Morris v. Kospelich

206 So. 2d 155
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 11, 1968
Docket2814
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 206 So. 2d 155 (Morris v. Kospelich) 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
Morris v. Kospelich, 206 So. 2d 155 (La. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

206 So.2d 155 (1968)

Robert L. MORRIS, III, and Reliance Insurance Company of Philadelphia
v.
Rudy KOSPELICH, Cooperative Cab Company, Inc., and Joseph McQueen, Jr.

No. 2814.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

January 9, 1968.
Rehearing Denied February 5, 1968.
Writ Granted April 11, 1968.

Montgomery, Barnett, Brown & Read, Wood Brown, III, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellants.

Dudley A. Phillips, Jr., New Orleans, for defendants-appellees.

*156 Before REGAN, HALL, and BARNETTE, JJ.

REGAN, Judge.

The plaintiffs, Robert L. Morris, III, and Reliance Insurance Company of Philadelphia, his automobile liability insurer, filed this suit against the defendants, Rudy Kospelich, an operator of a taxicab, Joseph McQueen, Jr., the owner thereof, and the Cooperative Cab Company, Inc., the insurer of the cab, endeavoring to recover by way of contribution from them as joint tort-feasors the sum of $2,350.24 representing one-half of the sum expended by the plaintiffs in compromising a claim for personal injuries incurred by a guest passenger as the result of a collision which occurred between their respective vehicles.

The plaintiffs also sought to recover from Rudy Kospelich and Cooperative Cab Company, Inc., the sum of $397.70 representing one-half of a judgment rendered solidarily against the plaintiffs and these two defendants for property damage which resulted from their joint and concurrent negligence in the same collision.

The defendants answered and in effect conceded that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover the sum of $397.70 representing one-half of a judgment rendered against the plaintiffs and the defendants, Kospelich and Cooperative Cab Company, Inc., as joint tortfeasors, for property damage incurred by McQueen as a result of the collision.

However, the defendants denied that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover from them, by way of contribution as joint tort-feasors, the sum of $2,350.24 representing one-half of the amount expended by the plaintiffs in settlement of a claim for personal injuries incurred as a result of the collision by Frederick Elliot, as a guest passenger in the plaintiff's vehicle.

The lower court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs for $397.70, or one-half of the judgment previously rendered against them for property damage, but denied their legal effort to recover contribution for one-half of the amount paid in settlement of the guest passenger's claim prior to the filing of a suit therefor.

The facts hereof were stipulated in the lower court, and they disclose that on April 26, 1964, an automobile collision occurred in the intersection of Napoleon Avenue and Freret Street in the City of New Orleans. The accident involved a vehicle owned by the plaintiff, Robert L. Morris, III, operated by his son, Robert L. Morris, IV, and insured by the Reliance Insurance Company of Philadelphia. The other vehicle involved was a United Cab operated by Rudy Kospelich, owned by Joseph McQueen and insured by Cooperative Cab Company, Inc.

A guest passenger in the plaintiff's vehicle, Frederick Elliot, a minor, was injured in the collision. This claim was compromised by Reliance Insurance Company without the knowledge or consent of the defendants, for the sum of $4,700.47. This settlement was submitted, as is usual, to the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans and was approved by a judge thereof in conformity with law.

Subsequently, Joseph McQueen, Jr., the owner of the cab, filed suit against the plaintiffs, Morris and Reliance Insurance Company, endeavoring to recover the cost of repairing the damage to his vehicle which it had sustained in the collision. The lower court rendered judgment in favor of McQueen and against the plaintiffs for the entire amount of McQueen's damages, that is, the sum of $795.41 plus court costs of $54.90. This judgment, as well as the judgment approving the minor's settlement, was rendered before the prescriptive period of one year.

This suit, the issues of which are now posed for our consideration, was also filed before the end of the prescriptive period by the plaintiffs requesting contribution from the defendants for one-half of all amounts paid by the plaintiffs as a result of the claims asserted against them. The plaintiffs' *157 total expenditure was $5,550.78, and they request contribution of one-half thereof, or $2,775.39.

It was also stipulated in the lower court that the drivers of both vehicles were guilty of negligence which concurred in the collision; that the settlement or compromise paid to Frederick Elliot was reasonable; and that the award to McQueen was proper.

The lower court concluded that the plaintiffs as joint tortfeasors were entitled to recover in a separate suit their virile share of the sum expended as a result of the judgment rendered against them, that is, for property damage in the amount of $397.70 together with court costs of $27.45. However, the lower court refused to permit the same joint tortfeasors, the plaintiffs herein, to recover by a separate suit the sum paid as the result of a voluntary compromise between them and the injured party without the knowledge, consent, or concurrence of Kospelich and the Cooperative Cab Company, Inc., the other joint tortfeasors.

Since there was no answer to the appeal or an appeal by the defendants, that portion of the judgment awarding plaintiffs $425.15 as their share of the amount paid as the result of the judgment against the plaintiffs for property damage is not before us.

Therefore, the only question posed for our consideration, the answer to which, we are informed, is res nova, is whether the plaintiff, as a joint tortfeasor, and his insurer are entitled to recover in a separate or plenary lawsuit the plaintiffs' virile share of money expended as a result of a voluntary compromise between themselves and the injured party, Frederick Elliot, without the knowledge, consent, or concurrence of the other joint tortfeasors, that is, Rudy Kospelich and the Cooperative Cab Company, Inc.

It is axiomatic under Louisiana law that joint tortfeasors are solidarily liable.[1] Prior to the 1960 amendment to Civil Code Article 2103, it was well settled that contribution between joint tortfeasors could only be obtained when one of the tortfeasors was compelled to pay damages which had been awarded by a judgment rendered against both solidarily.[2] It was equally well settled that one joint tortfeasor who had been condemned by judgment and who had paid the amount thereof had no right to enforce contribution from another joint tortfeasor against whom a judgment had not been rendered.[3] In short, contribution could only be obtained by one solidarily liable with another upon his voluntary payment of the debt in the case of obligations incurred ex contractu.[4] Moreover, between the enactment of the Third Party Practice Act[5] and the 1960 amendment to Civil Code Article 2103, the court reasoned in the case of Kahn v. Urania Lumber Company[6] that the Third Party Practice Act did not change the established jurisprudence and that despite this Act, the right of contribution between joint tortfeasors existed only on behalf of the joint tortfeasors who were compelled to pay damages as the result of a judgment rendered against both in solido. The rationale thereof was to the effect that there existed no substantive right of contribution between joint tortfeasors, irrespective of the fact that the legislature had created a procedural vehicle therefor.[7]

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Bluebook (online)
206 So. 2d 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-kospelich-lactapp-1968.