Nyman v. Monteleone-Iberville Garage

25 So. 2d 634, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 395
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 15, 1946
DocketNo. 18418.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 So. 2d 634 (Nyman v. Monteleone-Iberville Garage) 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
Nyman v. Monteleone-Iberville Garage, 25 So. 2d 634, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 395 (La. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment dismissing, on exception of no cause of action, her suit against the United States Fidelity Guaranty Company, the liability insurance carrier of W.K. Weaver, the owner of an automobile by which plaintiff's husband was severely injured (he later died) as the said car was being driven to Monteleone-Iberville Garage by an employee of the corporation which operated the said garage.

[1] The essential allegations of plaintiff's petition which, on consideration of the exception, must be treated as true, are as follows: W.K. Weaver, who did not reside in New Orleans, arrived at the Monteleone-Hotel at about 1 o'clock on the early morning of Saturday, July 29, 1944, and *Page 635 caused the Monteleone-Iberville Garage, Inc., to be notified that he desired to park his car in its garage and the garage company sent one of its employees, Warren Lewis, to the hotel to get the car. As the said Lewis was driving the car to the garage by a circuitous route, through his negligence in operating it at a dangerously high speed, it skidded into and severely injured plaintiff's husband, Albert Nyman, who, as a result of his injuries, died on September 4, 1944.

The said Weaver, owner of the car, had obtained from United States Fidelity Guaranty Company a policy of liability insurance under which that company had designated him as the "insured" and had agreed to indemnify and hold him harmless against any claim for loss or damage resulting from the negligent operation of the car. In the policy there was inserted what is known as an "omnibus clause" which provided that the word "insured" should include "any person while using the automobile and any person or organization legally responsible for the use thereof provided the actual use of the automobile is with the permission of the named insured." In other words, the insurer agreed that, subject to certain exceptions to which we shall later refer, it would indemnify and hold harmless against any claim for loss or damage any person or organization who or which, with the permission of Weaver, might operate the said car.

Act No. 55 of 1930, among other things, provides that when any insurance company shall issue a policy of liability insurance, any person injured or his or her heirs in the event of death, shall have a direct cause of action against the person responsible and/or against the said insurance company.

Acting under the right provided by the said Act of 1930, plaintiff brought this suit against Warren Lewis, the operator of the car, Weaver, the owner, United States Fidelity Guaranty Company, Weaver's liability insurance carrier, and the Monteleone-Iberville Garage, Inc.

[2] As we have already said, United States Fidelity Guaranty Company filed this exception of no cause of action which, in the District Court, was sustained. Exceptor concedes that were it not for the exceptions to the coverage afforded by the omnibus clause the exception could not properly be sustained; that the fact that Lewis had diverted from his proper route would not deprive Lewis or his employers of the protection afforded by the omnibus clause and that, consequently, because of the effect of the said Act of 1930 this suit could be maintained against it, the liability insurance carrier of Weaver. These concessions result from an appreciation by counsel for exceptor of the effect of the decisions of the Supreme Court in Parks v. Hall, 189 La. 849, 18 So. 191, and of this court in Haeuser v. Aetna Casualty Surety Co., La. App., 187 So. 684, as a result of which decisions it is now established in this state that where there is such an omnibus clause, initial permission to use the car is all that is necessary and that once that initial permission is obtained, the protection of the omnibus clause attaches and is not affected by the fact that the user of the car at the time of the accident may have diverted entirely from his proper route or may have been using the car for a purpose entirely different from that which was contemplated when the permission for use of the car was initially given.

For an interesting and thorough discussion of the effect of the omnibus clause see 15 Tulane Law Review 422.

Conceding then that the mere diversion by Lewis from his proper route would not have rendered the omnibus clause inoperative, exceptor points to and relies upon the exception to the omnibus clause found in paragraph "(c)" of the exceptions and asserts that the protection afforded by that clause does not attach here because of that exception which reads as follows:

"* * * The insurance with respect to any person or organization other than the named insured does not apply:

* * * * * *

"(c) to any person or organization, or to any agent or employee thereof, operating an automobile repair shop, public garage, sales agency, service station or public parking place, with respect to any accident arising out of the operation thereof."

Counsel for plaintiff argues that that exception has no effect whatever unless the person injured or killed is an employee of a public garage, service station or public parking place, and that it has no effect even though the car may be operated by an employee of such an establishment if the person injured or killed is a third person — a member of the general public — an innocent bystander.

[3] We have diligently searched for something in the wording of that paragraph of the exception which might lead us *Page 636 to believe that this argument is sound but have been entirely unable to read that language except as having one and only one meaning. We read it as meaning that if the permission to use or to operate the car is given to a garage, a service station or public parking place or to any other of the listed establishments or to any agent or employee thereof, then the omnibus clause "does not apply * * * to any accident arising out of the operation thereof." We cannot torture that language into having any other meaning.

We say that we have diligently attempted to see in these words some other meaning because we have hesitated to disagree with our brothers of the Second Circuit who, in Donovan v. Standard Oil Co. of La., La. App., 197 So. 320, reached a different conclusion.

[4] If the facts of that case had been identical with those before us we would find ourselves bound to accept the conclusion which our brothers arrived at because in that case application for a writ of certiorari was made to the Supreme Court and this application was refused. Thus the Supreme Court stamped with its approval the legal conclusion reached by the Court of Appeal for the Second Circuit.

[5] But the facts of that case were slightly different and though we have found it difficult to persuade ourselves that between that case and this there is anything more than a distinction without a difference, still we see a slight distinction and point to it to justify our right to refuse to follow a result which may be said to have the approval of the Supreme Court.

In the Donovan case the artomobile which was involved was owned by the Standard Oil Company of La. Near the place at which that automobile was kept was a service station owned and operated by H.H. Jones. Donovan and his wife came into the service station of Jones and reported that their car, a few miles out on the road near Homer, La., had a flat tire and they asked at Jones' service station that the new tire which they had purchased there be taken to their car and put on it to replace the other one. At the Jones Service Station there was no service car at that time, so Taylor, an employee who was in charge of the station, asked the Standard Oil Co.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 So. 2d 634, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nyman-v-monteleone-iberville-garage-lactapp-1946.