Barraque v. Neff

11 So. 2d 697, 202 La. 360, 1942 La. LEXIS 1356
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 30, 1942
DocketNo. 35891.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 11 So. 2d 697 (Barraque v. Neff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barraque v. Neff, 11 So. 2d 697, 202 La. 360, 1942 La. LEXIS 1356 (La. 1942).

Opinions

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

This is a suit against a contractor and the surety on his bond for the cost of remedying defects in a building which was constructed for the plaintiff. The judge of the district court, after hearing the evidence, rejected the plaintiff’s demand. She is appealing from the judgment.

The testimony leaves no doubt that the defects complained of — consisting mainly of cracks and leaks in the walls of the building — appeared within a very short time — and had developed into very serious defects within a year — after the building was completed. And it is virtually conceded that the cause of the cracks and leaks was that the walls were made of a very porous material, called super-rock, which absorbed too much moisture. Super-rock is a composition of cement and cinders, molded into building blocks. It was something new in Shreveport at the time when this contract was entered into; hence the contractors and builders there generally were not well informed of the fitness of super-rock for. the construction of the walls of buildings in this climate. The evidence indicates that super-rock is perhaps suitable for the construction of the walls of buildings if they are waterproofed permanently by an outside finish. But in this instance the walls were finished in stucco and the absorption of moisture after hard rains, and the expansion and contraction of the super-rock, caused the walls to crack in many places and to let in the moisture to such an extent that the inside plastering was badly blemished. The consequence was that the house was hardly tenantable, until the owner had the house brick-veneered, and had it renovated inside and out.

*364 The plaintiff bases her suit upon certain clauses in the contract which required that the contractor should provide and pay for the materials and labor and that the workmanship and' materials should be of good quality. But the suit is founded particularly upon the following clause in the contract: “The Contractor shall re-execute any work that fails to conform to the requirements of the contract and that appears during the progress of the work, and shall remedy any defects due to faulty materials or workmanship which appear within a period of one year from the date of completion of the contract.” [The italics are ours.]

According to that clause, the contractor was not only obliged to re-execute any work that failed to conform with the plans and specifications — or with the so-called “requirements of the contract”— and that so appeared during the progress of the work — but he was obliged also to remedy any defect due to faulty material or workmanship if any such defect appeared within a year after the completion of the building. There is no doubt that the defects in this case, which appeared within the year after the completion of the building, were due to faulty material or workmanship, because the using of super-rock without water-proofing the walls proved to be faulty construction. The question therefore is whether the mistake of using super-rock, in the way in which it was used, is attributable to the contractor or to the plaintiff. The defendants plead that the use of super-rock for the construction of the walls was specified in the contract, and that the work was done under the supervision of a competent and experienced building inspector employed by the plaintiff. The defendants contend that the building was completed in a workmanlike manner, and they aver that the cracks and leaks in the walls were caused either by the expansion and contraction of the super-rock or by the settling of the building because of defects in the soil. The evidence shows conclusively that there was no defect in the soil, no unusual settling of the walls, and shows that the cracks and leaks in the walls were caused entirely by absorption of moisture and by expansion and contraction of the super-'rock. Our opinion is that the contractor is the one who is responsible for the mistake of using super-rock as it was used in this instance. Mrs. Barraque knew nothing about super-rock before the contractor suggested and recommended it. She desired brick-veneered walls, and was very reluctant in accepting the contractor’s recommendation of super-rock. He designed the building, drew the plans and specifications, and 'prepared the contract for Mrs. Barraque’s signature. She had no architect to advise her or to supervise the construction of the building. The inspector whom she employed was regularly employed as a building inspector for a building and loan association; and his duties in this instance, as he understood them and described them in his testimony as a witness for the defendants, consisted merely of seeing that the construction of the building was being done according to the terms of the contract. He acknowledged in his testimony that if the building *366 and loan association had intended to make a loan on the building he would have recommended furring between the super-rock walls and the plastering inside of the building. And when he was asked why he did not make that recommendation for the benefit or protection of Mrs. Barraque he replied that it was not required by the contract for the construction of the building. He made it very plain that his employment was merely to see that the work was being done according to the specifications of the contract, and that he was not employed to advise Mrs. Barraque with regard to any unforeseen consequence of the method or material with which the work was done. The doctrine that a contractor is not responsible for unforeseen and unfavorable consequences of work which he does in conformity with plans and specifications furnished him by the party for whom the work is done, or by an architect employed by such party, is not applicable to the facts of this case. Mrs. Barraque did not, by consenting to the use of super-rock for the construction of the walls of her building, or by employing an inspector to inspect the work as it progressed, abandon her right to depend upon the contractor’s guaranty that he would remedy any defect that might result from faulty materials or workmanship and that might appear within a year after the completion of the building.

The defendants cite and rely upon the decisions in the following cases: Fremont v. Harris, 9 Rob. 23; Le Duff v. Porche, 5 La.Ann. 148; Powell v. Markham, 18 La. Ann. 581; Police Jury of Vernon Parish v. Johnson, 111 La. 279, 35 So. 550; and Louisiana Shipbuilding Co. v. Bing Dampskibsaktieselskab [perhaps it should be Dampskibsaktieselskabit], 158 La. 548, 104 So. 364.

None of the decisions cited supports the defense in this case. For example, in Fremont v. Harris, it is indicated in the syllabus that the burden of proof is on the plaintiff in a case like this to show that the cracks in the walls of the building were caused by bad material or bad workmanship, and not by an unfavorable condition in the soil; but in the concluding words of the opinion itself it is indicated plainly that cracks in the walls of a new building create a presumption that it was badly constructed; for it is said: “In the present case, the presumption resulting from the cracks in the walls, that the house was badly constructed, is rebutted by the concurrent testimony of the witnesses examined on the trial.”

Le Duff v. Porche was a suit by a contractor for the contract price, $250, under a verbal contract, for installing a set of sugar kettles for the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
11 So. 2d 697, 202 La. 360, 1942 La. LEXIS 1356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barraque-v-neff-la-1942.