Blodgett Const. Co. v. Board of Com'rs

96 So. 281, 153 La. 623, 1922 La. LEXIS 2530
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 29, 1922
DocketNo. 24199
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 96 So. 281 (Blodgett Const. Co. v. Board of Com'rs) 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
Blodgett Const. Co. v. Board of Com'rs, 96 So. 281, 153 La. 623, 1922 La. LEXIS 2530 (La. 1922).

Opinions

LAND, J.

Plaintiff has instituted this suit against defendant levee board to recover the sum of $3,024,22, the balance due on work done in the dredging of Kelly bayou in the parish of Caddo.

Dutton and Nattin intervened, claiming the funds sued for. To this petition of intervention plaintiff tendered an exception of no cause of action and a motion to strike out'. This exception and motion were overruled, and plaintiff answered the intervention, with reservation of all rights under said exception and motion.

The defendant levee board answered, admitting that the indebtedness claimed - was due either plaintiff, or int'ervener, or both, and deposited the full amount in the registry of court, and disclaimed further interest in the controversy. The ease went to trial on these issues, resulting in a judgment in favor of plaintiff for $2,102.72, and in favor of interveners for $922.50, and taxing the costs equally between plaintiff and interveners.

Interveners have appealed from this judgment, and plaintiff has answered the appeal, praying that the judgment of the district court be so amended as to dismiss the demands of the interveners and order the entire fund paid over to plaintiff.

The exception of no cause of action is not' well founded, as the facts well pleaded in the petition of intervention, if taken as true for the purpose of trying said exception, would clearly entitle interveners to recover.

The motion to .strike out is based on the ground that the issues raised by intervener are entirely foreign to the main issue, and foreign to all issues to be determined between plaintiff and defendant, that interveners’ demand for future profits as damages for the violation of the contract by plaintiff must be raised by independent suit, and that no intervention can be allowed in plaintiff’s suit, which is in the nature of a mandamus proceeding.

This suit is analogous to a concensus proceeding, in which plaintiff and interveners each claim a fund of $3,024.22, admitted to be due to either or both by defendant levee board, under a contract entered into originally with interveners by said board, and sublet and assigned in part by interveners to plaintiff. Interveners also claim, in addition to the main demand, damages for prospective profits because of the failure of the plaintiff to complete its part of the contract under the assignment.

As plaintiff and interveners are each claiming the amount admitted to be due by defendant levee- board under a contract to which each of them is a party, and under which their conflicting claims have arisen, evidently interveners’ petition is not foreign to the issues involved in the main action. Interveners having an interest in opposing plaintiff’s claim, have a right to intervene or interplead in the present suit. C. P. articles 389, 390.

An intervener, like a defendant, may also institute demands incidental t'o the main action, such as for damages, without the necessity of bringing an independent' suit. C. P. art. 364 ; Howell v. Mundy, 145 La. 297, 298, 82 South. 274.

[627]*627As the suit brought by plaintiff is not a mandamus proceeding, the right to intervene in such a proceeding is not an issue before the court for decision, although such right has been -recognized by this court in the case of State v. Pilsbury, 31 La. Ann. 8, and in a quite recent decision of this court in the case of Continental Supply Co. v. Fontenot, Sheriff, Dalbey, Intervener, 152 La. 912, 94 South. 441.

Plaintiff has assigned in this court as error:

(1) “The district court erred in overruling plaintiff’s exception of no cause of action and motion to strike out.”

The ruling of the trial judge is, in our1 opinion, correct for the reasons already assigned.

(2) “The district court erred in not sustaining the objection of plaintiff to the testimony of interveners for the reasons stated in the objection which was .made general.”

A detailed list of items claimed as due interveners was presented by counsel to the witness Dutton, a member of the partnership of Dutton and Nattin, and the question was asked whether said list was correct or not. Counsel for plaintiff then objected to the answer of the witness on the sole ground “that interveners cannot institute an intervention for an action in damages for violation of a contract.” Transcript, p. 74. This issue has been disposed of already in this opinion adversely to the contention of able counsel for plaintiff.

(3) “The lower court erred in holding that that testimony enlarged the pleadings so as to entitle the intervener to recover for items not sued - on.”

We have carefully read the examination of the witnesses as disclosed by the record, and fail to flndvany such objection urged in the lower court to the testimony of any witness.

The' district judge, in his writ-ten opinion on the merits, states that the account offered “was not objected to on the ground that it sought to prove an indebtedness not alleged in the intervention,” but was objected to “for the reason that interveners cannot substitute an intervention for an action in damages for violation of a contract.”

The objection urged to the admissibility of this testimony at the time of its introduction was properly overruled. The opinion, however, states that:

“Intervener contends that the items not being objected to on the latter ground (enlargement of pleadings) they enlarge the pleading, and, if proof is found sufficient, should be allowed. We think the authorities support this contention and will allow such items as are proved.”

The list referred to and offered in evidence by interveners reads'as follows:

Statement.

(1) By contract October 6, 1916.............. $ 250 00

(2) By contract October 6, 1916.............. ISO 00

(3) Feb. 10, 1917, due on estimate 11........ 10 00

(4) March 10, 1917, due on estimate 12...... 11 62

(5) April 2, due on estimate 13.............. 10 50

(6) May 10, due on estimate 14.............. 12 OO

(7) 1/12/16. Team" rental and drill press____ 75 00

(8) 1/30/16. Deducted in error from Dutton and Nattin’s portion of estimate No. 10 (Henderson’s charge)................ 39 28

(9) Dutton and Nattin’s 20 per cent, hold-back on actual yardage dug........... 684 80

(10)$1.69 on 122,496 yards being deflcient yardage ................................. 2,070 18

''$3,815 38

(11)Fel(. 17. Clearing by Blodgett (credit) 37 50

$3,275 88

(12)Interest at 6 per cent, on same from October 1, 1916.......................... 98 00

$3,373 88

Plaintiff itself, by annexing to and making a part of its petition, and by filing in evidence the original contract between interveners and the levee board, the subcontract between interveners and plaintiff, and the supplemental contract between the same par-' ties, has enlarged the pleadings as to item (1) $250 and item (2) $150. It is stipulated in said subcontract of date October 6, 1916, that’ interveners (Dutton and Nattin) “agree to furnish and pay for all flues, shafts, and: gears and for certain plates for boom repairs, [629]*629all of which are now being made and supplied by the W. K. Henderson Iron Works & .Supply Company.

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Bluebook (online)
96 So. 281, 153 La. 623, 1922 La. LEXIS 2530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blodgett-const-co-v-board-of-comrs-la-1922.