Lighting Fixture S. Co. v. Pacific Fire Ins. Co.

146 So. 35, 176 La. 499, 1932 La. LEXIS 1970
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 20, 1932
DocketNo. 31286.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 146 So. 35 (Lighting Fixture S. Co. v. Pacific Fire Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lighting Fixture S. Co. v. Pacific Fire Ins. Co., 146 So. 35, 176 La. 499, 1932 La. LEXIS 1970 (La. 1932).

Opinions

ROGERS, J.

The plaintiff, as lessee, made certain alterations to the leased premises under an agreement that at the termination of the lease these improvements should, without compensation, become the property of the lessor. Plaintiff insured the improvements for $2,000 with the defendant company. Shortly before the expiration of the lease, the entire building, including plaintiff’s improvements, was destroyed by fire. Plaintiff then sued the insurer for the amount of the policy, with penalties, interest, and attorney’s fees, grounding its action on the state’s valued policy law, Act No. 135 of 1900.

The defendant denied the application of the statutory law pleaded, and averred that plaintiff’s insurable interest in the improvements covered by its policy was $1S7.12, the value of their use for the unexpired term of the lease.

The court below rendered judgment against defendant for $187.12, the amount it admitted to be due. From this judgment, plaintiff has appealed.

The facts are admitted. Plaintiff, as the lessee of a certain building in the city of New Orleans, made certain additions and replacements to the premises, such as partitions, bins, shelving, plumbing, and electric fixtures, a mezzanine floor, and an office inelosure. These fixtures and improvements were firmly attached to the building by nails, bolts, and cement, and it was impossible to ■ remove them without injury to them or to the building. The fire by which they were totally destroyed occurred on January 3, 1929, about nine months prior to the expiration of the lease.

The property insured is described in the contract as follows, viz.:

“$2,000.00 Betterments and improvements all while contained in the three story brick building situated #301 Tchoupitoulas St., corner of Gravier St., City of New Orleans, Louisiana.
“Betterments and improvements are understood to consist of additions, replacements and improvements of any kind, nature and description made to the premises at the Assured’s expen'se including tiling, decorations, plumbing and electrical fixtures and wiring, show windows, shelving, machinery and other fixtures or improvements as are not permitted by law or by agreement to be moved by assured at expiration of lease.”

Plaintiff’s lease, which expired on September 30, 1929, stipulated, as part consideration of the rental, that “all alterations and improvements to the premises, except movable business fixtures, must remain the property of the lessor without claim for reimbursement in lessee.”

Under the provisions of Act No. 135 of 1900, all insurance contracts covering fire *503 risks on property “immovable by nature” are valued policies. The statutory provisions are inapplicable to movables. Melancon v. Phoenix Ins. Co., 116 La. 324, 40 So. 718; Lake Arthur Dredging Co. v. Mechanics’ Ins. Co., 162 La. 1000, 111 So. 466.

Plaintiff contends that the insurance contract herein sued on is within the terms of. the valued policy law, because the “betterments and improvements” insured therein were immovable by nature. Plaintiff, in support of its contention, relies on article 464 of the Civil Code.

Defendant, on the other hand, contends that the insurance policy is not governed by the valued policy law, because the “betterments and improvements” insured were not immovable by nature, since they were installed in the leased premises by the tenant and not by the owner. Defendant, in support of its contention, relies on article 2726 of the Civil Code.

Defendant's interpretation of the insurance contract was upheld by a recent decision of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for this circuit in the case of Lighting Fixture Supply Co., Inc., v. Fidelity Union Fire Insurance Co., 55 F.(2d) 110, 111, in which certiorari was denied by the Supreme Court of the United States May 23, 1932. 286 U. S. 558, 52 S. Ct. 641, 76 L. Ed. 1292. In that case an insurance policy for $3,500 similar in terms and additionally covering the same property as the policy under review here was held not to be a valued policy under the law of Louisiana, and plaintiff’s recovery was limited to the value of its right of use in the property 'insured for the unexpired term of the lease. While we are in accord with the result, we are not in accord with the reasoning in the case.

Things are either common or public, Civ. Code, art. 449; corporeal or incorporeal, Civ. Code, art. 460; movable or immovable, Civ. Code, art. 461.

Things may be immovable by nature or movable by nature; the distinction between these two classes of things being that the-former are such as cannot either move themselves or be removed from one place to another, and the latter are such as may be carried from one place to another, whether they move themselves or cannot be removed without an extraneous power. Civ. Code, arts. 462, 463.

Article 464 of the Civil Code provides: “Lands and buildings or other constructions, whether they have their foundations in the soil or not, are immovable by their nature.”

Things which the owner of a tract of land place upon it for its service' and improvement are immovable by destination. Civ. Code, art. 468.

Under the codal article 468, things become immovable by destination only when placed thereon by the owner of the soil. But codal article 464 does not require that, in order to enjoy the character of immovables by nature, buildings or other constructions must be erected on the soil by the owner thereof. As pointed out in Vaughn v. Kemp, 4 La. App. 682, there is no qualification of the rule stated in article 464 of the Civil Code. “The law makes no distinction between buildings erected by the’ owner and those erected by tenants or others. If they are erected on the land, they are immovable *505 by their nature.” This ruling was quoted and approved by this court in the ease of Westwego Canal & Terminal Co., Inc., v. Paul Pizanie and Clarence Pizanie, 174 La. 1068, 142 So. 691, decided May 23, 1932.

Vaughn v. Kemp presented the question of whether a small wooden garage built by a tenant upon the leased land, under an agreement that it might be removed at the termination of the lease, was immovable by nature so, as to pass to a purchaser under a conveyance of the land with all the buildings and improvements thereon. The court held that it was, and that the purchaser received a valid title to the garage as against the tenant who had failed to record his agreement.

And in Louisiana Land & Pecan Co. v. Gulf Lumber Co., 134 La. 784, 64 So. 713, which involved a petitory action for the recovery of a tract of land with the buildings, which had been erected thereon by defendant’s authors with the landowner’s consent, the court held, applying article 464 of the Civil Code, that the buildings were immovable, and that the defendant had lost title thereto by non recordation.

Defendant seeks, to distinguish the foregoing two cáses from the ease at bar by suggesting that the decisions in the cited cases were intended to give effect to the registration laws so as to protect purchasers in good faith. The suggested distinction appears to have been accepted by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals in deciding the ease of the present plaintiff against the Fidelity Union Fire Insurance Co., supra.

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146 So. 35, 176 La. 499, 1932 La. LEXIS 1970, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lighting-fixture-s-co-v-pacific-fire-ins-co-la-1932.