Case Name: KING FINANCE COMPANY OF LOUISIANA, Inc., and King Discount Company of Louisiana, Inc. v. FIREMAN'S FUND INSURANCE COMPANY
Court: Louisiana Supreme Court
Jurisdiction: Louisiana
Decision Date: 1964-12-14
Citations: 170 So. 2d 111
Docket Number: No. 47157
Parties: KING FINANCE COMPANY OF LOUISIANA, Inc., and King Discount Company of Louisiana, Inc. v. FIREMAN’S FUND INSURANCE COMPANY.
Judges: 
Reporter: Southern Reporter, Second Series
Volume: 170
Pages: 111–114

Head Matter:
247 La. 113
KING FINANCE COMPANY OF LOUISIANA, Inc., and King Discount Company of Louisiana, Inc. v. FIREMAN’S FUND INSURANCE COMPANY.
No. 47157.
Supreme Court of Louisiana.
Dec. 14, 1964.
Christensen & Christensen, Siegfried B. Christensen, III, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellants.
Curtis, Foster, Dillon & .Huppenbauer, Gerard M. Dillon, New Orleans, for defendant and respondent.

Opinion:
HAWTHORNE, Justice.
King Finance Company of Louisiana, Inc., and King Discount Company of Louisiana, Inc., insured under a small loan company blanket bond, filed this suit to recover from Fireman's Fund Insurance Company $2125.00 which they alleged was "taken, stolen, and/or was the object of a theft by a party and/or parties unknown" from one of their branch' offices in New Orleans. The provision of the bond under which the plaintiffs seek to recover stipulates that the insurer will indemnify petitioners for:
"B. Any loss of property through robbery, burglary, theft, damage or destruction while the Property is actually within any of the of-, fices of the Insured covered hereunder »
The trial judge dismissed plaintiffs' suit, being of the view that they had not proved their case by a preponderance of the evidence. On appeal the Court of Appeal stated that the sole question presented was whether the proof adduced on the trial was sufficient to warrant a judgment in plaintiffs' favor, and agreed with the trial judge that it was not. See 159 So.2d 708. On application of the plaintiffs this court granted a writ, 245 La. 968, 162 So.2d 15.
There is no serious question of law in this case. The Court of Appeal, citing authorities, stated that the legal principles involved are simply these: Plaintiff bears the burden of proving that the loss was caused by one of the covered risks. The loss and cause of loss do not have to be proved beyond a reasonable doubt but must be proved by a preponderance of the evidence, and circumstantial evidence may be sufficient. But suspicion or speculation as to the cause of loss is not enough, as where evidence merely shows the loss or injury. Mere disappearance is not sufficient evidence of theft. Mere disappearance of an article covered by burglary or theft policy which does not contain a specific provision dealing with its disappearance is not sufficient of itself to warrant a finding that its loss was due to theft, larceny, or burglary within the terms of the policy. The finding of such a felonious abstraction may in a proper case rest upon circumstantial evidence.
The facts are fully set out in the opinion of the Court of Appeal, and we do not propose to reiterate them in detail here. Generally summarized, they are as follows:
When the branch office of the plaintiffs closed at about 5:00 p. m. on October 3, 1961, there was on hand in cash more than $2700.00. Of this amount $2125.00 had been placed in an envelope or loan pocket and put in the middle drawer of a filing cabinet or safe which could be locked with a key. The remaining cash had been placed in a small iron box in the bottom drawer of this cabinet or safe. During business hours the office had two employees, the manager and a secretary, and according to their testimony both the filing cabinet and the office were locked when they left that daj\ These employees returned to the office at or before 9:00 o'clock the following morning, and in preparation of the day's business unlocked the safe. During the early afternoon one of them discovered that the loan pocket containing the $2125.00 was missing, this loan pocket having been one of about 400 in the safe drawer. There had been no forcible entry into the office or into the safe where the money had been left the evening before. Only the manager, the secretary, the bookkeeper, and the porter had keys to the office, and only the first three had keys to the safe. The only persons who knew of the practice of putting money into a loan pocket and placing it in the safe among other loan pockets were two officers of the corporations, the manager, the secretary, and the bookkeeper. Plaintiffs' office was a small one, and the safe was under a counter within an enclosed area to which the public had no access. On the day the money was missed only five or six customers came into the office, none of them went into the enclosed space, and there was no time during this period when the office was left unattended by the two employees present.
There is no evidence in this case which would establish theft of the funds by a forcible entry of the office or the safe. Under the circumstantial evidence adduced there is possible the inference that the fnnds were stolen either by one of the persons having keys to the office and the safe or by some third person who was in the office during business hours on the day the funds were missed. All the persons who had keys to the office or the safe were called as plaintiffs' witnesses, and all denied taking the missing money. Their integrity or honesty is not questioned by the plaintiffs, and the president of the plaintiff corporations himself stated that he had no reason to believe that these persons were dishonest, and that he had no evidence that any of them had ever taken any property belonging to the corporations. Under these circumstances any inference that the missing money was taken by one of these employees is destroyed by evidence adduced by the plaintiffs themselves. There then remains only an inference that the money was taken by some third party, but this inference also is destroyed by plaintiff's own evidence. As stated by the Court of Appeal, "A theft of the money by a customer or a stranger during office hours seems to have been highly improbable, if not impossible. First, he would have had to know that the money was kept in a loan pocket in the safe drawer, which was apparently a closely guarded secret. Secondly, he would Lave had to lean well over the railing and then open the safe drawer without being seen or heard by plaintiffs' employees which they said could not well have been done. Thirdly, he would have had to single out the loan pocket containing the money which was sandwiched among 400 similar loan pockets".
Thus we can only conclude, as did the district court and the Court of Appeal, that the plaintiffs have not proved by a preponderance of the evidence that their loss was covered by the blanket bond insurance.
Plaintiffs-relators argue that in sustaining the judgment of the district court the Court of Appeal did not apply the rule outlined in the case of Holder v. Lockwood, La.App., 92 So.2d 768, to the effect that when an insurer seeks to avoid a circumstantial showing of coverage by setting up an exception in the policy, this constitutes a matter of defense which the insurer must affirmatively prove. The holding in the Lockwood case is not pertinent or applicable to the facts of this case, for the insurance company here is not pleading an exception or exclusion found in the policy in order to avoid payment under the policy.
The judgment of the Court of Appeal is affirmed; relators are to pay all costs.