Standard Motor Car Co. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.

97 So. 2d 435, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 768
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 4, 1957
Docket4456
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 97 So. 2d 435 (Standard Motor Car Co. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. 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
Standard Motor Car Co. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 97 So. 2d 435, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 768 (La. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

97 So.2d 435 (1957)

STANDARD MOTOR CAR COMPANY et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 4456.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

October 4, 1957.

N. Cleburn Dalton, Baton Rouge, for appellants.

Haynes, Mathews & Lane, Baton Rouge, for appellee.

TATE, Judge.

Plaintiffs appeal from judgment dismissing their suit upon exception of no right and cause of action.

*436 The petition alleges: A car left by a customer of the plaintiff, Standard Motor Car Company, Inc. ("Standard"),[1] for servicing was involved in an intersectional collision while being road-tested by Standard's employee in the course and scope of his employment. The negligence of a driver insured by defendant, State Farm Mutual Insurance Company, was the sole proximate cause of the accident. Standard paid for repair of the damages and by this tort suit seeks recovery of same from the insurer of the tortfeasor.

Defendant contends that, in the absence of a conventional subrogation by the owner of the damaged car in favor of Standard, Standard as possessor has no right or cause of action for the damage caused to its customer's car, even though Standard paid for the repair of same. This contention is based upon the doctrine that "subrogation will not generally be decreed in favor of a mere volunteer or intermeddler who, without any duty, moral or otherwise, pays the debt or discharges the obligation of another," 50 Am.Jur. 696, "Subrogation", Section 21. See also 83 C.J.S., Subrogation § 9, p. 601. See LSA-Civil Code Article 2161, especially 2161(3).

Able counsel for defendant argues that Standard was a "volunteer" since, as depositary or bailees of its customer's car, it was not legally liable to its customer for damages caused through the negligence of another and without fault on its own part. See cases such as Niagara Fire Insurance Co. v. Shuff, La.App. 1 Cir., 93 So.2d 325. "The depositary is only bound to restore the thing in the state in which it is at the moment of restitution. Deteriorations, not effected by an act of his, are to the loss of the depositor." Article 2945, LSA-C.C. (Italics ours.)[2]

Plaintiffs urge most forcefully that the garageman is at least under a moral duty to repair the cars of his customers injured while in his custody. It is argued that the garageman cannot morally or as a matter of sound business practice return his customer's car to the latter in a damaged condition with the observation that it is up to the customer to collect for the loss from an allegedly negligent third party. We are reminded that the garageman, as depositary or bailee, is under a duty to return the car deposited with him in the same condition as received, and that —as between him and his customer, the depositor—injury to the car during the garageman's custody establishes a prima facie case in favor of the customer against the garageman. Hazel v. Williams, La. App. 2 Cir., 80 So.2d 133; Articles 1908, 2937, 2938, 2944, 2945, LSA-Civil Code. The garageman thus has at least a prima facie duty to repair the vehicle damaged while in his custody before returning it to his customer. Furthermore, should he refuse to repair the vehicle on the ground that the damages resulted from the negligence of a third party tortfeasor, the prescriptive period applicable to his customer's action against him for the damages to the car, while in the garageman's custody is that of ten years, Article 3444, LSA-C.C., Reehlman v. Calamari, La.App.Orleans, 94 So.2d 311; far longer than the peremptive one year for tort actions during which either party must seek to hold the negligent third person.

The contentions of the plaintiffs-appellants are sustained by the jurisprudence; although in fairness we must add that the authorities cited below were not called to the attention of the learned trial judge.

The identical legal question was before our brethren of the Orleans Court of Appeal *437 in Douglas v. Haro, 32 So.2d 387. Their opinion at 32 So.2d 387 contains a scholarly review of the applicable authorities. As against third persons misappropriating or damaging same, the possessors (such as an administrator, depositary, or consignee) of property damaged or stolen while in their possession, although not owned by them, have been permitted to recover the property or for the damages thereto, irrespective of their non-ownership thereof. Lannes v. Courege, 31 La. Ann. 74; Johnson v. Imboden, 7 La.Ann. 110; Johnson v. Imboden, 4 La.Ann. 178; Fowler v. Cooper, Carathers & Co., 3 La. 215; Morgan v. Bell, 4 Mart., O.S., 615; McGrew v. Browder, 2 Mart., N.S., 17, 20; Klein v. Anderson, 4 Orleans App. 262. But based upon Article 15, C.P., the Orleans Court held in Douglas v. Haro that the depositary or bailee was without interest to institute suit to recover damage to property in his possession, when the sole cause of such damage was the negligence of a third party defendant, who under these circumstances was held to be liable solely to the owner (unless of course a conventional subrogation had been secured).

The Orleans court's decision was, however, reversed by our Supreme Court, 214 La. 1099, 39 So.2d 744, which opinion, in the words of the Supreme Court in a later decision, Holley v. Butler Furniture Co., 217 La. 8, 45 So.2d 747, at page 748,[3] "held that inasmuch as the depositor had ten years in which to file a suit against the plaintiff under the provisions of the Civil Code, and the right of action to recover damages from the defendant was one which prescribed in one year, that the plaintiff was deemed to have an interest to bring such action—but inasmuch as the depositor had not been made a party remanded for such purpose".

In Douglas v. Haro, above cited, a strong argument had been made by the defendant that there was no allegation that the plaintiff-garageman had paid the owner for the damage to the automobile or that the owner had demanded payment of same from the garageman. In response to this argument, the Supreme Court remanded the case to implead the owner-depositor as a necessary party to settle the rights of all three parties and to prevent the possibility of the garageman being unjustly enriched by recovering the damages to the customer's car although such damages were not demanded of him by the customer. Thus the cited decision might be interpreted so as to require our reversal, but also to require on the remand the impleader of the owner of the damaged automobile as a party to the suit. However, we feel that under the pleadings in this particular case, this requirement would be a useless technicality, since herein (unlike in Douglas v. Haro) the garageman-plaintiff has specifically pleaded that he himself has paid the claim for the damages sustained by the car while deposited with him.

The result we have reached is consistent with the common law principles surrounding a "bailment", which is quite similar in many respects to a civil law "deposit". "A bailee may recover from a third person for the latter's wrongful injury to bailed property or disturbance of his possession thereof," 8 C.J.S. Bailments § 39 b, p. 317. "Every bailee or person clothed with the exclusive right of possession has a temporary or qualified ownership in the property to the extent of enabling him to maintain actions in respect thereof against third persons, as has been shown in § 39, and he may sue for the protection of his own interest, or for the benefit of his bailor, or he may sue for both interests and recover *438 full damages," 8 C.J.S.

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