Dallas Ray SCHEXNIDER, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Louie McGUILL and Lafayette Insurance Company, Defendants-Appellants.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*514 Morgan, McClain & Savoy, Robert E. Morgan, Lake Charles, for plaintiff-appellee.
Terry E. Johnson, Woodley, Barnett, etc., E.E. Woodley, Lake Charles, for defendants-appellants.
Before FORET, LABORDE, JJ., and REGGIE[*], J. Pro Tem.
REGGIE, Judge Pro Tem.
We are asked to decide in this appeal whether the lower court correctly concluded that defendant McGuill's punch to plaintiff's face was unintentional for purposes of determining the scope of the coverage of McGuill's Homeowner's Policy which he obtained from Lafayette Insurance Company. Based upon our review of the facts and relevant law in this area, we are of the opinion that the decision by the lower court was not clearly erroneous. We accordingly affirm.
FACTS
On November 30, 1984, Dallas Ray Schexnider (plaintiff) entered Brownie's Lounge in Iowa, Louisiana to meet Gail McGee, a Brownie's employee, to obtain a ride home. While plaintiff was waiting for Ms. McGee to get off of work, defendant Louie McGuill, a long time friend, entered Brownie's and sat down next to plaintiff at the bar.
During the course of conversation between the plaintiff and defendant McGuill about the possibility of going into business together, the defendant struck plaintiff with one quick jab to what he believed to be plaintiff's jaw. Plaintiff fell to the ground and suffered several broken bones in his cheek. He later was required to undergo surgery to correct the damage to his face and missed a considerable amount of time from work.
Plaintiff sued defendant McGuill and defendant's homeowner insurer, Lafayette Insurance Company (Insurance Company), seeking to recover damages for his injuries. The Insurance Company defended on the basis of an Intended Injury exclusion in McGuill's homeowner's policy.
At trial, the parties presented conflicting testimony regarding events leading up to the blow. Based upon his first-hand observation of the witnesses, the lower court resolved the conflict by concluding "[t]hat the blow was not for defensive purposes since no threatening gesture had been made by [P]laintiff and it is unreasonable to believe that the blow was without any reason whatsoever."
Nevertheless, the lower court appeared to give considerable weight to defendant McGuill's testimony (1) that he did not draw back his arm to swing at plaintiff; (2) that the blow resulted from his arm moving perhaps 12 inches; (3) that he believed immediately afterward that he had hit plaintiff on the jaw; and (4) that defendant's conduct after the incident did not signify an intention to cause plaintiff the injuries he suffered. The lower court thus concluded that the blow was unpremeditated and that "the injuries sustained by [P]laintiff were neither expected nor intended by McGuill. This [D]efendant acted reflexively and without a conscious or deliberate intent to strike a blow and without a belief that his uncontrolled reaction would cause injury."
Because defendant did not intend, nor expect, the massive injuries suffered by plaintiff, the lower court held that the Insurance Company's Intentional Injury Exclusion did not bar plaintiff's claim and that the defendants were liable in solido for the damages suffered by plaintiff. Defendant Insurance Company appeals from the judgment.
OPINION
The lower court's decision that the actions of defendant McGuill caused plaintiff's injury was not appealed by McGuill and therefore is not before us. The only *515 issue before us is whether the lower court correctly concluded that the injuries suffered by plaintiff were not the result of an intentional act by McGuill for purposes of the Intentional Acts Exclusion in defendant McGuill's homeowner's policy with defendant Insurance Company. If the exclusion does not apply to defendant McGuill's actions in this case, then defendant Insurance Company is liable with McGuill in solido for the injuries sustained by plaintiff.
The lower court had the opportunity to examine the witnesses and the evidence in this case first-hand and made its factual findings of McGuill's intent based upon such examination. The factual findings of the court are entitled to great deference and will only be overturned if they are clearly erroneous. Canter v. Koehring Company,
We then turn to the lower court's conclusion that as a matter of law the Intentional Injury Exclusion in McGuill's policy does not exclude coverage for the injuries suffered by plaintiff in this case and that the Insurance Company thus is liable with McGuill in solido for damages suffered by plaintiff as a result of those injuries. Based upon our analysis of the relevant case law, we affirm the decision of the lower court.
There is a distinction in the law of this state between an intentional act and an intentional injury. In Rambin v. Wood,
Similarly, in Kling v. Collins,
Moreover, in Pique v. Saia,
We do not disagree with the conclusions by the lower court in the instant case that the massive cheek-bone injuries sustained by plaintiff were not intended by defendant, who punched plaintiff with a short, unpremeditated jab to what he thought was his jaw. While we certainly do not condone defendant's actions and would have agreed with the lower court's decision were it before us on appeal that defendant McGuill is liable for plaintiff's injuries, we nevertheless believe that McGuill's actions were not of the intentional sort that are intended to be excluded by his homeowner's policy.
This is not a case, such as Guilbeau v. Roger,
This is a case involving two friends, where one punched the other, perhaps after a verbal insult, and the scope of the injury to plaintiff far exceeded what any reasonable person would expect from a jab intended for the jaw. As the lower court held, perhaps "plaintiff moved as the blow was being delivered...." We may never know. But what was adduced at trial, and what we do not disturb here on appeal, is the lower court's finding that defendant McGuill "acted reflexively and without a conscious or deliberate intent to strike a blow and without a belief that his uncontrolled action would cause injury."
For the reasons assigned, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed at defendants-appellants' costs.
AFFIRMED.
FORET, Judge, dissenting.
I have great difficulty, and in fact cannot agree that McGuill's act was unintentional. I believe that when McGuill punched Schexnider in the face, he intended to inflict pain and injury. Otherwise, why would he strike him? McGuill did not strike the plaintiff in self-defense; there is no particular allegation that plaintiff provoked McGuill, other than the testimony that plaintiff spit on McGuill, which apparently the trial court chose to disbelieve. If the trial court had believed that Schexnider had spit on McGuill, that may have been more of a reason to hold the way it did. In fact, the record shows that McGuill indicated to the barmaid, just before he struck plaintiff, that he was about to teach Schexnider a lesson. I believe that the cases cited by the majority to sustain the position do not go quite as far as what we're doing here. Indeed, if we sustain this trial court judgment, I can't conceive of what set of facts could constitute an intentional act such as to fall within the exclusionary clause of an insurance policy.
Here, the defendant set out to strike the plaintiff in the face, and he did so with such violent force as to fracture several bones in plaintiff's face and knock him off the bar stool onto the floor, unconscious. Even after the incident, his comments to the barmaid, and possibly others, certainly indicate that McGuill was in a violent frame of mind when he struck the plaintiff and even thereafter.
The majority apparently feels that the recent Supreme Court case of Caudle v. Betts,
I think the rationale of Caudle fits this case like the proverbial glove. The defendant committed an intentional tort, a battery upon the plaintiff, causing damage, and he is responsible for the damage caused even if it could not have reasonably been foreseen. Therefore, the intentional tort exclusionary clause in defendant's insurance policy definitely is applicable.
I respectfully dissent.
NOTES
Notes
[*] Judge Edmund M. Reggie, Retired, participated in this decision as Judge Pro Tempore by appointment of the Louisiana Supreme Court.
