Stevens v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company

141 So. 2d 346, 242 La. 1006, 1962 La. LEXIS 506
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 26, 1962
Docket45814 and 45877
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 141 So. 2d 346 (Stevens v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company) 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
Stevens v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, 141 So. 2d 346, 242 La. 1006, 1962 La. LEXIS 506 (La. 1962).

Opinion

HAMITER, Justice.

Douglas P. Stevens instituted this suit seeking a solidary judgment against Dominic A. Regan and Eugene A. Nolan, as well as against their respective public liability insurers (hereinafter named), for personal *1009 injury damages allegedly sustained by him as the result of an intersectional collision between an automobile driven by Regan (in which plaintiff was a guest passenger) and another operated by Nolan.

After trial, the district court awarded damages to plaintiff in the amount of $27,-•011.44 and condemned the defendants in solido therefor.

From the judgment all defendants appealed. Plaintiff answered, seeking an increase in the award.

The Court of Appeal, on the original hearing, reduced the damages to $24,011.44 and dismissed plaintiff’s demands as against Regan and his insurer, the Liberty Mutual Insurance Company. It found that Nolan was guilty of negligence that was the sole proximate cause of the accident. Consequently, judgment was rendered against only Nolan .and his insurers, the Royal Indemnity Company (the insurer of the car Nolan was •driving, but which did not belong to him) and the American Automobile Insurance Company (the insurer of Nolan’s personal automobile which was not involved in the collision).

Plaintiff applied for a rehearing, praying merely that the damage award be increased. Nolan and his insurers also sought another hearing, urging that he was guilty of no negligence and that the judgment against them should be annulled. Alternatively, those defendants pleaded that there should be judgment in solido against them, Regan and his insurer, as decreed by the district court.

The Court of Appeal (with its entire membership participating) “expressly granted unlimited rehearing as it was our intention, aim, desire and purpose to bring the entire matter again before us for reappraisal”. On the same day counsel for all parties were notified of that ruling.

When the case came on for argument on the rehearing Regan and his insurer (through their counsel) contended that, inasmuch as plaintiff failed to apply for a rehearing on the portion of the judgment which dismissed the suit as against them, the decree in their favor “is final and not reviewable by this or any other Court”; and that the application of Nolan and his insurers could not have the effect of keeping them in the litigation, there having existed no independent rights as between the alleged co-tort-feasors.

The Court of Appeal rejected such contention and, after reconsideration of the evidence, changed its original judgment, this time condemning Regan and his insurer for all damages ($24,011.44) and dismissing plaintiff’s suit as against Nolan and his insurers. See 133 So.2d 1, 6.

We granted certiorari herein primarily because of the complaint made in the petition therefor of Regan and his insurer respecting the ruling of the Court of Appeal *1011 on the above mentioned procedural issue, i. e., whether the ordering of a rehearing as to them was proper and legal in view of plaintiff’s failure to apply for it from that portion of the judgment rendered in their favor. Certiorari was issued also on plaintiff’s petition (complaint was made therein of the dismissal of the suit as against Nolan and his insurers and of the reduction in the district court’s award) so that we might have the entire case before us.

Addressing ourselves first to the above stated paramount procedural issue, our further study of the cause has led us to conclude that the Court of Appeal’s granting of an unlimited rehearing as to all parties litigant was proper and legal. While we seriously doubt that plaintiff’s application was sufficient to permit such action, inasmuch as therein no error was alleged as to the court’s ruling respecting the matter of liability, we are satisfied that the application timely filed by Nolan and his insurers sufficed therefor.

In their briefs to this court counsel for Regan and his insurers argue: “ * * * Nolan and his insurers had no legal right to seek any relief whatever against Regan and his insurer; therefore, the language in Nolan’s application for rehearing asking that Regan and Liberty Mutual be held in solido with Nolan and his insurers was of no legal effect whatever.” And in support of the argument certain cases are cited.

Clearly the cited decisions are not decisive of the instant issue. They stand generally for the principle that where two persons are sued as solidary obligors and the plaintiff takes no appeal from the judgment of the district court dismissing the suit as to one defendant while condemning the other an appeal by the latter has no effect on the former defendant and, hence, does not bring him before the appellate court. But that situation does not exist here.

The district court’s judgment in this cause, to the contrai-y, decreed solidary liability as to all defendants, and all of them appealed to the Court of Appeal. As a consequence all parties litigant were properly before such court. And it follows that when that tribunal, on the original hearing, held Nolan and his insurers to be solely liable for the damages sought herein certainly they had an interest in seeking to have reinstated the judgment of the district court decreeing Regan and his insurer liable solidarily with them (so that ultimately they could demand and obtain contribution) despite the fact that plaintiff did not apply for a rehearing respecting the issue of liability. This being true such interest was properly asserted by way of their filing the application for a rehearing, the result of which was that finality of the judgment as to Regan and his insurer was prevented.

Other cases relied on here by counsel for Regan and his insurer would perhaps be' pertinent if only plaintiff’s limited applica *1013 tion for a rehearing were involved. But such cases are not appropriate in view of the application of Nolan and his insurers in which, as aforeshown, they alternatively sought to have reinstated the district court’s judgment decreeing solidarity of the obligation as to all defendants.

Had it not been for the above discussed and determined procedural matter in all probability no writ of review would have issued herein since the merits of the controversy, which we now consider, involve mainly questions of fact. Nevertheless, as before stated, the entire cause is presently before us.

A detailed account of the circumstances surrounding the accident is contained in the published opinions of the Court of Appeal, and no useful purpose would be served by our recounting all of them. We shall relate only those deemed necessary for this consideration.

The collision occurred in the City of Baton Rouge during clear weather about 11:00 a. m. o’clock of May 28, 1958 at the intersection of Convention and North 16th Streets. Convention, approximately twenty-eight feet wide and coursing in an east-west direction, is the favored street, it having a legal speed limit of thirty miles per hour and there being a stop sign facing traffic on 16th Street as it approaches from the north. Nolan was proceeding east on Convention and Regan was driving south on 16th.

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Bluebook (online)
141 So. 2d 346, 242 La. 1006, 1962 La. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-v-liberty-mutual-insurance-company-la-1962.