Ouachita Parish Police Jury v. Northern Ins. Co. of New York

176 So. 639, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 355
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 1, 1937
DocketNo. 5360.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 176 So. 639 (Ouachita Parish Police Jury v. Northern Ins. Co. of New York) 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
Ouachita Parish Police Jury v. Northern Ins. Co. of New York, 176 So. 639, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 355 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

This is one of five suits filed by the Oua-chita Parish Police Jury for the purpose of reforming policies of insurance to conform to the true intent of the parties and, after such reformation, for judgment for certain amounts, together with 12 per cent, statutory penalties and 25 per cent, attorney’s fees.

The lower court in a written opinion rendered judgment for plaintiff, ordering the policy reformed and for judgment in the amount sued for, but rejected the demands for penalties and attorney’s fees. The opinion of the lower court, in which we find the facts to be correctly found, is as follows :

“This is a suit to reform a fire insurance policy, and to recover thereunder.
“The Police Jury of Ouachita Parish, desiring to distribute their insurance on Parish property equally among the various agents writing insurance in the' Parish, took the matter up with the local insurance exchange. This is an insurance exchange whose associates are composed of the various agents selling insurance in Ouachita Parish.
“The insurance exchange appointed a committee, and the Police Jury of Ouachita Parish appointed a committee, and these two committees worked out a fire insurance policy that would be satisfactory to the Police Jury.
*640 “The form approved is known as ‘Combined Fire and Tornado Blanket Form (with co-insurance clause and fire coverage)’, and said form was approved by the Louisiana Rating and Fire Prevention Bureau, September, 1924, and bore the designation ‘Form T-13’. It did not contain a distribution clause.
“The Police Jury entered into contracts of insurance for a three-year period with the various agents, the policies being written on the said Form T-13. When these policies expired, — that is when they were about to expire — the Police Jury took up with the local insurance exchange the question of new policies, and as the policies then in force were satisfactory, the Police Jury, through ifs committee, notified the committee of the local insurance exchange that the policies were satisfactory as to form, etc., and for the various agents to simply renew their policy. The only change made being the placing of some of the insurance with a new agent, who had started selling insurance since the original policies had been taken out, and he, of course, came in for his pro-rata share of the business.
“The committee of the local insurance exchange in turn notified the various agents in Monroe (all of the agents being members of the exchange), that the Parish of Oua-chita wished its insurance policies renewed on the same forms which had been used and which were then in force, this form being known at the time of the issuance of the policies in 1928 as T-13.
“In 1928, Bureau Form T-13 did not contain a distribution clause, but subsequent to that time, the Bureau, in printing Form T-13, included the distribution clause.
“When the various agents received their instructions from the committee of the local insurance exchange, of which they were members, some of them secured Form T-13 from the - stenographer in the office of the Mead of the local exchange. This T-13 Form which they secured was the new T-13 Form and contained a distribution clause, and therefore was not the form which had been used in writing the original policy which the Police Jury requested to have renewed.
“It was the intention of the Police Jury and all of the local agents, and it was the understanding of everyone concerned, until after the loss was suffered by the Parish, that all of the policies were uniform.
“After the loss, it was discovered that some of the policies contained the distribution clause, on account of the error referred to, in using the new Form T-13, while other policies, which were really renewals of the old policy, did not contain this clause.
“In view of this situation, certain companies were forced to bear more than their pro-rata share of the loss which occurred, and they tendered to the Parish of Ouachita in the form of a so-called loan, the amount which they would owe under the policy as written, but secured a promise from the Police Jury to seek legal action to revise the contract, and if recovery were made thereon, to return to the said company the excess amount which they had entrusted to the Police Jury.
“The Police Jury filed this suit seeking to have the contract revised, recover penalties and attorney’s fees.
“Instruction from the Police Jury to the Insurance Companies (through the local insurance exchange) was to renew the policy on the same form on which they had been written in 1928, that .is, Form T-13, as it existed in 1928.
“The word ‘renewal’ in insurance, of course, has a definite legal meaning. ‘Renewal’ means that the original policy shall be repeated in substance and in fact; to express the legal meaning briefly, a ‘renewal’ would simply mean that the policy in force was to be extended as to the time it was to remain in force. In other words, that the new policy would be identical, except as to the date of its expiration.
“It was clearly understood, the court thinks, that the Police Jury did not intend to change the form of its insurance policy and, while the court is aware that the local insurance exchange represented simply the local agents and not the insurance companies, the court feels that the present situation, as presented in this case, would be the same as one in which the local agent had instructed a clerk in his office to write a policy on Form T-13 as it existed in 1928, and the clerk, through error, had written it on Form T-13, as amended. In other words, the use of the wrong form was a mistake of the agent in this case, based on inaccurate information which he secured from sources other than the Police Jury. It was clearly the intention of the Police Jury and was understood by the various agents that these insurance policies in force were to be renewed and the agent, in writ *641 ing the policies, intended to do that, but instead of making a personal investigation to ascertain the exact form used in the contract of insurance then in force, the agents asked a clerk in another insurance office for a copy of the form and were given the wrong form. Clearly, it was a mutual mistake. The Police Jury thought they were getting their insurance renewed; the agents thought they were writing the policies in the same form as the old policies.
“In view of these facts, the court holds that this court, being a court of equity, as well as a court of law, has the right to revise the contract, and it is the judgment of the court that the contract be revised so as to be a renewal in fact of the contract entered into in 1928, that is, without the distribution clause.

“In this case, the court finds, after careful examination of the evidence, that there was no demand made prior to suit by the plaintiff, that is, the Parish of Oua-chita or its lawful attorney, or anyone authorized by law to act therefor upon the defendant; and therefore, the court holds that the plaintiff is not entitled to the penalty.

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Bluebook (online)
176 So. 639, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ouachita-parish-police-jury-v-northern-ins-co-of-new-york-lactapp-1937.