Anderson v. Visa, Ltd.

478 So. 2d 1346
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 12, 1985
Docket85-CA-315
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 478 So. 2d 1346 (Anderson v. Visa, Ltd.) 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.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Visa, Ltd., 478 So. 2d 1346 (La. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

478 So.2d 1346 (1985)

Glory Allen Ledford, Wife of/and Hugh R. ANDERSON, Jr.
v.
VISA, LTD., 20th Century Homes, Inc. and Charles Ray Eaton.

No. 85-CA-315.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

November 12, 1985.

*1347 Jennifer N. Willis, Michael Florio, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellees.

Michael J. Moran, Rebecca B. Mache, Metairie, for defendant-appellant.

Before KLIEBERT, GRISBAUM and DUFRESNE, JJ.

DUFRESNE, Judge.

This is an appeal by Visa, Ltd. (now 20th Century Homes, Inc.), defendant-appellant, from a judgment in quanti minoris in favor of Hugh Anderson and his wife Glory Ledford, plaintiffs-appellees. The allegations which plaintiffs sought to prove at trial were that a new house which they purchased from the builder, Visa, had not been completed as per contract, and was built on a defective foundation. After trial on the merits, the trial court awarded plaintiffs $2,000 as costs for completing the house according to the contract. This award is not contested here. He also found that the foundation was defective and awarded $15,000 to correct that condition. *1348 Finally, he awarded $5,000 in attorney fees pursuant to La.Civ.Code art. 2545, noting that a builder of a home is presumed to know of its vices.

Because our review of the record discloses neither manifest factual error, nor prejudicial procedural error, we affirm.

The pertinent facts are these. In July, 1980, the Andersons bought a new house from Visa, the builder. They moved into the house before it was completed, but with the understanding that all work was to be finished by the builder. When a disagreement arose between the parties over whether completion of certain work was the responsibility of Visa, the Andersons filed suit for a reduction of the purchase price for defects in the house. The original petition was filed in July, 1981, and an amended petition followed in May, 1982. Attached to this amended petition was a list of defects which included cracks in the sheetrock and in the exterior brickwork. During June through August, 1982, a sixfoot deep below ground swimming pool was built in the back yard of the house.

Duane Crump, an architect and expert for the plaintiffs, examined the house in January of 1983. During that examination he determined that the slab of the house was settling unevenly. This was the first indication to the plaintiffs that some defect in the slab may have been responsible for problems in the structure of the house. In February, 1984, a survey conducted by R.L. Schumann showed conclusively that the slab had settled some two inches more in the center than at the edges.

Trial of the matter was held on April 23-24, and on August 27-29, 1984. During the April phase of the trial, George Schrenk, plaintiffs' expert on foundation design, testified. His opinion then as to the probable cause of the settling was that the fill dirt placed on the lot had not been allowed to sit on the site for a long enough time before the piles were driven. His technical term for what he thought was happening was "down drag". This occurs, he explained, because the weight of fill dirt gradually compresses the underlying soil. Thus, if pilings are driven before this compression is substantially completed, they get drawn downward along with the underlying soil as it continues to be compressed by the weight of the fill. He further stated that the greatest compression occurs in the center of the filled site, and he found this compatable with the two inch differential between the elevations at the edges, and those at the center of the house.

Although the briefs of the parties in this court do not explain the four month hiatus in this trial, it is apparent from the record that the delay was occasioned by third party demands made by Visa. Specifically, on March 30, 1984, less than four weeks before trial was to begin, and almost three years after the original suit was filed, Visa made Royce Waters and the City of Kenner third party defendants. The allegations against these parties were that Waters, Kenner's City engineer when the house was being built, had incorrectly redesigned the piling plan of the house before giving city approval for its construction, and this improper plan was the cause of the house settling. Waters requested and was granted a 30 day extension of time within which to answer this demand, on April 24, 1984. It is evident, therefore, that the trial could not proceed further until the third party defendants had answered and completed discovery.

During the break in the trial, new discoveries by all parties led to revision of both the Andersons' and Visa's theories of the cause of the settlement. First, Visa's soil and foundation expert, Berkley Taughber, discovered in a May test, that the water table at the site was only some 18 inches below the surface, rather than five feet as he previously believed. The 18 inch figure was confirmed by additional tests of August 7th and August 23rd. Second, Waters, in the company of plaintiffs' expert, excavated four pilings on the site on August 10th and discovered that there was a gap of some two inches between the slab and the top of these pilings.

When trial resumed on August 27th, Visa dismissed Waters and the City of Kenner as third party defendants, and Waters *1349 subsequently testified as a fact witness for the Andersons. The substance of his testimony as indicated above was that when the four pilings were excavated, they were not in contact with the slab, and they had sand on their tops. Irving Bergeron, a neighbor of the Andersons, testified that he watched the slab being poured. He stated that on the day before the pouring, the tops of the pilings were protruding above the fill dirt, but that a rainstorm during the night had washed the fill dirt over the tops of the pilings. He further testified that the cement was simply poured over the fill dirt without first removing the covering dirt to re-expose the tops of the pilings.

All of the experts in the case agreed that if the slab was poured in the manner described by Bergeron, it would be improper construction and settling would occur. Based on this new information, George Scherenk, plaintiffs' expert, changed his opinion as to the main cause of the settling. While he still thought that "down drag" may have played some part in the problem, he was convinced that the failure of the pilings to penetrate up into the concrete slab was the major factor.

Defendant's expert, Berkley Taughber, also admitted that sand on the pilings would cause settling. However, he was not persuaded that that was the problem here. He based that opinion on the fact that pilings are not all driven to the same depth, and if the slab were settling down to the pilings, there would be an erratic settling rather than the somewhat uniform settlement in the center of the house as shown by the survey. His explanation for the problem was, instead, that it was caused by the swimming pool excavation. He admitted that when he first examined the house, he ascribed the settlement to "down drag" on the pilings, rather than the pool excavation. He had reached this initial conclusion on the assumption of a water table five feet below the surface. However, on learning in May, 1984, after the first phase of the trial, that the table was only 18 inches below ground, he revised his opinion.

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Bluebook (online)
478 So. 2d 1346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-visa-ltd-lactapp-1985.