Maryland Cas. Co. v. Trahan
This text of 384 So. 2d 819 (Maryland Cas. Co. v. Trahan) 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
MARYLAND CASUALTY COMPANY
v.
Don TRAHAN d/b/a Trahan Texaco Service Station and the Travelers' Insurance Company.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*820 Francipane, Regan & St. Pee, Albert C. Miranda, Metairie, for plaintiff-appellee.
Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrere & Denegre, John G. Gomila, Jr., New Orleans, for Don Trahan d/b/a Trahan Texaco Service Station, defendant-appellee.
James J. Morse and Grayson H. Brown, New Orleans, for Travelers Ins. Co., defendant-appellant.
Before SAMUEL, LEMMON and GULOTTA, JJ.
SAMUEL, Judge.
Plaintiff, Maryland Casualty Company, filed this suit against defendants, Don Trahan, d/b/a Trahan Texaco Service Station, and Travelers Insurance Company, Trahan's insurer, seeking to recover as subrogee of its insured the amount of $3,434.22 paid by it as a result of the theft of its insured's 1974 Chevrolet Camaro automobile stolen from Trahan's service station on October 26, 1977.
The defendants answered, denying liability. In addition, Travelers denied coverage for the loss, relying on an exclusion in their garage keeper's liability coverage for thefts by employees.
Trahan filed a third party demand against Travelers for indemnification and cost of defense.
After a trial on the merits, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff and against Trahan and Travelers solidarily for $3,434.22. The court also rendered judgment in favor of Trahan and against Travelers for indemnification. Travelers has prosecuted this appeal.
The primary issue presented is whether the trial court applied the proper burden of proof and whether the trial court committed error by failing to hold the automobile was stolen by an employee of defendant Trahan.
*821 The record reflects that on October 25, 1977, Trahan hired a service station attendant to work for him named Terrance Vaughn. The only information Trahan obtained when he hired Vaughn was his name and telephone number. Trahan did not obtain references or other personal information.
During the middle of the night on October 26, 1977, a Chevrolet Camaro owned by plaintiff's insured was stolen from the station. Vaughn, who had custody of the service station from 10 p. m. until 8 a. m. the next morning, left the service station that night and has never returned. The next morning, Trahan found a note which indicated in part that a "lady" had come to the station to pick up the Camaro. In fact, the defendant's insured had not retrieved the Camaro from the service station that night. It was later found at a service station in Mississippi, after having been unclaimed for some time.
Travelers contends that Terrance Vaughn was an assumed name used by Jessie Nesby. When Trahan called the telephone number given him by Vaughn, he spoke with a woman named Lena Barnes. Lena Barnes is Nesby's mother. Lena Barnes testified that on the night of the theft her son was working at a service station. He came home early saying he was not feeling well. He then went out to mail a letter and did not return. She further testified that after the theft, a man from Trahan's Texaco called asking for Terrance Vaughn. She informed the caller she did not know a Terrance Vaughn, but that she had a son named Jessie Nesby, who worked there. She told Trahan she had not seen Jessie Nesby since he left that morning.
The operator of the service station in Mississippi who recovered the stolen vehicle was unable to identify the man who brought the vehicle to his station. Moreover, Trahan was unable to identify a picture of Nesby as being the same person whom he hired under the name of Terrance Vaughn. The handwriting on the note found by Trahan the next morning has not been identified.
Travelers argues the trial judge did not apply the correct burden of proof. However, the standard expressly applied by the trial judge was whether Travelers had established its defense by a preponderance of the evidence that the theft of the vehicle was committed by Trahan's employee.
Ironically, Travelers cites Ned v. Hertz Corp. and Jordan v. Travelers Insurance Company,[1] as authority for the proposition that the trial judge applied the wrong burden of proof. However, both of these cases stand for the proposition that the burden of proof in a civil case is by a preponderance of the evidence and that a preponderance exists when the proof taken as a whole shows that the fact or causation sought to be proved is more probable than not.
Since the record clearly shows that the trial judge applied the burden of proof which Travelers now claims he should have applied, we conclude that Travelers' first specification of error is without merit.
Travelers also contends the trial court committed error by not finding the Camaro was stolen by Trahan's employee. Travelers advances three main arguments to justify this contention.
First, it contends it proved that Vaughn and Nesby are the same person. It cites as evidence of this fact that the telephone number given Trahan by Vaughn and that of Nesby's mother are identical. Travelers also argues Nesby's sister received letters addressed to Vaughn, but Nesby's sister denies knowing anyone named Vaughn. Further, it contends Trahan identified the photograph of Nesby as that of Vaughn. However, the record indicates Trahan was not in fact able to make such identification, apparently because of the short length of time he knew Vaughn and the approximate year which intervened between the theft and the request for identification. Travelers argues the existence of the note left the night of Vaughn's disappearance is evidence of the fact that he stole the Camaro. However, *822 the handwriting of the note was never identified, and this presents little evidence to show that Vaughn in fact did commit the theft.
Second, Travelers argues that flight represents an admission of guilt. However, Travelers never proved that Nesby fled in connection with the theft. Nesby in fact left home on the night of the theft and did not return for approximately one month. However, the operator of the service station in Mississippi where the stolen vehicle was eventually abandoned could not identify the person who left the vehicle at his station, and stated he could not identify him in the future.
Third, Travelers argues that since the thief did not take all or any of the money in the cash register that night, such fact provides additional evidence to support the contention that Vaughn is the thief. Travelers theory, which we do not totally comprehend, is that by leaving some money in the cash register, the thief intended to "reduce the possibility of an all points bulletin being put out for him".
The evidence offered at the trial by Travelers is, by its own admission, circumstantial in nature. Since it based its case on circumstantial evidence, its case must fail unless the circumstances lead to the exclusion of other reasonable hypotheses with a fair amount of certainty.[2]
We conclude the circumstantial evidence advanced by Travelers does not exclude other reasonable hypotheses with a fair amount of certainty. One such alternate hypothesis advanced by Trahan is that the record shows Vaughn drove an automobile to work on the evening in question and that he was informed by the mechanic on duty that he had not finished working on the Camaro and it was not ready to be delivered to its owner.
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384 So. 2d 819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-cas-co-v-trahan-lactapp-1980.