Joseph S. McDermott v. Crown Zellerbach Corporation, Main Mutual Insurance Company of Illinois

418 F.2d 598
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 13, 1969
Docket27865_1
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 418 F.2d 598 (Joseph S. McDermott v. Crown Zellerbach Corporation, Main Mutual Insurance Company of Illinois) 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
Joseph S. McDermott v. Crown Zellerbach Corporation, Main Mutual Insurance Company of Illinois, 418 F.2d 598 (5th Cir. 1969).

Opinion

DYER, Circuit Judge:

Appellee McDermott was severely injured when a truck ran a red light and collided with a taxicab in which he was riding as a passenger. A jury verdict was returned for McDermott against Main Mutual, the insurer of the taxicab. From the judgment entered against it for its policy limits Main Mutual appeals. We affirm. 1

Upon arrival at New Orleans Moisant International Airport from his home in *600 St. Louis, Missouri, McDermott entered a taxicab owned by Connie Hemphill, driven by his brother Carl Hemphill, and insured by Main Mutual. He was in the back seat of the taxicab for the trip to downtown New Orleans when Hemphill stopped for a red light in the right hand lane of Moisant Road where it intersects Airline Highway. There were no vehicles in front of him. A traffic sign prohibited a left turn from this lane.

In the left lane of Moisant Road a Mr. Milligan was also stopped for the light, waiting for it to turn green so that he could make a left turn onto Airline Highway. Mr. Milligan saw a large truck travelling on Airline Highway, approaching the signal light from his left. When it was about a half block from the traffic signal the light turned red for the truck and turned green for Moisant traffic, but the truck did not appear to slow down in order to come to a stop. Having moved his vehicle forward about ten feet, Mr. Milligan stopped because the truck was still approaching at the same speed. The truck ran the red light and struck the taxicab which had pulled onto Airline Highway, resulting in McDermott’s injury.

On April 29,1966, McDermott sued the truck driver, Carl Hemphill and others. By amended and supplemental complaint filed August 7, 1967, McDermott joined Main Mutual as insurer of the Hemphill automobile and the other defendants were ultimately dismissed. Main Mutual’s first notice of the accident was when it received the suit papers.

Main Mutual complains of four errors: There was a failure of proof that the taxicab was being operated with the owner’s consent, and without such proof there was no coverage. The insured and McDermott failed to give prompt notice and Main Mutal was prejudiced by the unexplained delay. The District Court gave an erroneous charge concerning the respective duties of motorists entering a traffic-controlled intersection. McDermott’s claim was prescribed because it was not asserted against Main Mutual for over two years after the accident. We take up Main Mutual’s specifications seriatim.

Coverage.

While coverage under a policy of insurance must be proved like any other essential fact, Abshire v. Audubon Insurance Company, La.App.1957, 99 So. 2d 395; Continental Casualty Company v. Quebedeaux, 5 Cir. 1956, 234 F.2d 241; Standard Accident Insurance v. Rivet, 5 Cir. 1937, 89 F.2d 74, the courts of Louisiana have repeatedly construed the word “permission” in an omnibus clause in its broadest possible sense; and once permission, either express or implied, to use an automobile is established it is given a wide and liberal meaning in determining coverage. Thus, if initial permission to use a vehicle is shown to have been given, the coverage of the insurance attaches notwithstanding some subsequent use even for an unauthorized or unintended purpose. Peerless Insurance Co. v. Schnauder, 5 Cir. 1961, 290 F.2d 607; Gonzalez v. National Surety Corporation, 5 Cir. 1959, 266 F.2d 667; Continental Casualty Company v. Quebedeaux, supra ; Gonzalez v. Beaumont Cement Sales Company, La.App.1961, 125 So.2d 785; Thomas v. Peerless Insurance Company, La.App.1960,121 So.2d 593. And in Talbot v. Allstate Insurance Company, La.App.1954, 76 So.2d 76, a familial relationship of the named insured and the omnibus insured was taken into consideration in finding an implied permission to use a vehicle.

It is undisputed that on the day of the accident McDermott was injured while riding as a pasenger in a [taxi cab] owned by Connie Hemphill, operated by his brother Carl Hemphill, and insured by Main Mutual. In the application for insurance it was stated that the vehicle owned by Connie was to be used as a taxicab and that Carl, Connie’s brother, was to use the taxicab ten percent of the time. Main Mutual had previously paid a claim that arose under the same policy when Carl was driving the same vehicle. Neither of the Hemphills *601 testified at trial because neither of them could be found.

We are convinced that under the circumstances of this case the District Court was correct in finding that Carl had Connie’s implied if not express permission to drive his brother’s taxicab on the day of the accident and that omnibus coverage was thus in effect.

Lack of Notice.

Claiming that it was prejudiced in its defense of the case because it was not joined as a defendant until two years and three months after the accident, and more than a year after the suit was filed, Main Mutual contends that the suit should have been dismissed. The thrust of the argument is that with reasonable diligence McDermott could have known or found out that Main Mutual insured Connie Hemphill because the policy of insurance was a matter of public record. This being so and the Louisiana courts having impliedly recognized that the right of the injured party is not permanently fixed against the carrier, Main Mutual maintains that the unexplained delay in notifying or suing the insurer contributed to its prejudice. This oblique statement is simply not the law of Louisiana.

West v. Monroe Bakery Incorporated, 1950, 217 La. 189, 46 So.2d 122, exhaustively treated an injured third party’s rights under the Direct Action Statute. 2 The court said:

[The Direct Action Statute] does not impose on the injured party the duty to give the statutory notice of the accident which causes him injury. This duty under the policy and the statute which recognizes the policy contract is imposed on the assured only.

Id. at 124. The court further said:

[The Direct Action Statute] gives the injured party an immediate right of direct action against the insurer of the party responsible for the injuries. The statute expresses the public policy of this State that an insurance policy against liability is not issued primarily for the protection of the insured but for the protection of the public. (Emphasis by the court).

Id. at 129-130.

The court went on to say that an injured party cannot be deprived of his rights against the tort-feasor’s liability insurer because of the tort-feasor’s failure to notify his insurer of the accident in accordance with the policy provisions except when the injured party is guilty of fraud, collusion or bad faith in deliberately failing to notify the insurer with the intention of prejudicing its rights. Id. at 128.

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418 F.2d 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-s-mcdermott-v-crown-zellerbach-corporation-main-mutual-insurance-ca5-1969.