Monroe v. Heard

168 So. 519
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 8, 1936
DocketNo. 1618.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 168 So. 519 (Monroe v. Heard) 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
Monroe v. Heard, 168 So. 519 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

DORE, Judge.

This suit is to recover damages on account of injuries received by plaintiff in an automobile accident on the Old Spanish Trail Highway about four miles east of the Sabine river bridge on March 9, 1935, between the hours of 7 and 7:30 p. m.

Plaintiff alleges that she was riding as a passenger in a car driven by Jno. W. Plummer and was proceeding in a westerly direction on said highway on the right-hand side of the road and traveling at a speed of forty miles per hour. She then describes in detail how another car, coming from the opposite direction, in attempting to pass a slowly moving vehicle going in the same direction, ran into the car in which plaintiff was a passenger, causing injury for which she asks damages in the sum of $5,000.

She alleges that the automobile causing the damage, was owned by Miss Irene Heard, which automobile had been loaned to Mrs. Vera Perkins, who was a passenger in said car at the time and who was then directing and controlling the driving thereof; that the owner of said car causing the damage, Miss Heard, carried insurance with the Commercial Standard Insurance Company, a policy of insurance whereby it was agreed to protect and indemnify Miss Heard should she be held in damages on account of the negligent operation of said car which was being driven at the time of the accident under the direction and control of Mrs. Perkins as the agent of Miss Heard. The defendants are Miss Heard and the said insurance company. Mrs. Perkins is not made a party defendant.

Both defendants filed an exception of vagueness based on the ground that the petition alleged that Mrs. Perkins was operating said car as the agent of Miss Heard, and also that the car had been lo.aned to Mrs. Perkins, which allegations were claimed to be inconsistent. The court sustained these exceptions reserving to plaintiff the right to amend her petition so as to clarify these allegations. In accordance with that ruling, plaintiff filed a supplemental petition wherein she alleged that Mrs. Perkins was the agent of the owner, Miss Heard, only in the sense that she had charge of said automobile at the time of the accident with the permission of Miss Heard; she further alleged that the Heard car was being driven at the time of the accident by a Mr. Borsum under the direction and control of Mrs. Perkins who was not restricted in the use of the car. She further set forth provisions in the insurance policy in so far as these provisions affect the liability of the defendant insurance company, one of these provisions in the policy reading as follows:

“Extended Coverage; If loss or expense from the Perils set forth in Item 1 and/or item 2 is insured against hereunder, the company agrees that in addition to the Assured named in this policy, such insurance as is granted under Item 1 and/or Item 2 shall be available in the same manner and under the same conditions and to the extent as it is available to the Assured named herein to any person or persons, except chauffeurs and domestic servants, while riding in or legally operating any automobile described in this policy and to any person, firm or corporation legally responsible for the operation thereof; but only while it is being used for the purpose specified in statement 6 of the ‘Schedule of Statements and with the consent of the Assured named herein or (if the Assured is an individual) of an adult member of his household who is not a chauffeur or domestic servant”.

Exceptions of no cause or right of action were then filed by both defendants, and plaintiff then filed a second supplemental. petition in which she alleged that the sole and proximate cause of the accident was the negligence of Borsum in driving said Heard car and who was driving said car under the direction of Mrs. Perkins who had the unrestricted use of said car and who was sitting in the front seat with Borsum directing and controlling the driving of said car. In the alternative, plaintiff averred that while the car was being driven by Mr. Borsum under the direction of Mrs. Perkins as her guest and who had the unrestricted use of the *521 car, Mrs. Perkins was herself guilty of negligence in certain particulars, i. e., in failing to keep a proper lookout, in failing to have directed Borsum to check his speed, and in failing in other ways to direct Borsum in his operation of the car at the time of the accident.

The exceptions of no cause of action were renewed and sustained by the trial court. Plaintiff has appealed.

It is evident from the above summary of the original and supplemental petitions that Miss Heard,' the owner of the car, could under no possible theory be held liable for plaintiffs injury. She only loaned the car to Mrs. Perkins, and as Mrs. Perkins was not the agent of Miss Heard at the time of the accident, it follows that the latter would not be liable for any damage caused by the negligence of either Mrs. Perkins or Mr. Borsum. The exceptions as to Miss Heard were therefore correctly maintained or sustained.

If plaintiff has a cause of action against the insurance company, it is admitted that such claim must arise under the “extended coverage” clause which is quoted above. Furthermore, plaintiff must be able to show that this clause in the policy is available to her for the negligence of Borsum in driving the car, or, in the alternative, because of the fact that Mrs. Perkins is herself responsible for the accident.

Mrs. Perkins, as to the owner, Miss Heard, was a licensee or borrower of the car. As it is alleged that the owner consented to the use of the car by Mrs. Perkins, it follows that the provisions of the policy would cover the negligence of Mrs. Perkins in the operation of the car. However, the coverage could not be extended to liability for the negligence of another with whom the borrower had intrusted the operation of the car without the consent of the owner. We quote the following from 6 Blashfield’s Cyc. of Automobile Law and Practice (Permanent Ed.) p. 326, § 3943: ‘Permission to drive does not confer upon the licensee the power to confer permission, and one driving under this derivative, and therefore defective, permission is not an additional assured.” Therefore, in the absence of any allegation that Borsum was operating the car with the consent of Miss Heard, the owner, the petition fails to show liability in the insurance company for the injury caused by the negligence of Borsum.

The other and more serious question is whether or not, under the pleadings, Mrs. Perkins, while riding in the automobile with the consent of the owner as licensee, and while directing Borsum in driving, was “legally operating” the automobile, and was “legally responsible for its operation.” It is true that she is not made a defendant in the suit, but plaintiff contends that, under the pleadings, she was responsible for the operation of said car and therefore within the provisions of the policy.

The primary purpose of the policy was to protect the owner, Miss Heard, from liability which she might incur because of the operation and use of the car. To this extent it was purely a contract of insurance and indemnity inuring to the benefit of Miss Heard and any person who might have a claim against her because of the negligent operation of the car. But by the quoted clause in the policy the insurer went further and agreed to pay damages in certain instances where the owner was not personally liable.

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Bluebook (online)
168 So. 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monroe-v-heard-lactapp-1936.