Bordelon v. Comeaux Furniture & Appliance, Inc.

701 So. 2d 1032, 97 La.App. 5 Cir. 405, 1997 La. App. LEXIS 2430, 1997 WL 631860
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 15, 1997
DocketNo. 97-CA-405
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 701 So. 2d 1032 (Bordelon v. Comeaux Furniture & Appliance, Inc.) 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
Bordelon v. Comeaux Furniture & Appliance, Inc., 701 So. 2d 1032, 97 La.App. 5 Cir. 405, 1997 La. App. LEXIS 2430, 1997 WL 631860 (La. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

JiBOWES, Judge.

Plaintiff, Marty Bordelon d/b/a Pyramid Cleaning Company (“Pyramid”), appeals a judgment of the First Parish Court for the Parish of Jefferson awarding him $1,440.00, plus interest and costs, with the exception that each party bear its own expert fees, alleging that this is an insufficient amount; and that the trial court erred in not awarding to him attorney fees and expert witness fees. We disagree and, therefore, affirm as follows.

Pyramid filed suit against Comeaux Furniture and Appliance Company (“Comeaux”) on an open account. Pyramid averred that pursuant to an oral contract, Comeaux hired Pyramid to clean a portion of carpeting 12in its store on Veterans Highway, which Pyramid did, and for which it was paid at the rate of twenty cents per square foot of carpeting, or $186.16. After payment for the initial work, Comeaux requested cleaning to additional portions of carpeting, which plaintiff again completed. An invoice of $3,630.64 was submitted to defendant, which defendant failed to pay. Pyramid avers that Comeaux is liable under the oral contract, and alternatively, under the principles of quantum meru-it and/or unjust enrichment for payment of the invoice, plus interests, costs, and attorney fees as provided by La. R.S. 9:2781.

EVIDENCE AND TESTIMONY

At trial, Bordelon testified that in his eleven years of self-employment in the carpet cleaning business, it has been his normal practice to charge by the room for residential cleaning and by the square foot for commercial cleaning. At the request of Comeaux, Bordelon went with his assistant, Jay Cadis, to the store, and Comeaux showed them the area that he wanted them to clean. Borde-lon and Cadis measured the area, figured the square footage and gave a price of $186.16. That price reflected the charge of $.20 per square foot, plus $2.00 per stair, and 4% tax. Bordelon told Comeaux at the time that while the price may have seemed high, it was a lot of work so he would be charged the twenty cents per square foot.

[1034]*1034After the first section was completed, Co-meaux was very satisfied and requested they come back and clean the rest of the store. They were to |3clean the open areas, and not to move the heavy furniture. It was Borde-lon’s understanding that the cleaning would be on the same basis as that of the first, and there was no discussion of a different price.

On attempting to clean on the first night, Bordelon and his assistant found it took longer than anticipated because of shampoo residue in the carpet, because the heater of his machine was not working properly, and because this was the dirtiest part of carpet. On the second night, he brought his assistant and another cleaner, Dave Chryssoverges of Econo Clean, to help.

According to plaintiff, an hourly rate for the work was never discussed. The two invoices for the subsequent work was computed on the twenty cents per square foot basis; however, the invoices introduced into evidence did not contain the area calculation. However, plaintiff did introduce a paper with his square footage calculation. Bordelon testified initially that he gave the written estimates to Comeaux prior to beginning the job. On Day one he and his assistant worked about four hours to clean the carpet in the front of the store, about 720 square feet; it took five hours for four people on Day two to clean and on Day three it also took about five hours (for four people). Some of this cleaning was in areas recleaned at the request of Comeaux.

Usually, Bordelon could clean 1,000 square feet of carpet per hour. It was faster to work upstairs in a wider area because it wasn’t as soiled, and phe did not have to maneuver in and around furniture. On rebuttal, Bordelon was adamant that he computed precisely the square footage for the first night’s job. He estimated that he got to the job at about 8:00 p.m. and left around 2:00 a.m.

On cross examination, Bordelon stated that he only measured the carpet prior to cleaning on the first day (720 square feet); on the second and third day, he measured everything he cleaned after the cleaning.

Jay Cadis, who worked with Bordelon, testified that Bordelon measured the area and he would write down the footage. He was “pretty sure” an estimate based on those numbers was given. Bordelon never charges by the hour, but he did tell Comeaux he would charge $.20 per square foot. He didn’t remember how much Bordelon paid him the first night, but on the second and third night she received between $100.00-130.00.

Norman Comeaux testified for the defendant that he did not remember being quoted a price for the cleaning by the square foot or by the hour, but was told that the first day’s cleaning would cost between $150.00-200.00 to clean a certain area. The first time he saw the first bill was when it was presented for payment after the job was done, and he did not recall previously seeing a written estimate. Comeaux assumed that Bordelon charged $200.00 per night, and he could hire him to spend that same amount of time to clean other areas of the store. On days two and three Isthere was more machinery and more men, although they spent the same amount of time, about four hours. He did recall seeing Bordelon measuring at the time of the second day, but was never told how many square feet were to be cleaned. He did not ask Bordelon anything about the price, and did not see the bill until after completion of the work. It was “common sense” that Bordelon would charge by a measuring device, but Comeaux did not know what the charge would be.

George Ferris testified as an expert on behalf of plaintiff on general carpet cleaning, restoration, and practices within the industry for pricing. He stated that there is a “blue book” or pricing guide for all of the trades in the carpet industry for certain types of services. After looking at the store, Ferris testified that the $.20 per square foot price was fair or low for what he considered to be a restorative cleaning. According to the witness, the blue book showed that the $.20 price was for light cleaning. In the course of business, Ferris only quotes prices by square footage for commercial jobs. Like Mr. Bor-delon, he did not like to quote the square footage unless specifically requested, because it takes a lot of time to measure.

[1035]*1035Ferris felt that when furniture has to be moved, a reasonable price would be $.25 per square foot. The standard in this area is to charge by the room for residential jobs, and by the square footage in commercial jobs. He had never heard of charging by the hour. Ferris felt that the price | (¡charged by Borde-lon for the work done was fair, and that he would have charged more.

Mr. Bob Rispoli was accepted as defendant’s expert witness. He testified that when he works on a square footage basis, he measures the area ahead of time so as to let the customer know what to expect. He sometimes quotes the footage to the customer. He only does a job by the hour if it is spot cleaning. The industry standard is to do a commercial job by the square foot only, and Rispoli also does residential jobs by this standard. It is not an industry standard to do jobs without giving prices in advance.

He felt that a range of charge for the Comeaux job would be between $.19 and $.20 per square foot, or perhaps a little higher. If the job had to be done at night and furniture had to be moved, the price could be higher still. He had never heard of carpet cleaners charging by the hour.

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Bluebook (online)
701 So. 2d 1032, 97 La.App. 5 Cir. 405, 1997 La. App. LEXIS 2430, 1997 WL 631860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bordelon-v-comeaux-furniture-appliance-inc-lactapp-1997.