Eugene FONTENOT and Cecilia Fontenot v. MARQUETTE CASUALTY CO., et al.
No. 50716.
Supreme Court of Louisiana
May 4, 1971.
247 So. 2d 572
Drury, Lozes & Curry, Felicien P. Lozes, New Orleans, for defendants, third party plaintiffs and appellees.
Porteous, Toledano, Hainkel & Johnson, William A. Porteous, New Orleans, Larry P. Boudreaux, Donald J. Greene, Geoffry D. C. Best, LeBoeuf, Lamb, Leiby & MacRae, New York City, Ronald A. Jacks, Charles W. Havens, III, Washington, D. C., for amicus curiae.
BARHAM, Justice.
The issue for determination is whether the rights of a third person damaged by a party who is insured may be exercised in a direct action for his damages against the reinsurer of the tort feasor‘s insolvent liability insurer. Contrary to the Court of Appeal, we hold that the treaty or contract of reinsurance here and the law do not permit a direct action by such third person against the reinsurer.
This litigation began as an action for personal injuries arising out of an automobile accident, filed in 1964 by Eugene Fontenot and his wife. Mrs. Fontenot was a
On February 1, 1965, Marquette was judicially placed in rehabilitation (it has since gone into liquidation), all further proceedings against it were ordered stayed, and a preliminary writ of injunction was issued against it. On the basis of this order and injunction which had been issued out of the Nineteenth Judicial District Court, the trial court stayed all further proceedings against Marquette in this suit.
Answers were then filed by Louque, Marquette, and Veron to the Fontenots’ original petition, and third party petitions were filed by them against Holloway‘s insurer Traders. Veron filed a third party petition
The Holloways, having ascertained through interrogatories that Peerless Insurance Company was Marquette‘s reinsurer, made Peerless a third party defendant in June, 1965, alleging that the reinsurance contract brought Peerless within the provisions of
Before the case came on for trial, the Fontenots and the Holloways compromised their claims upon the payment by American Employers of $7500.00 to the Fontenots and $30,000.00 to the Holloways. In the “receipt
As the case then stood, the parties to the action were Veron against Peerless on its third party claim and the Holloways against Peerless on their intervention and third party demand which had been “assigned” to Veron, American Employers, and Louque. Neither Louque, American Employers,1 Traders, nor the Fontenots asserted any claim against Peerless in these proceedings. A stipulation was reached by the parties remaining in litigation in which it was noted among other things that the Fontenots and the Holloways had been paid by Amer-
Trial was had on the merits on the stipulation, depositions, policies, and other instruments which were submitted to the trial court, and that court rendered judgment holding Louque at fault and liable for the full compromise settlement to Veron and American Employers. The trial court dismissed the demands of all three parties plaintiff against Peerless. American Employers and Veron appealed (although there was no pleading upon which American Employers could appeal) to the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal, which reversed the trial court‘s judgment as to Peerless and granted judgment in favor of Veron and American Employers2 in the amount of $27,500.00. That court expressed doubt as to the Fontenot assignment and doubt that any claim for indemnification remained. Nevertheless it made its award for the full compromise amount of $37,500.00 less the $10,000.00 limit as to any reinsurance payment, or a total of $27,500.00. See 235 So. 2d 631.
Certiorari was granted on the application of Peerless, 239 So. 2d 344. The relator Peerless raises interesting exceptions of no right of action and no cause of action (no valid assignment and no right to claim in-
An understanding of reinsurance—its history, purpose, and function—is essential to a determination of the issue before us. Olson, Reinsurers’ Liability to the Insolvent Reinsured, 41 Notre Dame Law. 13 (1965); Thompson, Reinsurance (4th ed. 1966), Chapts. 1, 3, 5, 6, 9, 10, and 13; Reinarz, Property and Liability Reinsurance Management (1969), Chapts. 1 and 4; Golding, A History of Reinsurance (2nd ed. 1931); and Hone v. Mutual Safety Insurance Company, 1 Sandf. 137 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1847). Reinsurance is a contract by which one insurance company agrees to indemnify another in whole or in part against loss or liability which the latter has incurred under a separate contract as insurer of a third party. It is neither double insurance nor coinsurance “because regardless of the nature of the liability of the original insurer and the reinsurer, they are not co-liable to the original insured, nor liable to him in the same degree“. 19 Couch on Insurance 2d § 80.2. Reinsurance is a method by which an insurance company distributes all or part of its potential losses to another insurance company in order to reduce the extent of its possible loss under any policy
“Reinsurance is a standard practice of insurers, small and large. The smaller insurer, with assets not greatly in excess of minimum requirements, cannot financially withstand individually large losses. Even a very large company may consider it imprudent to have too many eggs in one basket, as it were, by remaining alone as the bearer of very large risks. An insurer which might easily carry the individual risks of 1,000 lives insured for $1,000 each might be unable or unwilling to carry the risk of one life insured for $1,000,000; or might carry the fire etc. insurance on 100 $10,000 buildings but be unable or unwilling to carry one $1,000,000 building. It is wholly unlikely that the 1,000 persons would die at once, or the 100 buildings be destroyed at once. But the death of one person insured for $1,000,000, or the destruction of the one $1,000,000 building, could require payment of proceeds equal to the requirements for the 1,000 lives or the 100 buildings.
“An insurer which is offered a risk it does not wish to carry alone may itself spread the risk by obtaining ‘reinsurance’
from other insurers, on a suitable basis such as for a percentage share of the risk, or for the excess over the original insurer‘s retained portion. “Of course the original insurer which issues a policy remains liable to its insured for the full amount of the insured risks. But as between that insurer and the reinsurers the final loss on the maturity of the risk will fall upon the reinsurers to the extent their contracts stipulate.
“The original insured is usually unaware of the existence of reinsurance, did not bargain for it, and in other jurisdictions is usually said to be a stranger without privity to the contract of reinsurance and with no legal interest in it.”
Historically, reinsurance, or “re-assurance“, was known to the French in the Seventeenth Century, and came into American law from these French sources. Hone v. Mutual Safety Insurance Company, supra. It was recognized in Louisiana in Egan v. Fireman‘s Insurance Co., 27 La. Ann. 368 (1875), where the court held it not to be for a third party‘s benefit. Reinsurance is described in Louisiana‘s Insurance Code by
Reinsurance not only affords no privity in contract to the insured, but it is
“Some of the more important needs which reinsurance fulfills are: 1) to increase the ceding company‘s capacity, 2) to help stabilize the ceding company‘s operating results, 3) to attain a greater spread of risk, 4) to enable the ceding company to withdraw from a given class or line of business within a short period of time, 5) to permit the reduction of the primary carrier‘s required reserves, 6) to enable a small insurance company to write risks which would normally be beyond the carrier‘s capacity, and 7) to enable a number of insurers to spread the risk of a catastrophe such as Hurricane Camille over many companies throughout the world. See, generally, Thompson, supra, pp. 9, 24-25; Reinarz, Robert, Property and Liability Reinsurance Management, pp. 14-15. In sum, it allows insurers to meet the public need and also allows the smaller insurer to compete, creating a marketplace.
“While direct liability insurers deal with individual members of the public reinsurers deal with insurers and other reinsurers.”
We begin with the premise that ordinarily no one knows of the financial potential of reinsurance except the purchaser (the insurer) and the seller (the reinsurer); that
The general, even constant and uniform, principle of law in this country is that the original insured cannot enforce his insurer‘s contract for reinsurance against the reinsurer because the original insured is not a party to or in privity to that contract of reinsurance. 13 Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice, § 7694; 46 C.J.S. Insurance § 1232; 44 Am.Jur.2d, Insurance, § 1867; 19 Couch, op. cit. supra, § 80.66; 41 Notre Dame Law. 13. The only exceptions are made (1) when the reinsurer by his actions and relations with the original insured directly assumes the insurer‘s responsibility and liability, (2) when the reinsured and the reinsurer merge, and (3) when the contract of reinsurance expressly and spe-
Louisiana has enacted specific legislation providing for reinsurance, and the provisions pertinent to this case are contained in
The vital distinction between reinsurance and liability insurance is that reinsurance indemnifies the insurer for a loss which is actually sustained, whereas liability insurance is protection against the liability of an insured. The reinsurance agreement be-
In Louisiana the exception to the general rule of payment of reinsurance only to the insurer is provided in
Veron takes out of context certain standard provisions in the reinsurance contract to support this argument. These provisions, however, when read in context are no more than a statement of the contractual relationship between Peerless, the reinsurer, and Marquette, the reinsured. Clauses in reinsurance contracts which fix the liability of the reinsurer to the reinsured as being subject to the original policy stipulations and limits are held by the overwhelming majority of courts to mean that “* * * the reinsured or original policies furnish * * * the basis upon which the contract of indemnity stands, and that in all dealings with the original insured [by insurer] the provisions of the policy issued to him are to be observed * * *“. Faneuil Hall Ins. Co. v. Liverpool & London & Globe Ins. Co., 153 Mass. 63, 26 N.E. 244 (1891); Stickel v. Excess Ins. Co. of America, 136 Ohio St. 49, 23 N.E. 2d 839 (1939); State ex rel. Menning v. Security General Ins. Co. (In re Security General Ins. Co.), 82 S.D. 47, 140 N.W. 2d 676 (1966); 19 Couch, op. cit. supra, § 80.46; 44 Am.Jur.2d, Insurance, § 1862.
Veron relies upon decisions in five jurisdictions as holding that the standard reinsurance provisions, such as are contained
In only one jurisdiction in the United States has it been held that provisions which are somewhat similar to those contained in the Peerless-Marquette agreement afford a direct action against the reinsurer upon the insolvency of the reinsured. This holding comes out of Missouri and is founded upon earlier decisions there and elsewhere sounding in equity and not founded on contract interpretation in a court of law. Homan v. Employers Reinsurance Corp., 345 Mo. 650, 136 S.W. 2d 289, 127 A.L.R. 163 (1939); First National Bank of Kansas City v. Higgins, 357 S.W. 2d 139 (Mo. 1962). It may be said that only in Missouri have general provisions in a reinsurance agreement tieing that agreement to policies of insurance been interpreted as an assumption of the liability of the reinsured. The cases from all other jurisdictions cited by Veron have not followed this view, and are distinguishable.5
In Louisiana contracts for the benefit of others, or the stipulation pour autrui, must be in writing and clearly express that intent.
The proper resolution of whether this treaty for reinsurance is a contract of indemnity or of liability insurance, and whether third parties not in privity to the contract have a direct right of action against the reinsurer, should be made after a reading of the contract or treaty to ascertain the intent of the parties and after an examination of the stipulations in the contract in light of the statutes applying to reinsurance. As previously noted,
The direct action statute is not applicable to reinsurance policies where neither a novation of the original policy obligation nor a merger of the companies has occurred. When the direct action statute is read alone, it becomes clear that it could not create a direct right of action for a third party under a reinsurance contract.
As was said in Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland v. Pink, supra, “* * * the liability under any written contract must be determined upon consideration of the words employed, read in the light of attending circumstances.” Courts should not and cannot by implication extend or restrict a contract to mean something different from that intended by the parties. Nor may the court construe contracts contrary to the intent of the parties to effectuate a determination of what it believes to be in the public interest when the contractual intent of the parties is permitted by law.7
Art. 1964: “Equity, usage and law supply such incidents only as the parties may reasonably be supposed to have been silent upon from a knowledge that they would be supplied from one of these sources.”
Art. 1967: “The law, intended by the rule before referred to, means such legislative provisions as provide for those cases in which the parties have not declared their intention. When the contracting parties have not derogated from such law, its provisions are to be followed. * * *”
For the reasons assigned the claim of Veron Provisions Company, Inc., and the claims of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Holloway against Peerless Insurance Company are dismissed. Any rights of parties in the proceedings which are reserved by the stay order in the lower court are maintained.
HAMLIN, J., dissents being of the view that the result reached by the court of appeal is correct.
DIXON, Justice (dissenting).
I respectfully dissent. I agree with the reasoning of the Court of Appeal, 235 So. 2d 631 (La. App. 4th Cir. 1970). The rationale of the majority holding of this court is an attempted distinction between a contract of indemnity on the one hand, and a contract of liability insurance on the other. Yet, a Louisiana statute defines “insurance” as “a contract whereby one undertakes to indemnify another or pay a specified amount upon determinable contingencies.”
Having concluded that a contract of reinsurance is indeed “insurance,” the question remains whether it is a contract of liability insurance so as to fall within the direct action statute,
The direct action statute is substantive, not merely procedural. It creates a cause of action as well as a right of action against the insurer. Accordingly, because of the existence of the direct action statute, Marquette is directly and primarily liable for personal injuries caused by the negligence of its policyholders. When Marquette purchases a contract of indemnity to protect itself against its liability for the injury of other persons caused by its policyholders, it is obtaining “insurance against the liability of the insured for the death, injury or disability of an employee or other person.” This contract of indemnity, therefore, is a contract of liability insurance, and in turn confers a direct right of action against the reinsurer pursuant to
Peerless Insurance Company bases its defense upon its own definition of its contract as an “indemnity.” But when it agreed with Marquette to pay it up to $300,000 for any accident, with no gross total limit (in fact limited only by the $10,000 deductible provision, for loss from any one accident), it wrote a policy of liability insurance. The definitions in the Louisiana statutes must control, and Peerless’ defenses fall.
