Richard v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.

175 So. 2d 277, 247 La. 943
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 3, 1965
Docket47547
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 175 So. 2d 277 (Richard v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richard v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 175 So. 2d 277, 247 La. 943 (La. 1965).

Opinion

175 So.2d 277 (1965)
247 La. 943

Sam RICHARD
v.
UNITED STATES FIDELITY & GUARANTY COMPANY and Landreneau Enterprises, et al.

No. 47547.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

May 3, 1965.
Rehearing Denied June 7, 1965.

*278 Preston N. Aucoin, Ville Platte, Daniel J. McGee, Mamou, for plaintiff-appellee-applicant.

Gist, Gist, Methvin & Trimble, by DeWitt T. Methvin, Jr., Alexandria, Donald Soileau, Mamou, for defendants-appellants-respondents.

HAMLIN, Justice:

In the exercise of our supervisory jurisdiction (Art. VII, Sec. 11, La.Const. of 1921, LSA), we directed certiorari to the Court of Appeal, Third Circuit, in order that we might review its judgments in the cases of Richard v. Landreneau Enterprises, Et Al., and Richard v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, which reversed the judgments of the trial court rendered in favor of plaintiff. La.App., 167 So.2d 827; La.App., 167 So.2d 840; 247 La. 254, 170 So.2d 510. The cases were consolidated for trial and appeal, but separate judgments were rendered. Certiorari having been granted at the instance of plaintiff-relator, the matter has been consolidated in this Court and one judgment will be rendered herein.

This matter involves workmen's compensation. Sam Richard filed suit against United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, in which he alleged that while in the course and scope of his employment with Landreneau Enterprises, Adraste Landreneau Gins, Inc., and/or the Estate of Adraste Landreneau, on November 19, 1962, he suffered a myocardial infarction (heart attack) with superimposed pneumonitis, as well as a stroke, from which he became permanently and totally disabled. Plaintiff further alleged that he was informed and believed that the defendant had insured his employers and that the insurance covered the alleged liability. By supplemental and amending petition, plaintiff alleged that the policy sued upon erroneously and through inadvertence named only Adraste Landreneau Gins, Inc. as insured, whereas, it was the true intention of the parties that the policy should cover the employees of Landreneau Enterprises, Adraste Landreneau Gins, Inc., and the Estate of Adraste Landreneau; he prayed for reformation of the policy.

The defendant insurer denied liability and filed a Third Party Complaint against Adraste Landreneau Gins, Inc. It alleged that the policy of workmen's compensation insurance it had issued to Adraste Landreneau *279 Gins, Inc. did not cover the work being performed by plaintiff at the time he suffered his heart attack.

Landreneau Enterprises, Semantha Vidrine, Widow of Adraste Landreneau, Joseph Gibbons Landreneau, Louis Calvin Landreneau, Charles Edward Landreneau, Annabelle Landreneau, and Adraste Landreneau Gins, Inc. denied the allegations of the Third Party Complaint.

After filing the above suit, Sam Richard filed a workmen's compensation suit against Landreneau Enterprises, Adraste Landreneau Gins, Inc., and the Succession of Adraste Landreneau. He alleged the accident, supra, and made a demand against the defendants for total disability, penalties and attorney's fees, and medical expenses, said demands being the same as those prayed for in his suit against the insurer.

These defendants denied liability and filed a Third Party Complaint against United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company. They alleged that they were insured by United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company on and prior to the date of plaintiff's alleged accident, against liability to their employees, including Sam Richard, under the provisions of the Louisiana Workmen's Compensation Laws, and that this insurance was in full force and effect when Richard was injured. The third party defendant prayed for rejection of the third party plaintiffs' demands.

For a complete understanding of this matter, we repeat the following facts correctly found by the Court of Appeal:

"* * * we start with the business activities of Mr. Adraste Landreneau before his death in 1960. He was engaged in several businesses in and around the town of Mamou, Louisiana. He owned two cotton gins, as an incident to which he sold cottonseed, fertilizer and insecticides and also financed farmers; he owned a farm with about fifteen tenant houses for individuals who farmed the land on a sharecrop basis; he raised cattle; he operated a rice irrigation well; he owned an insurance agency; he also owned four or five rent houses in the town of Mamou.
"Mr. Adraste Landreneau died on July 13, 1960 leaving a widow and four children. His succession was opened on July 18, 1960 and his two sons, Mr. Louis Calvin Landreneau and Mr. Joseph Gibbons Landreneau, were appointed co-administrators. These administrators managed the various interests of the estate until the heirs were placed in possession by judgment dated March 24, 1961. Then the heirs decided they would separate the cotton gin from the remaining business interests. Accordingly, as of January 1, 1962, a corporation was formed under the name `Adraste Landreneau Gins, Inc.' The two gins, as well as the cottonseed, fertilizer, insecticide and farm financing businesses, were transferred to this corporation which was wholly owned by the heirs. On or about the same date the widow and heirs also formed a partnership known as `Landreneau Enterprises' for the operation of the remaining interests of the estate, including the farm properties and the rental properties in town. Separate sets of books and separate bank accounts were created for the corporation and the partnership.
"Shortly after Mr. Adraste Landreneau's death, the co-administrators had employed the plaintiff, Mr. Sam Richard. He was hired primarily to operate one of the gins during the ginning season. When his services were not needed for this purpose he worked for the estate (later the partnership) or for one of the heirs individually. Usually plaintiff worked full time at the gin from August through October and then, during November and December when the season was `winding up,' he worked only one or two days a week *280 at the gin. When plaintiff worked at the gin he was paid by the gin corporation. When not working at the gin, he was paid respectively by the individual heir or the partnership for whom the work was done. Most of plaintiff's off-season work was at a feed and seed store owned and operated by Mr. Calvin Landreneau individually. He also occasionally did work as a general handyman for the partnership. He maintained the irrigation well and had done repair and maintenance work on the rent houses in town and on the farm."

The Landreneau Estate owned a mortgage on a dilapidated house and a lot located in the town of Mamou, which property was turned over to the Estate by the mortgagor. The Estate also owned another dilapidated house which had belonged to the Landreneau grandmother. The Estate employed Marcel Guillory as foreman to oversee the tearing down of these two houses and, from the same lumber, the reconstruction of one house on one of the loss; Guillory was paid by the Landreneau Enterprises. The reconstruction was the first in which the Landreneaus had engaged. They owned four other houses in Mamou; two were rented for cash, one was occupied by a Landreneau, and the other was occupied by a farm manager. Plaintiff Sam Richard worked at the gin on November 17, 1962. On November 19, 1962, he worked as a carpenter's helper on the reconstruction project and suffered his heart attack while performing carpentry work; he thereafter instituted the two proceedings supra.

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175 So. 2d 277, 247 La. 943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richard-v-united-states-fidelity-guaranty-co-la-1965.