Ray v. Liberty Industrial Life Ins. Co.

180 So. 855, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 197
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 2, 1938
DocketNo. 16893.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 180 So. 855 (Ray v. Liberty Industrial Life Ins. 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
Ray v. Liberty Industrial Life Ins. Co., 180 So. 855, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 197 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

On November 15, 1937, Octavia Ray filed this suit as duly designated beneficiary in a policy of life insurance issued by Liberty Industrial Life Insurance Company on the life of Albert Robertson. She alleged the death of Robertson and the refusal of the insurer to make payment under the policy. She averred that she had f * * delivered to defendant insurance company the policy” and “the proofs of death, * * * all of which were satisfactory and accepted by defendant company, and all of which were furnished on forms supplied by defendant company.” She prayed for judgment in the sum of $255, the face amount of the policy.

Defendant filed a plea of prescription based on* a policy stipulation reading as follows: “No suit shall be maintainable to enforce the performance of this contract until ten days after filing, in the Principal Office of the Company, of the above named proof or (of) prior death, or unless such suit shall be commenced within one year next after such maturity or the death of the person insured under this Policy.”

In connection with the plea of prescription defendant insurer averred that the in-súred, as set forth in the petition, had died on September 17, 1936, and that proof of death had been filed on September 21, 1936, and contended that the one year granted by the policy' — within which suit might be brought — had commenced on October 1, *856 1936, ten days after the filing of the proof of death, and had expired on October 1, 1937.

The plea of prescription was overruled and, after a trial on the merits, there was judgment for plaintiff as prayed for. Defendant has appealed and in this court its counsel have addressed themselves solely to the plea of prescription.

Counsel for plaintiff, conceding, of course, that when the suit was filed there had already elapsed more than one year and ten days from the day on which the proof of loss was filed, maintain that, nevertheless, for several reasons, prescription had not accrued.

First, they declare that the qttoted condition is vague and fixes no definite time at which the year commences to run, and they further contend that,-if the time fixed can be considered as definite, that time, at the earliest, is ten days after “satisfactory” proof of loss is furnished, and that it has never commenced to run since there has never been furnished proof of death sufficiently “satisfactory” to the insurer to induce it to make payment.

Second, they maintain that during the said year negotiations looking to a settlement of the controversy were conducted and they assert that, as a matter of law, a prescriptive period is halted during negotiations and recommences only after such negotiations have been definitely terminated.

Third, they point to an earlier suit on the same policy in which this court, on appeal, held that the then plaintiff, which had sued as assignee of the present plaintiff, had not secured proper assignment, and they argue that that earlier suit interrupted prescription.

We shall consider these contentions in reverse order.

Plaintiff, relying upon the earlier suit as interrupting prescription, calls attention to many cases in the reports of this state in which our courts have interpreted the provisions of the various articles of the Civil Code touching upon prescriptive periods and upon the various circumstances which tend to interrupt the running of prescription. Plaintiff also cites many cases here and elsewhere, in each of which it was held that an earlier unsuccessful suit had interrupted the limitation period. In some the citations in the earlier suits had been defective; in others the courts in which the earlier suits had been filed had been without jurisdiction; and in others the earlier suits had been dismissed for technical reasons, but in each it was held that the earlier suit was sufficient to interrupt prescription.

Without further reference to those and other cases, we deem it sufficient to say that, even prior to the enactment of Act No. 39 of 1932, to which we shall later refer, it had been well settled that the running of prescription was interrupted by an earlier suit which fairly apprised the ob-ligor of the existence of the claim, and that technical defects as to parties plaintiff or in citation did not alter the situation, and, as we have said, this rule was well established as the result of the provisions of the Civil Code — notably article 3484 — even before the enactment of the statute to which we have referred. '

In 9 Tulane Law Review, page 286, in an article entitled “Prescription — Interruption,” appears the following: “ * * Numerous cases have held that although there is some mistake as to the parties plaintiff, nevertheless the suit will interrupt prescription. Blanc v. Dupre, 36 La.Ann. 847, supra (suit by curator of succession whose appointment was null) ; Flower v. O’Connor, 1841, 17 La. 213 (suit by surviving partner of a firm who was non-suited because of lack of authority to represent the others) ; Becnel v. Waguespack, 1888, 40 La.Ann. 109, 3 So. 536 (suit by-one co-owner «for damage by trespass); Wolf & Sons v. New Orleans Tailor-Made Pants Co., 1903, 110 La. 427, 34 So. 590 (suit by individuals in their own names-for tort to commercial partnership). This, is in line with the French jurisprudence, in. that the plaintiff need not have the capacity to sue in order to interrupt prescription. Huc, Commentaire du Code Civil XIV (1902) No. 386, p. 488; Baudry-Lacantinerie et Tissier, op. cit. supra No. 484, p. 369.”

Here the earlier suit, which was filed on. November 6, 1936, was an attempt to collect on the identical policy which is the-foundation of the present suit. The defendant was the same and the plaintiff in. that suit — Strudwick Funeral Home, Inc.— claimed to be the assignee of the beneficiary, Octavia Ray, who is the plaintiff in. the present suit. That -suit w,as dismissed, by us on November 2, 1937, so that it was. actually pending for almost one year and. would amply serve to extend the prescriptive period if plaintiff’s contention, that the; *857 •earlier suit interrupted 'prescription is sound as a matter of law.

Therefore, were we dealing here with the interruption of a period of prescription fixed by statute, the circumstances shown in connection with the earlier suit would have amply justified the application of the doctrine that an earlier suit, in general, interrupts the limitation period. But, in the case at bar, the period of limitation was fixed not by statute, but by contract, and in none of the cases cited was there involved the interruption, by an earlier defective suit; of a limitation period fixed by contract. In each the prescriptive period which was held to have been interrupted was one which had been established by statute, and counsel for defendant insist that, where there is involved a contractual, or conventional prescription, the rule as to interruption is vastly different and that, in such case, even an earlier suit by the same plaintiff against the same defendant on the same cause of action, if dismissed for technical reasons, will not serve to defeat the right of defendant to raise the bar of prescription as soon as the time granted by the contract has expired. And that this has often been held is evident. Vincent v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association, 74 Conn. 684, 5 A. 1066; Williams v.

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Bluebook (online)
180 So. 855, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ray-v-liberty-industrial-life-ins-co-lactapp-1938.