Slocum-Stevens Ins. Agency, Inc. v. International Risk Consultants, Inc.

666 So. 2d 352, 1995 La. App. LEXIS 3265, 1995 WL 728220
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 11, 1995
Docket27,353-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 666 So. 2d 352 (Slocum-Stevens Ins. Agency, Inc. v. International Risk Consultants, Inc.) 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
Slocum-Stevens Ins. Agency, Inc. v. International Risk Consultants, Inc., 666 So. 2d 352, 1995 La. App. LEXIS 3265, 1995 WL 728220 (La. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

666 So.2d 352 (1995)

SLOCUM-STEVENS INSURANCE AGENCY, INC., Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
INTERNATIONAL RISK CONSULTANTS, INC., et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 27,353-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

December 11, 1995.
Writ Denied March 8, 1996.

*354 Davis & Saybe by Michael H. Davis, Alexandria, for Appellant.

Robert U. Goodman, Shreveport, for Appellees, Sinclair Kouns and D. Frank Green, Jr.

Before MARVIN, NORRIS, HIGHTOWER and STEWART, JJ., and PRICE, J. Pro Tem.

MARVIN, Chief Judge.

In this action on an open account a five-judge reargument panel was convened to consider this appeal as required when one member of the original three-judge panel dissented to the reversal of the trial court's partial summary judgment in favor of the defendant debtors.[1] Defendants are an incorporated insurance agency and its personal guarantors, hereafter simply referred to as IRC, who were alleged to be indebted to an insurance company.

The right to sue on the IRC account was assigned and sold for $25,000 in 1989 to the original plaintiff, Slocum-Stevens, by Agricultural Insurance Company, one of the Great American insurance companies, simply referred to hereafter as AIC. After Slocum-Stevens instituted its right of action by suing on the open account on March 22, 1990, Slocum-Stevens executed a second contract "assigning back" the right of action to AIC in an "agreement" dated July 11, 1990. Substituting AIC as the plaintiff in the action on March 4, 1991, Slocum-Stevens and AIC attached both the 1989 contract and the 1990 agreement to the supplemental petition. The *355 attachments to the 1990 and 1991 petitions are appended to this opinion to facilitate discussion.

In the 1990 agreement, AIC paid Slocum-Stevens $25,000. According to its answers to a second set of interrogatories posed after the two contracts were disclosed in 1991, AIC denied that anything was paid for the "assignment back" of the IRC account, but explained that the $25,000 consideration paid to Slocum-Stevens for the assignment back was for

terminating the right of Slocum-Stevens to continue to write paramedical facilities policies and [for] taking over the collection of the IRC account. (Our emphasis and brackets.)

Relying on the 1989 and 1990 contracts and AIC's pleadings and answers to interrogatories, the defendant-debtors moved for a partial summary judgment declaring the assignment back of the instituted action from Slocum-Stevens to AIC was the sale or transfer of a litigious right, which has the effect of allowing the debtors to extinguish the obligation sued upon by paying AIC the same price that AIC paid for the transfer of the litigious right. See former CC Arts. 2652-2654, the substance of which was reenacted as a single article, Art. 2652, by Acts 1993, No. 841, effective January 1, 1995. The trial court agreed, saying the 1990 assignment back

certainly consists of a price that can be reasonably ascertained, despite [AIC's] argument to the contrary.... [The amount paid by AIC] should be divided, if necessary, to calculate the amount [AIC] paid for the debt.... The court will determine the price consistent with this opinion and the record at a later date if the parties do not apportion the price of the sale.

AIC argues on its appeal of the trial court judgment, as it did below, that the 1990 agreement between it and Slocum-Stevens is ambiguous, and creates a material factual dispute regarding the intent of the parties to the two contracts. AIC further claims the trial court impliedly ruled on the credibility of AIC, a consideration which is improper as a basis for summary judgment.

On our de novo review, we find that the AIC contracts, pleadings and answers to interrogatories support the summary judgment and affirm the judgment.

FACTS

When the action was instituted on March 22, 1990, the plaintiff insurance agency, Slocum-Stevens, alleged that it had been assigned the IRC account by the insurance company and that it had sent a demand letter to the IRC debtor-defendants on January 16, 1990, a copy of which is attached to the Slocum-Stevens petition as exhibit four. The demand letter attached to the original petition unequivocally states that Slocum-Stevens paid the Great American Insurance Companies "$25,000 ... for the subject account." The substituted plaintiff, AIC, is one of the Great American companies.

Thereafter and in response to exceptions, interrogatories and defenses, affirmative and general, that were promptly raised by the defendants about the validity of the assignment from Great American and AIC to Slocum-Stevens and the accuracy of the account allegedly due, Slocum-Stevens and AIC filed the "amending and supplemental petition" on March 4, 1991, wherein AIC became the substituted plaintiff.

AIC's allegation in Art. 2 of the 1991 supplemental petition, amending Art. 8 of the original petition, clearly reads:

The account due [Great American and/or AIC] by [IRC] was assigned by Great American ... to Slocum-Stevens ..., original plaintiff herein, as per [1989] Act of Assignment attached hereto as plaintiff's Exhibit 2. The said account was assigned to Slocum-Stevens ... directly by [AIC] as part and parcel of a contract between the two said entities, a copy of said contract attached hereto as plaintiff's Exhibit 2-A. Subsequently, the said account was assigned back to [AIC] by Slocum-Stevens... as part and parcel of a [1990] contract between the two said entities dated July 11, 12, 1990, a copy of said contract attached hereto as Plaintiff's Exhibit 2-B. (Our emphasis and brackets.)

AIC's exhibit two, dated October 20, 1989, also clearly states, "that Great American *356 Insurance Companies has assigned [the] right to collect the debt owed to us by [IRC] to Slocum-Stevens."

After AIC attached the 1989 and 1990 contracts to its March 4, 1991, supplemental and amending petition, the debtor-defendants repeatedly sought to have plaintiff disclose what amount of the $25,000 paid to Slocum-Stevens by AIC in 1990 was attributable to anything other than the return of the $25,000 paid to AIC by Slocum-Stevens in 1989 for the right to sue on the IRC debt. The trial court's judgment grants the motions of the debtors which were combined and styled "motion for partial summary judgment and motion to compel answers to interrogatories." Our emphasis.

AIC's answers to interrogatories had denied that any amount was paid, explaining that the assignment of the IRC account back to AIC was

part and parcel of the consideration given... for the right to market certain types of insurance policies ... Therefore, in order to market the said type policies, Slocum-Stevens paid $25,000 to AIC and, also, agreed to collect the IRC account [in 1989]. Consequently, when the parties agreed [in 1990] that Slocum-Stevens would no longer write those certain policies..., the $25,000 was returned to Slocum-Stevens and, at the same time [in 1990], Slocum-Stevens was relieved of the obligation to collect the IRC account and... said obligation was assumed by AIC once again. (Our emphasis and brackets.)

AIC further explained in its interrogatory answers in the trial court that the consideration ($25,000) paid by AIC to Slocum-Stevens in 1990, after Slocum-Stevens filed the action against IRC, was for

terminating the right of Slocum-Stevens to continue to write paramedical facilities policies and [for] taking over the collection of the IRC account. (Our emphasis and brackets.)

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666 So. 2d 352, 1995 La. App. LEXIS 3265, 1995 WL 728220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slocum-stevens-ins-agency-inc-v-international-risk-consultants-inc-lactapp-1995.