Newman v. Fidelity Mutual Insurance Co.

86 So. 2d 404, 1956 La. App. LEXIS 668
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 20, 1956
DocketNo. 4139
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 86 So. 2d 404 (Newman v. Fidelity Mutual 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
Newman v. Fidelity Mutual Insurance Co., 86 So. 2d 404, 1956 La. App. LEXIS 668 (La. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

LOTTINGER, Judge.

This is a tort action instituted by Clifton Newman against the Fidelity Mutual Insurance Company, for damages resulting from an accident which occurred : in the City of Lake Charles on December 29, 1953.

The petition alleges that on the day :of the accident the petitioner, while a guest in a 1952 Pontiac automobile owned by one Dalton J. Breaux, suffered a -fractured arm and other injuries when the car door on the right front side suddenly opened and he was'thrown from the vehicle. Negligence is charged against the car owner, Breaux, in failing to warn petitioner of the defective condition of the door when he had full knowledge of same, in driving at a high rafe of speed in reverse gear, in suddenly and violently applying his brakes and in failing to check the right front door when he knew of its defective condition and that plaintiff would be seated' near same. It is set forth that Breaux had in effect at the time of the accident a policy of-insurance whereby, defendant insurance company agreed to pay all damages up to the amount of $5,000 caused by tire, negligence of Breaux or anyone . using the vehicle with his permission .pjus medical payments up to $500 per person injured in the vehicle. The prayer is for damages for loss of earnings, medical expenses, disability and pain and suffering in. tiie .total amount of $5,500.

Following the filing of an exception of vagueness the plaintiff amended his petition alleging that he was informed by defendant’s insured after the accident that the right front door of the vehicle' was defective and would open; after having been properly closed, without the application of any pressure to the door handlés and that while he believed the door to be defective he did not have the technical knowledge so as to be' able to - name the specific mechanical defects which existed. ’ In addition he re-itemized and particularized his damages and alleged that as the failure of defendant to pay medical expenses was arbitrary and capricious he was, under LSA-R.S. 22:65S, entitled to attorney fees and penalties as therein provided.

The defendant’s answer is in the form of' a general denial and, in addition, the following alternative defenses are urged:

..(1). That the policy of-liability insurance sued upon had been rendered null and-void, by the insured, Dalton Breaux, in-that he violated, that certain clause in the policy. [406]*406requiring that he co-operate with' the defendant at all times with respect to accidents and claims arising out of the policy.

(2) That the door in question was in excellent condition and was inadvertently opened by plaintiff himself who was leaning against same.

(3) That if in fact a defect did exist in the door, it was hidden to Breaux and unknown to him.

(4) That the plaintiff was contributorily negligent in not closing the.door properly and in leaning against same.

During trial in the court below defendant’s counsel admitted medical expense liability in the amount of $500 and judgment was rendered against it in said amount together with the sum of $150 for attorney fees, or a total of $650 and costs. Plaintiff’s claim for damages for personal injuries, loss of earnings, disability and pain and suffering was disallowed. The matter is now before us on a devolutive appeal taken by the plaintiff. The defendant has answered the appeal seeking that the judgment be reversed insofar as it awards attorney .fees, on the ground that same were not prayed for in either the original or supplemental petition.

The record discloses that there were three witnesses who saw the accident — the plaintiff, Dalton J. Breaux, the former’s brother-in-law, and Mrs. Dalton J. Breaux, plaintiff’s sister. An analysis of the testimony of those who took the stand discloses the following version of how the accident occurred:

According to Newman, just before the accident he was seated on the right hand side of the front seat of Breaux’s 1952 Pontiac some four to six inches from the door. Neither his arm nor any part of his body was touching the door. He had previously ridden in the car and the door had never opened. On cross examination he testified that he had never told anyone he had leaned on the door. He testified at one point that he did not remember discussing the matter with an adjuster, but then stated that he did recall going to the office of the W. L. Gaynor Claims Adjuster Service and telling an adjuster there all about the accident. He further stated that he did not remember telling the adjuster he had been leaning against the door and denied that such was a fact. Dalton J. Breaux and he discussed the matter shortly after the accident and Breaux told him that the door had opened with his wife before. Breaux did not, however, tell him how many times this had happened.

Mrs. Breaux stated that she was standing in her front door at the time of the accident and saw its occurrence. While she did not know what caused the door to open, it had opened when she was in the car on previous occasions. This witness declared that the door had opened on her twice, at intervals of about one month apart, the last time having been three or four months before the plaintiff’s accident. The door was finally fixed by her husband some time after the accident.

Dalton J. Breaux, the remaining person who was present when the accident happened, was not called to the stand by counsel for plaintiff. Counsel for defendant, who had had this witness summoned, sought permission to call him under cross examination as a hostile witness. His request was disallowed with the result that he never testified during the trial of the case.

The trial judge stated orally that while he thought the plaintiff entitled to the sum of $500 for medical payments that he would not allow damages for loss of earnings, disability or pain and suffering as the plaintiff’s testimony had been impeached on many scores and on account of the presumption arising against him for the failure of the only other eyewitness to the accident, his brother-in-law, to take the stand. The trial judge further stated that he felt plaintiff had failed to make out his case with that degree of certainty required by law and further that he was guilty of negli-fence' himself such as to bar recovery.

The record fully substantiates the trial judge’s observation to the effect that the plaintiff was impeached on several counts. Briefly, they are as follows:

[407]*407(1) As stated previously, during the trial of the case the plaintiff denied that he was leaning on the right front door of the car or touching it in any manner when it flew open. However, in a statement taken by an insurance adjuster named Hon Ellis, the plaintiff stated:

“ * * * I had got in the car and closed the door myself. As far as I could tell, the door was closed good. I had been leaning against it when it flew open. * * * ”

While it is true that this statement was not signed by Newman, the adjuster testified that the plaintiff had read it over and said it was true but that he did not want to sign it because “someone told him not to sign anything.”

(2) Sometime after the accident Newman worked one day for the Coastal Water Well Company of Welsh, Louisiana. He denied that in seeking this employment he used the assumed name of “Jack Kelly.” However, James Osterlin and Ralph V.

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Bluebook (online)
86 So. 2d 404, 1956 La. App. LEXIS 668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newman-v-fidelity-mutual-insurance-co-lactapp-1956.