Lusk v. Travelers Insurance Co.

250 So. 2d 197, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 6091
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 31, 1971
Docket8323
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 250 So. 2d 197 (Lusk v. Travelers Insurance Co.) 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
Lusk v. Travelers Insurance Co., 250 So. 2d 197, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 6091 (La. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

250 So.2d 197 (1971)

M. Conway LUSK et al.
v.
The TRAVELERS INSURANCE CO. et al.

No. 8323.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

May 31, 1971.

*198 James E. Moore of Franklin, Moore, Beychok & Cooper, Baton Rouge, for appellants.

Horace Lane, Frank E. Coates, Jr., of Taylor, Porter, Brooks & Phillips, Jimmy R. Major, Baton Rouge, for appellees.

Before LOTTINGER, SARTAIN and TUCKER, JJ.

TUCKER, Judge.

On May 29, 1968 Janice Sarto, a senior at Broadmoor Senior High School, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, requested permission from one of her teachers, Mrs. David Lovely, to use her automobile in getting some hamburgers for lunch. Mrs. Lovely questioned Janice with respect to whether she possessed a driver's license. Miss Sarto replied that she did have a driver's license, although in truth and in fact she did not. Mrs. Lovely, without further adieu, handed Miss Sarto her car keys, and she departed in the Lovely vehicle for the hamburgers. En route she had a collision with plaintiff's vehicle, causing bodily injuries to plaintiff's two minor daughters, Lillian Marie Lusk and Becky Sue Lusk, who were respectively the driver and a passenger in the plaintiff's vehicle. The case was submitted to the lower court on the stipulation of all counsel wherein it was agreed that Janice Sarto, the driver of the Lovely vehicle, was negligent, and that her negligence was the sole and proximate cause of the accident.

M. Conway Lusk, individually and as administrator of the estates of his two minor daughters, Lillian Marie and Becky Sue, all domiciled in the Parish of East Baton Rouge, sued solidarily in tort State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., the liability insurer of the Lovely automobile, and The Travelers Insurance Co., the liability insurer under a family policy issued to Miss Sarto's father. Alternatively, the plaintiff sued Allstate Insurance Co. under an insurance policy issued to him with uninsured motorist coverage containing limits of $5,000.00 and $10,000.00.

The Travelers Insurance Co., a defendant in the main demand, answered and interposed its third party demand wherein it alleged that Miss Sarto was driving the Lovely vehicle with the permission of Mrs. Lovely. It further pleaded that its coverage of Miss Sarto was "in excess" of State Farm's coverage, and asked in the third party demand for judgment over and against State Farm for such portion of any judgment that might run against Travelers up to the limits of State Farm's coverage, and its own costs and attorney fees in defending the action against it as the insurer of Miss Sarto. State Farm denied coverage and Allstate denied that its uninsured motorist coverage provisions were applicable.

*199 The instant suit bore Docket No. 134,469 in the lower court, and was originally consolidated with a suit by Allstate against David Lovely, Jr., et al. to recover under its subrogation the property damages paid to Mr. Lusk under the collision portion of their policy issued to Mr. Lusk, which suit bore Docket No. 134,022. These suits were ultimately severed (Tr. 34), and we are now concerned only with the suit originally docketed as No. 134,469 in the trial court.

On May 6, 1970 the lower court signed the judgment apparently for the oral reasons given on April 29, 1970, dismissing all claims against the defendants, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. and The Travelers Insurance Co., on the ground that the permission given to Miss Sarto for her to drive the car was vitiated by the false statement that she had a driver's license. Since Janice Sarto was found to be uninsured, the trial court rendered judgment against Allstate Insurance Company in the respective sums of $600.00 for Becky Sue Lusk, $3750.00 for Lillian Marie Lusk, and $190.59 for M. Conway Lusk, and all costs of the proceedings under the uninsured motorist coverage.

Allstate appealed from this judgment. The plaintiff did not appeal, or answer Allstate's appeal.

Travelers and State Farm raised a latter day contention that they are not before the court on this appeal, as the plaintiff has not appealed from the judgment of the trial court which dismissed his demands against these companies, citing the provisions of La.C.C.P. Art. 2133 and such cases as Barrois v. Noto, 215 So.2d 676 (La.App. 4th Cir., 1968), writ refused 1969. The said Art. 2133 deals with the purport of an answer filed by an appellee to an appeal. It does not require the plaintiff in the main demand to obtain an order of appeal from the trial court judgment so that a co-defendant, who has timely filed an appeal, may be properly before the appellate court against his co-defendants, where they have appealed.

In the Barrois case the defendant, Allstate Insurance Co., which insured the automobile of Rosario A. Noto, which was involved in an accident with a bus owned by the co-defendant, New Orleans Public Service, Inc., appealed from a judgment which cast Allstate on the ground that the sole and proximate cause of the accident was the negligence of the driver of the New Orleans Public Service Bus. Barrois, the plaintiff, merely answered the appeal, contending that he should also be permitted to recover against New Orleans Public Service, Inc., another defendant. Barrois did not appeal from the trial court judgment. The appellate court found that the driver of the bus owned by the defendant, New Orleans Public Service, Inc., by his negligence, was solely responsible for the accident, and reversed the judgment of the trial court. The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal further held in Barrois that, since Barrois had merely answered Allstate's appeal and had not appealed, the answer did not bring New Orleans Public Service before the Court to review that part of the judgment which dismissed the suit as to that defendant. In other words, the judgment of the trial court was final in the dismissal of the suit against New Orleans Public Service, Inc. The court noted that prior to the adoption of the Code of Civil Procedure that by an answer to an appeal "an appellee could have the judgment appealed from modified, revised or reversed only as between himself and the appellant; the appeal brought up the judgment for review only insofar as the appellant was concerned; and the judgment could be modified, revised or reversed as between the appellees only insofar as the appellant was concerned." The court also held that the present Code of Civil Procedure does not change this rule.

The factual circumstances in the cited cases with respect to the effectiveness of an appeal are not the same as those involved in the instant case. It is not the plaintiff appellee, as in Barrois, who is trying to bring the other defendant into the appeal by his answer, but the defendant-appellant, *200 Allstate, who is taking on the appeal against his co-defendants, sued alternatively. The appellant, Allstate Insurance Company, is properly before this court not only in regard to its complaint against the lower court judgment awarding damages to the plaintiff against it alone, but also as to any part of the judgment to which it objects, even though it involves bringing in co-defendants State Farm and Travelers against whom suit was dismissed in the lower court.

Allstate has raised the proposition that Travelers in its third party petition against State Farm has judicially confessed that Miss Sarto had the permission or the right to the reasonable belief that she had the permission of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
250 So. 2d 197, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 6091, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lusk-v-travelers-insurance-co-lactapp-1971.