Southern Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company v. Barbara McRee McKenzie

252 F.2d 195
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 4, 1958
Docket16797_1
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 252 F.2d 195 (Southern Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company v. Barbara McRee McKenzie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company v. Barbara McRee McKenzie, 252 F.2d 195 (5th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

BORAH, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered on a jury verdict in favor of plaintiff, Barbara McRee McKenzie, individually and as tutrix of her two minor children, in an action brought against Southern Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company, under the Louisiana Direct Action Statute, 1 to recover damages for the wrongful death of her husband Paul McKenzie who was electrocuted while working in the home of defendant’s insured, Wilbur Sibley. In addition, defendant also appeals from a judgment which was entered pursuant to an order of the District Court dismissing without prejudice its third-party complaint.

The facts which give rise to the present controversy are these: In January 1954, Wilbur Sibley contracted with Dewey Young, a competent electrical contractor, to change the lighting arrangement in the Sibley residence which was located near the City of Shreveport, in Caddo Parish, Louisiana. In the performance of this contract and while working in the attic over the carport where the head clearance between the ceiling joists and the rafters was only some three to four feet, Young or his workmen found it necessary to execute a splice in the electrical wiring by joining together two Romex cables and then taping the joint with insulating tape. After the cables were joined together in this fashion, the splice came to rest on the top of a ceiling joist and was there left exposed without being enclosed in a metal junction box. All of which was unknown to Sibley because he had no occasion to enter the attic or to observe the wiring conditions which existed there until after the accident in question.

Following the completion of this job by the electrical contractor and after a lapse of several months, Sibley engaged Radalee, Inc. to install a heating system and related metal duct work in his residence. Paul McKenzie, an experienced sheet metal worker employed by Radalee as a fourth year apprentice, together with his brother James, a helper, was assigned to do this work. And on August 9, 1954, after first inspecting the attic to determine where to lay the metal ducts, *197 they began the work of installing them. For the first two days Paul and his brother worked together in the cramped quarters of the attic and nothing unusual happened. On the afternoon of the third day, at about 4:00 p. m., James McKenzie, on Paul’s instructions, left the attic to get from their supply truck certain additional materials which were needed for the job, and upon returning with the required materials, he found Paul lying unconscious with his left shoulder against a galvanized iron vent pipe and another portion of his body resting on the sheet metal duct work. Upon touching his brother’s leg, James felt an electrical shock, whereupon and with the aid of his foot he pushed Paul’s shoulder away from the vent pipe, thus enabling him with the assistance of a third person to remove his injured brother from the attic. Shortly thereafter Paul died without regaining consciousness.

Following the fatal accident, the within complaint was filed against defendant, the general premises liability insurer of Wilbur Sibley, in which it was alleged that the decedent met his death from a charge of electricity which entered the duct work through an improperly and inadequately insulated and protected splice in an electrical wire located in the attic of the Sibley home. More specifically, it was alleged that Sibley was negligent in permitting the installation and continued existence of the inadequate and defective splice in the electric wiring system without giving warning to the decedent; in having and permitting to exist an electrical installation of a hazardous nature in said attic; and in failing to keep and maintain his premises in a safe condition “for persons whom he did invite and induce to be in and about the same.”

Thereafter and following referral to the merits of its motion to dismiss, the defendant filed responsive pleadings in which it denied that Sibley was guilty of the acts of negligence charged or of any negligence which resulted in McKenzie’s death, and affirmatively alleged that Sibley had no knowledge of the existence of the splice. In the alternative, it was alleged that the decedent was guilty of contributory negligence in that with knowledge of the “position and status” of the wiring which was clearly visible to him, he negligently placed, pulled, and attempted to install a metal duct across and on a portion of the wiring, negligently damaging the same.

The defendant, with leave of court, also filed a third-party complaint against Dewey Young seeking judgment over against Young, in the event the defendant should be held liable, on the ground that the electrical wiring was installed under Young’s sole supervision and control pursuant to a contract with defendant’s insured, and that if any danger or defect existed therein it was caused by the negligence of Young or his employees. Attached to the third-party complaint was an act of subrogation executed by Sibley in favor of the third-party plaintiff transferring all rights of Sibley against the third-party defendant in contract, indemnity or tort in connection with the death of Paul McKenzie.

Following the filing of this additional pleading, the third-party defendant moved to dismiss the third-party complaint on the ground, among others, that the defendant insurance company had made no payment to or on behalf of its insured and therefore no right of subro-gation existed. The District Court denied the motion to dismiss and after the filing of an answer by Young to the third-party complaint, the court on consideration of the third-party defendant’s motion for separate trial ordered that the case be tried first between the plaintiff and the defendant, with the understanding that should plaintiff prevail, the case between the third-party plaintiff and third-party defendant would then be tried by the same jury.

In accordance with this ruling, the case came on for trial before the court and jury, and at the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence and later at the close of all of the evidence, defendant moved successively and unsuccessfully for a directed verdict on the grounds: (1) that the evi- *198 denee showed no actionable negligence on the part of defendant’s insured; (2) that the record affirmatively showed that the decedent was guilty of contributory negligence; and (3) that Barbara McKee McKenzie, wife of the decedent, is not entitled to assert a direct action against defendant as insurer since she is not one of the persons named in LSA-R.S. 22:-655. Upon return of the jury’s verdict for plaintiff, individually and as tutrix of the minors, the trial court discharged the jury and dismissed the third-party complaint without prejudice on the ground that it was brought prematurely. Thereafter, and following the entry of judgment on the jury verdict, the trial court dismissed defendant’s motion to set aside judgment and for judgment in accordance with its motion for directed verdict, and this appeal followed.

Appellant is here relying on numerous assignments of error. Without cataloging them, we shall first consider the specification that the decedent’s widow was not among that class of persons entitled, under LSA-R.S. 22:655 as amended by Act 541 of 1950, to bring a direct action against appellant as insurer. The statute then provided, in pertinent part, that:

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252 F.2d 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-farm-bureau-casualty-insurance-company-v-barbara-mcree-mckenzie-ca5-1958.