Cook v. Ruston Oil Mills & Fertilizer Co.

127 So. 347, 170 La. 10, 1930 La. LEXIS 1661
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 3, 1930
DocketNo. 28647.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 127 So. 347 (Cook v. Ruston Oil Mills & Fertilizer Co.) 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
Cook v. Ruston Oil Mills & Fertilizer Co., 127 So. 347, 170 La. 10, 1930 La. LEXIS 1661 (La. 1930).

Opinion

ROGERS, J.

This is a proceeding in concurso brought by the owner against the contractor, his surety, materialmen, and laborers under a building contract entered into on August 2, 192®. The contract called for the erection on plaintiff’s lot in the town of Ruston of a brick dwelling for the price of $7,250. A contractor’s bond in the sum of $5,000 was furnished, and both the contract and bond were inscribed in the parish records.

The work was begun on or about September 1, 1923, and, after it had reached a certain point, was abandoned by the contractor and taken over and completed by the owner when the surety .company, although duly notified, had refused to do so.

The building contract was executed pursuant to the provisions of Act No. 139 of 1922. Plaintiff alleged full compliance on his part with the statutory provisions, and deposited in the registry of the court $282.95, the balance remaining in his hands of the contract price, after he had completed the work on the default of the contractor. He prayed for a eoncursus in which the various claimants might assert their claims against the contractor and his surety and for the release of his property from all liens. The liens amounted in the aggregate to '$7,194.76.

The defendants pleaded fraud and collusion between the owner and the contractor, insufficiency of the bond, material changes in the contract, and anticipation of payments.

The surety on the contractor’s bond impleaded the Ruston Hardware & Furniture Company, one of the claimants, as its indemnitor on the bond.

On these issues, two judgments were rendered. The first judgment was annulled on appeal and the case remanded, because the court below had excluded certain testimony. See Cook v. Ruston Oil Mills & Fertilizer Co., 161 La. 876, 109 So. 534. On the second trial, the court below rendered judgment in favor of all but one of the claimants against the contractor and his surety for the amount of their respective. claims, limiting the amount of recovery against the surety company to the amount of the bond, ordering the payment of the costs out of the proceeds of the bond and the amount on deposit in the registry of the court, the balance to be paid pro rata to the claimants, and decreeing the cancellation of the liens on plaintiff’s property. The judgment further rejected the demand of the surety company against the Ruston Hardware & Furniture Company as indemnitor.

This appeal is by thirteen of the claimants and by the surety company.

Plaintiff has moved for the dismissal of all the appeals, except the one taken by the surety company.

Plaintiff alleges as grounds for his motion to dismiss the appeals:

(1) That the transcript of appeal was not filed within the time prescribed by law.

(2) That the order obtained by the surety company for an extension of time within which to file the transcript did not inure to the benefit of the other appellants; their interests being diverse to that of the surety company.

*18 (3) That, additionally, as to the appeal of E. A. Gaar, no order of appeal was obtained by the appellant.

The record fails to show that appellant E. A. Gaar obtained an order of appeal. Hence as to him the motion to dismiss is well-founded. An appeal without an order granting it is nonexistent, and cannot be entertained by this court. Sammons v. N. O. Ry. & Light Co., 143 La. 731, 79 So. 320.

As to the other twelve claimants, the motion to dismiss must be denied. Those appellants, as well as the surety company, perfected their appeals by furnishing separate bonds of appeal. There was only one judgment rendered by the court below, and only one transcript was needed to present the appeals to this court. Conceding that the interests of the claimants and the surety company inter sese are diverse, nevertheless the interests of all of the appellants are common quoad plaintiff, the owner of the building. The surety company contends that the owner and his property are bound to the claimants for the full amount of their claims, and the claimants make the same contention. A judgment against the owner in favor of the surety company will undoubtedly benefit the claimants and accord with their demands. The case is within the doctrine of Gardner v. O’Keefe, 155 La. 447, 99 So. 398, rather than within the doctrine of Rojas & Conner v. Seeger, 122 La. 218, 47 So. 532.

Our conclusion is that the order for an extension of time procured by the surety company for the filing of the transcript of appeal' protected not only its own appeal but also the appeals of the other appellants.

Plaintiff applied to the court below for an order directing the clerk of court to furnish him with a certificate showing that no objection had been made by any claimant to the sufficiency or solvency of the surety on the contractor’s bond within ten days after the filing of the petition for a concursus. Plaintiff’s demand was based on section 4 of Act 139 of 1922, and his purpose was to present the clerk’s certificate to the recorder of mortgages and obtain 'the cancellation and erasure of all inscriptions created by the recordation of the contract, bond, and claims.

Plaintiff’s petition was filed in the office of the clerk of court on August 5, 1924. The claimants were served subsequent to August 6, 1924, the day on which the citations were dated and issued. All the answers were filed on or before August 16, 1924. Plaintiff contends that objection to the sufficiency and solvency of the contractor’s bond should have been urged on or before August 15, 1924.

It is true that section 4 of the statute provides for the issuance of a certificate by the clerk of court, if 'the sufficiency or solvency of the contractor’s bond is not objected to “within ten days after the filing’’ of the concursus. But it is equally ttue that section 2 of 'the statute provides that, if there are any recorded claims against the work, “the owner or other interested person may file a petition in a Court of competent jurisdiction citing all claimants, including the undertaker, contractor, master mechanic, or engineer, against whom said claims are filed and the surety on the bond, and shall therein assert whatever claim he has against any or all of them and require said claimants to assert their respective claims; and all of said claims shall be tried in concursus.”

The two sections of the statute referred to, when construed together, clearly disclose that the mere filing of the petition for a *20 concursus is not sufficient to bring the claimants into court; a citation to each claimant being indispensable for that purpose. The claimants are not required to assert their claims, including, necessarily, objections to the sufficiency or solvency of the surety on the contractor’s bond, until they are ordered to do so in the manner and form provided by law; that is -to say, until they are served with copies of the plaintiff’s petition together with citations addressed to them and prepared in accordance with the prescribed form.

It is significant that the ten days’ delay prescribed by the statute for making objections to the sufficiency or solvency of the contractor’s surety coincide with the ten days’ delay allowed by Code Prac. art. 180, for answering plaintiff’s suit.

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Bluebook (online)
127 So. 347, 170 La. 10, 1930 La. LEXIS 1661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-ruston-oil-mills-fertilizer-co-la-1930.