Wooten v. Central Mutual Insurance Company
This text of 166 So. 2d 747 (Wooten v. Central Mutual Insurance Company) 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.
Opinion
Charles N. WOOTEN, Trustee, Plaintiff-Relator,
v.
CENTRAL MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant-Respondent.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*748 Simon & Trice, by J. Minos Simon, Lafayette, for plaintiff-relator.
Mouton, Champagne & Colomb, by George J. Champagne, Jr., Lafayette, for defendant-respondent.
En Banc.
TATE, Judge.
The present suit was filed in Vermilion Parish. The District Court sustained exceptions based on the contention that Vermilion was an improper venue, and it therefore ordered the suit to be transferred to East Baton Rouge Parish as the court of proper venue. LSA-C.C.P. Art. 121. Supervisory writs were issued to review the trial court's holding that Vermilion was not a proper venue.
The plaintiff is the trustee in bankruptcy for Gordon Paul Bourque, who filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy after a large tort judgment had been secured against him. For present purposes, it does not appear to be contested that the trustee is vested with any cause of action of the bankrupt pleaded herein (8 C.J.S. Bankruptcy §§ 168, 194), and that the trustee is entitled to institute same in the same courts and at the same venue as if the suit had been instituted by the bankrupt himself prior to his adjudication and the trustee's qualification as such (8A C.J.S. Bankruptcy §§ 348, 358 and 489). See 11 U.S.C.A. § 110, sub. a(5), (6).
The question, then, will be whether Vermilion Parish is a proper venue for Bourque's *749 cause of action pleaded by the present suit.
The present defendant is the automobile liability insurer of the bankrupt Bourque on the date he was involved in an accident prior to his bankruptcy. The plaintiff trustee's cause of action is based upon the loss caused the bankrupt by the defendant insurer's allegedly unreasonable refusal to compromise a claim against Bourque, its insured, for injuries caused a third person, Mrs. Touchet, through Bourque's negligent operation of the insured automobile.
In a prior suit, Mrs. Touchet, the injured person, sued Bourque to recover personal injury damages alleged in the amount of $35,000. According to the allegations of the present suit, Mrs. Touchet had offered to compromise this prior suit with the defendant for the five thousand policy limits, but the defendant refused the offer, and judgment was thereafter secured by Mrs. Touchet against Bourque for $15,000, with the recovery against the insurer being limited to its $5,000 policy limits.
The trustee for Bourque now sues the defendant insurer to recover the ten thousand dollars in excess of policy limits recovered by Mrs. Touchet.
The plaintiff trustee alleges that, in view of the extensive physical injuries sustained by Mrs. Touchet and of the undisputable liability of Bourque, the refusal of the insurer to accept an unconditional offer of settlement for policy limits, constituted "a breach of its contractual obligation to the said Gordon T. Bourque to defend, protect and indemnify him against such liability arising from his gross negligence; petitioner further alleges that said refusal to accept said unconditional offer of settlement resulted either from the arbitrary and capricious conduct of said Central Mutual Insurance Company [defendant herein] or as a result of its gross neglect." Art. 6 of petition.
The defendant insurer contends that the proper venue is that set forth by LSA-C.C.P. Art. 42, the general venue provision, which pertinently states, 42(7), that an action against "A foreign or alien insurer shall be brought in the parish of East Baton Rouge."
The general venue provisions are specifically made subject to certain exceptions. LSA-C.C.P. Art. 43. Plaintiff especially relies upon the exception provided by LSA-C.C.P. Art. 76, that "* * * An action on * * * [a liability] insurance policy may be brought in the parish where the loss occurred or where the insured is domiciled." (Italics ours.) The plaintiff points out that Bourque, the insured, is and always has been a resident of Vermilion Parish.
To determine whether for venue purposes the present action is "on" the insurance contract, involves essentially the determination: Is the present action on a contract, i.e., for the breach of a special obligation, owed to the plaintiff-obligee by virtue of a contract between him and the defendantobligor?; or, Is the action instead in tort, i.e., for the violation of a general duty owed to all persons? For distinction between tort and breach of contract damages, see Davis v. LeBlanc, La.App. 3 Cir., 149 So.2d 252, and the authorities therein cited. (But we should note also that a breach of a contractual obligation may well give rise to actions both on the contract and in tort; the petition therefore must in such instance be examined as a whole to determine whether the action sounds in tort or in contract. Davis v. LeBlanc, cited above. See also Edward Levy Metals, Inc. v. Public Belt R., 243 La. 860, 148 So.2d 580.)
As noted by the comprehensive annotation cited at the conclusion of this paragraph, liability policies ordinarily reserve to the insurer the decision as to whether an offer to compromise a claim against the insured should be accepted. In the exercise of the insurer's right to accept or reject an offer of compromise, there may be a conflict in the interests of the insurer and the insured, if an action is instituted against the insurer for an amount in excess of the *750 policy coverage, and if an offer to compromise this claim is received for a figure close to or at the policy limits. Where the insurer exercises its exclusive power to reject a reasonable offer of compromise which is to the obvious best interest of its insured, and judgment is obtained in excess of the policy limits, the insurer may be held liable to its insured for the excess. See 7A Appleman's Insurance Law and Practice, Sections 4711, 4712, 4713. As stated in the Annotation, "Duty of liability insurer to settle or compromise", 40 A.L.R.2d 168, 171:
"* * * [I]t is probably the accepted rule in all jurisdictions at this time, that the insurer is bound to give some consideration to the insured's interest in such a situation [where an offer to settle at or near the policy limits is received], and the pronounced split in the decisions involves the question whether the insurer's obligations is only to act in `good faith' to the insured in considering such an offer, or whether it is required to exercise `due care' and is liable for a negligent rejection of the compromise."
Only three Louisiana cases have touched upon the question, and they have indicated that an insurer may be held liable in excess of its policy limits where the insurer's failure to settle is not in good faith and is arbitrary under the circumstances. New Orleans & C.R. Co. v. Maryland Casualty Co., 114 La. 153, 38 So. 89 (1905); Stewart v. Wood, La.App. 1 Cir., 153 So.2d 497 (1963); Davis v. Maryland Casualty Co., 2 Cir., 16 La.App. 253, 133 So. 769 (1931).
These Louisiana cases do not, however, concern themselves with whether the action on behalf of the insured in such instances is for a tort, as distinguished from for a breach of a contractual obligation, the question with which we are now concerned.
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166 So. 2d 747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wooten-v-central-mutual-insurance-company-lactapp-1964.