raised by the objection to the subrogation seems to have been passed upon by our Supreme Court in London Guarantee & Accident Insurance Co. v. Vicksburg S. & P. R. Co., 153 La. 287, 95 So. 771, 772, in which the court, in discussing that identical contention with reference to whether subrogation is necessary in such case, said that the right of an insurer to sue in such situation
"arises from the general provisions of article 2315 of the [LSA-] Civil Code. The article gives a right of action for damages to any and every one who is injured by another's fault. If the loss of $515 which the surety company has sustained was caused by the fault or negligence of the railroad company, the latter is answerable directly to the surety company for the loss. * * *"
We followed this ruling in Universal Automobile Ins. Co. v. Manisalco, La.App., 148 So. 731.
However, even if there could be found a distinction between the situation presented here and that which was passed upon by the Supreme Court in the London Guarantee & Accident Insurance Co. v. Vicksburg case, it would not be necessary for us to reach a conclusion because we find that because of his own negligence there can be no recovery by Mr. Hansen. Therefore, even if the subrogation had been executed by him instead of by Mrs. Hansen, it would have transferred no right to recover since he, himself, because of his own fault, had no right to transfer.
The testimony as to how the accident occurred is in irreconcilable conflict. Those who were in the Hansen car insist that that car had never come to a stop, but had merely slowed down and that when Mr. Hansen attempted to maneuver it around the stationary car ahead of it, it was run into from the rear by the Hickenbotham car. Their story, on the important details of which they are in substantial *623 agreement, is stated by Mr. Hansen as follows:
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61 So. 2d 620, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hansen-v-hickenbotham-lactapp-1952.