No. 90-C-1712.Supreme Court of Louisiana.
March 11, 1991. Rehearing Denied April 25, 1991.
APPEAL FROM FOURTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT, PARISH OF CALCASIEU, STATE OF LOUISIANA, HONORABLE GREGORY D. LYONS, J.
Merrick J. Norman, Lake Charles, for Wade B. Randolph third party-applicant.
Jack M. Dampf, D’Amico, Curet Dampf, Baton Rouge, for Wade B. Randolph third party-applicant.
Joe A. Brame, Brame, Bergstedt Brame, Lake Charles, for Trinity Universal Ins. Co. of Kansas Inc. defendant-respondents.
Karl E. Boellert, Lake Charles, for James H. Boyer plaintiff-respondent.
CALOGERO, Chief Justice.
[1] We granted the application of Wade B. Randolph, Jr. against whom the court of appeal rendered judgment on a third party claim in favor of Trinity Universal Insurance Company of Kansas, Inc. (hereinafter Trinity), which in the district court had been found liable to James H. Boyer (Randolph’sWest Page 445
vendee and Trinity’s insured) under the theft provisions of Boyer’s automobile insurance policy.
[2] What prompted our writ grant was an unusual set of facts, some intriguing legal issues, and an apparent miscarriage of justice. [3] This lawsuit started with a petition filed by James H. Boyer against his insurer, Trinity, for the loss of an automobile, a 1982 BMW 745i. In January, 1983, E.J. Cop purchased the BMW from Sunbelt Auto Imports, Inc. of Houston, Texas (hereinafter Sunbelt) for $37,000.00. Cop thereupon applied for and received a Louisiana motor vehicle certificate of title. In September, 1983, Cop sold the car to relator, Wade B. Randolph, Jr., who applied for and received a Louisiana certificate of title. [4] In March, 1984, the plaintiff, Boyer, purchased the BMW from Randolph and obtained a Louisiana certificate of title. On June 13, 1985, Boyer was jogging at the Lake Charles YMCA when he noticed that his BMW was missing from the parking lot. He reported to the police that the vehicle had been stolen. He also contacted his insurer, Trinity, and filed a claim under the theft provision of his policy. [5] Several weeks later, Boyer received a package from Germany which contained his personal belongings from the car and a letter from Riemer Oberst, a German BMW dealership, advising Boyer that Sunbelt, the importer of the vehicle, had never paid for the car, and that the car had accordingly been “reprocessed.” [6] The BMW in question was a “gray market” car.[1]West Page 446
in Boyer’s place to pursue any claims of Boyer’s arising out of the loss of the car, including Boyer’s claims or demands against Randolph and Cop. Thirteen days later, on January 3, 1989, Boyer executed a Subrogation Agreement in which he subrogated to Trinity any rights and claims that he may have against any person for the loss of the car in question (an obvious reference to Boyer’s claims against Randolph and Cop).
[10] Trinity thereafter filed an appellate brief in which it claimed to be subrogated to the rights of Boyer against Randolph. Trinity argued that the trial court had erred in dismissing its third party demand against Randolph, as well as Boyer’s claim in warranty against Randolph. The court of appeal reversed the trial court’s dismissal of Trinity’s third party demand against Randolph, and rendered a judgment in favor of Trinity against Randolph for $30,000.00 plus legal interest and costs. 564 So.2d 384. [11] On application to this Court, Randolph argued that the court of appeal erred in finding that he had breached a warranty of peaceable possession under La.C.C. art. 2500. By supplemental brief filed in this Court, Randolph argued that in all events Trinity has no valid and subsisting claim against him. [12] Upon review of the record, the briefs and the applicable law, we determine that most of the numerous legal and factual questions involved in this case need not be addressed.[3] The case is more easily resolved — in Randolph’s favor. [13] Trinity’s demand against Randolph is sustainable if at all on one of two alternate premises. Either it should prevail on its own third party claim against Randolph, or it should do so as subrogee to Boyer’s alternate demand against Randolph. Both the third party demand of trinity against Randolph and Boyer’s supplemental petition asserting a demand against Randolph had been dismissed by the district court. These judgments were based on the district court’s finding that Boyer’s loss was caused by a theft, and that, therefore, the only party who could be held responsible for the loss was Trinity, Boyer’s insurer, under the theft provision of the insurance policy. [14] First we will discuss Trinity’s own third party claim against Randolph. [15] A defendant in a principal action may bring in, by third party petition, any person who is his warrantor or who may be liable to him for all or part of the principal demand. La.C.C.P. art. 1111. Where a third party demand does not allege that the third party defendant is a warrantor of the third party plaintiff or is liable for all or part of the principal demand, pursuant to C.C.P. art. 1111, that third party demand fails to state a cause of action. Karam v. St. Paul Fire Marine Insurance Co., 281 So.2d 728 (La. 1973); State of Louisiana v. Reliance Insurance Co., 487 So.2d 160 (La.App. 4th Cir.), writ denied, 493 So.2d 635 (La. 1986); Price v. Hooper, 414 So.2d 842 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1982); Hubbs v. Canova, 427 So.2d 875 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1982). [16] In this case, Trinity’s third party demand can only appropriately assert that Randolph is bound to reimburse Trinity should Trinity be found liable on Boyer’sWest Page 447
main demand claiming a theft. That cannot be the case, for Randolph is not liable to anybody for Boyer’s loss through theft. Trinity’s claim is that Randolph breached what he owed Boyer, a warranty of peaceable possession. Such an implied warranty is triggered by an eviction, i.e. a loss suffered by the buyer of the thing sold, which was “occasioned by the right or claim of the third person.” La.C.C. arts. 2500 and 2501. Such a loss is different than one occasioned by theft. Thus, Trinity asserts no cause of action in the third party demand.
[17] If the policy in this case had insured “good title,” and Trinity had become subrogated on payment to its insured whose peaceable possession had been disturbed by virtue of Randolph’s conveying defective title, the result would possibly be different. However, that was not the case here. [18] The court of appeal cites Bewley Furniture Co., Inc. v. Maryland Casualty Co., 285 So.2d 216, 219 (La. 1973) (“A party not actually at fault whose liability results from the faults of others may recover by way of indemnity from such others”), in finding that trinity had a proper third party claim against Randolph. That case supports Randolph’s position here, not Trinity’s. [19] In Bewley, the defendant, a general contractor who was being sued for damage due to the faulty construction of a roof, filed a third party demand against a subcontractor and a supplier, claiming that the damage resulted from their faulty work. The defendant there was vicariously liable for damage that allegedly arose due to the negligence of the third party defendants. In the case at bar, Trinity could not have been liable for a loss due to the fault of Randolph, since Trinity’s liability (on the main demand) could only be based on theft. The warranty theory that formed the basis of Randolph’s alleged liability is unrelated to any claim in theft. Unde Bewley, the only person against whom Trinity could file a third party demand would be the thief, because that is the only person whose actions triggered Trinity’s liability. [20] Next, we shall discuss the only other possibility for Trinity to sustain a claim against Randolph, i.e., that Trinity should recover against Randolph as a subrogee of Boyer; that it should be permitted to stand in Boyer’s place and recover from Randolph because of Randolph’s warranty of title to Boyer. We are precluded from assessing the merit of Boyer’s warranty claim against Randolph for the following reason. The district court dismissed Boyer’s claim against Randolph and that judgment became final when Boyer let the suspensive and devolutive appeal periods pass without appealing.[4] Trinity was not subrogated to Boyer’s claim against Randolph until December 21, 1988, the date that Boyer executed the Release with Trinity, in which Boyer first acknowledged receipt of $36,500.00 from Trinity in satisfaction of Boyer’s claim. Since at that time, Boyer had not appealed and could no longer appeal the district court’s dismissal of Boyer’s third party claim against Randolph, there was no subsisting claim of Boyer’s to which Trinity could properly be subrogated. [21] Trinity’s argument that it had already been subrogated to the rights of Boyer by the terms of the insurance policy, and that it preserved its right to appeal in Boyer’s place by its own timely suspensive appeal from the district court judgment taken earlier, is without merit. Trinity can only be subrogated to Boyer’s rights at the time that it made the payment (under C.C. art. 1829) or rendered performance (under C.C. art. 1827), because “subrogation, whether by contract or as a matter of law, can only take place upon payment.” State v. Reliance Ins. Co., 487 So.2d at 163; see also La.C.C. arts. 1827West Page 448
Bond v. Commercial Union Assurance Co., 407 So.2d 401
(La. 1981). Trinity therefore could not subrogate itself to any rights that Boyer did not possess on December 21, 1988, because a subrogee can acquire no greater rights than those of his subrogor. Perkins v. Scaffolding Rental Erection, 568 So.2d 549 (La. 1990). Therefore, Trinity acquired no subsisting claim against Randolph in the December 21, 1988 and January 3, 1989 contracts.
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