Joe Fleming v. Pan American Fire & Casualty Company

495 F.2d 535, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 8253
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 6, 1974
Docket73-2285
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 495 F.2d 535 (Joe Fleming v. Pan American Fire & Casualty Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joe Fleming v. Pan American Fire & Casualty Company, 495 F.2d 535, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 8253 (5th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

*537 RIVES, Circuit Judge:

Pan American Fire & Casualty Company (hereafter Pan Am) appeals from an $8,586.00 judgment in favor of Joe Fleming (hereafter Fleming), entered after a trial by the court without a jury. We affirm.

On May 21, 1971, Pan Am issued its motor-truck cargo policy to the named insured William W. Hazelwood (hereafter Hazelwood). It was stipulated that the policy was in force and effect on June 12, 1971, when one of the covered vehicles was involved in an accident. The consequent loss is the subject of this suit.

On appeal, the only substantial question presented is whether Fleming had a direct claim against Pan Am on or arising out of its policy. Fleming’s claim was based upon two independent theories: 1. that Fleming had a right to proceed in equity as provided by section 12 of Title 28, Code of Alabama recompiled 1958, 1 either alone or as construed in connection with the preceding section 11 of the same title; 2 2. that Fleming had become a third-party beneficiary under the terms of the policy itself. Each theory presents a close and difficult question. The district court held with Pan Am under the first theory, but with Fleming under the second. Following the same order of consideration, we conclude that Fleming had a • claim against Pan Am based upon either or both theories. We therefore affirm the judgment of the district court.

On June 11, 1971, Hazelwood was employed by contract made in Texas 3 to haul sixty-five Hereford heifer cattle, the property of Fleming, from Henrietta, Texas, to Madison County, Alabama. The truck was loaded on June 11 and started its movement into Alabama. It was involved in an accident on June 12, 1971, at a point in Alabama about twenty-two miles north of Tuscaloosa, when it struck a tree and burned. Thirty-six head of cattle were either killed or so injured as to render death immediately necessary within the coverage of the policy.

On July 19, 1971, Fleming filed suit against Hazelwood. On September 17, 1971, an agent of Pan Am completed the *538 blanks in a proof of loss and presented it to Hazelwood for his signature. • Such proof of loss was signed by Hazelwood before a Notary Public and returned to Pan Am’s agent. That proof was accepted by Pan Am as sufficient under the terms of the policy. On September 24, 1971, Pan Am issued its draft in the sum of $2,400.00 payable to Hazelwood and City National Bank of Wichita Falls, Texas. 4 The face of the draft contained the inscription, “Nature of payment 13 head yearling heifers killed.” On the back of the draft appeared the following:

“All parties to whom this draft is made payable must endorse it properly (in ink) or the draft will not be pain
******
“Endorsement of this draft by payee or payees is acknowledgment of full settlement, satisfaction, compromise, and discharge of all claims and demands of every nature and kind arising from the loss or accident described on the face hereof and shall apply to all unknown unanticipated injuries or damages as well as those now disclosed.”

Underneath that inscription the draft was endorsed by Hazelwood and the said City National Bank, and it was then paid by the bank upon which it was drawn, and thereafter by Pan Am.

On October 24, 1971, Fleming obtained a judgment by default against Hazelwood in the amount of $14,525.00. That judgment remains unpaid. Fleming received none of the proceeds of the policy of insurance paid by Pan Am to Hazelwood and the City National Bank. Subsequent to that payment, Hazelwood was adjudicated a bankrupt and as against him Fleming’s judgment was discharged in bankruptcy. Fleming’s present action against Pan Am was commenced on January 7,1972.

I.

We consider first whether Fleming had a direct claim against Pan Am based on section 12 of Title 28 of the Alabama Code, 5 either by its own terms or as construed in connection with the immediately preceding section ll. 6

The district court held as follows:

“This Court rejects plaintiff’s contention that by resort to the rule of in pari materia, the right created by the Code of Alabama, Tit. 28 § 11 (Re-comp.1958), should be imported into the provisions of Section 12 which provides a remedy only. When Section 12 was amended in 1953 by extending the remedy of an injured party to include judgments ‘for loss or damage to property,’ Section 11 was left undisturbed. Failure to amend Section 11 may have been due to legislative inadvertence, on the one hand or, on the other, to a deliberate choice, in the imposition of absolute liability, to differentiate between easily determinable bodily injury or death and loss or damage to property, which might involve a bundle of various rights. For a full discussion of this cannon [sic] of statutory construction, see Erlenbaugh v. United States, 409 U.S. 239, [93 S.Ct. 477, 34 L.Ed.2d 446], 41 L.W. 4081, decided December 12, 1972. In view of the conclusion of the Court that plaintiff was entitled to maintain a direct action on the policy in suit, further discussion of the interplay of Sections 11 and 12 would be purely academic.”

(App.23.)

T?or the reason stated by the district court in the last sentence, supra, we could forego deciding the question now under consideration. We are persuaded otherwise by two considerations: (1) As hereafter developed Fleming’s right to maintain a direct action under *539 the terms of the policy itself is not entirely free from doubt; 7 and (2) we disagree with the district court’s positive conclusion of law, heretofore quoted, and our failure to indicate our disagreement might tend to confuse litigants as to our conception of the jurisprudence until such time as the Supreme Court of Alabama has occasion authoritatively to construe the statutes involved.

Preliminarily, we note that the present diversity action was brought in a federal district court located in Alabama, so that we must look to Alabama law, including Alabama’s law of conflicts, in deciding the nonfederal issues in this case. Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Co., 1941, 313 U.S. 487, 61 S.Ct. 1020, 85 L. Ed. 1477.

In light of Klaxon, the applicability and construction of section 12, either alone or in connection with section 11, must be determined in accordance with the law of Alabama. In Macey v. Crum, 1947, 249 Ala. 249, 30 So.

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495 F.2d 535, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 8253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joe-fleming-v-pan-american-fire-casualty-company-ca5-1974.