Cox v. Rockhold

128 So. 702, 14 La. App. 170, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 409
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 2, 1930
DocketNo. 3770
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 128 So. 702 (Cox v. Rockhold) 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
Cox v. Rockhold, 128 So. 702, 14 La. App. 170, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 409 (La. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

The above are separate suits, but, as the questions in each are identical and as they were tried together in the district court, we shall consider them as one.

The defendant, S. J. Rockhold, is, it seems, a contractor and builder. He owned a tract of land situated partly within and partly without the corporate limits of Jonesboro, Jackson parish, which tract he subdivided into lots. Beginning in the latter part of November, 1927, and continuing through a period of something over a year, he erected ten small residences on his tract or subdivision, each, it seems, on a separate lot. He built these houses himself on his own property and for his own account.

He employed J. P. Gable to do the plumbing work for all ten houses, and agreed to pay $215 per house for the water plumbing, including fixtures, which consisted of a bathtub, lavatory, commode, hot water tank, and kitchen sink for each house, and agreed to pay $20 additional for the gas plumbing in each house. The contract price for the plumbing in the ten houses amounted to $2,350.

The day on which Rockhold began to build these houses is not definitely fixed, but it must have been in the latter part of November, 1927, as it is shown that Rockhold’s contract with Gable, the plumber, was entered into about December 15th, and he began work on that date, there being one and probably two houses completed at that time. As Rockhold was building the houses himself and not by contract, the work seems to have proceeded slowly, so that the last of the ten houses must have been completed more than a year after the first was begun. The testimony does not show whether he was doing work or having it done on more than one house at the same time. It is shown, however, that his building program included the erection of ten houses on his subdivision, and that he made one contract with the plumber, Gable, to do the plumbing work on all ten houses at an upset rprice of $2,350, including gas plumbing and the fixtures, this being figured at $235 per house.

On March 19, 1928, some three months after the plumber had begun his work on the houses built up to that time, Rock-hold mortgaged a portion of this subdivision, including lots on which some of these houses were built, to the plaintiffs, J. E. Cox and Paul P. Stinson, for $7,000, which mortgage was recorded. In November following, he mortgaged to J. E. Cox other portions of the property, including all improvements, for $10,000, which mortgage was also recorded.

In April, 1929, plaintiffs, Cox and Stinson, brought foreclosure proceedings by executory process against Rockhold, the property mortgaged being seized and advertised for sale. But, before the date of sale, the plumber, Gable, intervened, claiming the first privilege on the buildings which he had plumbed, for the unpaid balance due him, and asked that these buildings and lots be sold separately from the other property subject to plaintiffs’ mortgages, and that the proceeds be held until further orders of the court. The court ordered a separate sale, and the proceeds held, as prayed for.

Gable, the plumber, made out a sworn statement of his account, and had it recorded on May 18, 1929, which he claims was within sixty days after the completion of the work. The claim of Gable against Rockhold for the balance due him for plumbing the houses is not contested; but the plaintiffs, Cox and Stinson, contend, [172]*172first: that Gable has no privilege because his contract with Rockhold for the plumbing was not reduced to writing and no bond given; second, that a sworn statement of his account- was not recorded within sixty days after the work was completed, as required by Act 298 of 1926; third, that; if it be held that Gable has a lien, it is subordinate to theirs, having-been recorded subsequently. We dispose of these contentions in the order named:

(1) Section 2, Act No. 298 of 1926, which was in force at the time these transactions took place, provides that every. contract entered into for the construction or improvement" of any work on immovable property by any undertaker, general contractor, or master mechanic or other person undertaking such general contract with the owner, shall be reduced to writing, signed by the parties thereto, and shall be recorded before the date fixed for the beginning of the work and not more than thirty days after the date of the contract, “and such recordation shall preserve the liens and privileges which are created by this act on the building or other work of improvement, and on the land on which it is situated, in favor of every undertaker, architect, consulting engineer, contractor, master mechanic, or contracting engineer, and all sub-contractors, workmen, journeymen, cartmen, truckmen, laborers,'mechanics, or furnishers of material,” etc.

It is contended by counsel for plaintiff that this method of preserving liens in favor of those who perform work or furnish material for the improvement of real estate is exclusive; that one who contracts to do such work as plumbing houses can preserve his lien in no other way than by having his contract for doing the work reduced to writing and recorded.

The error into which counsel has fallen results from the fact that they seem to have overlooked section 12 of the same act which provides that, when the owner himself undertakes the construction of the work for his own account, and “for which no contract has been entered into, or when a contract has been entered into but has not been recorded, as and when required by this act, then any person furnishing service or material or performing any labor on said building or other work may record in the office of the Clerk of Court or Recorder of Mortgages in the parish in which said work is being done or has been done a copy of his estimate or an affidavit of his claim or an;/ other writing evidencing same, which recordation, if done within sixty days after the date of the last delivery of all material upon said property or the last performance of all services or labor upon the same, by said furnisher of material or said laborer, shall create a lien and privilege upon the building or other structure and upon the land upon which it is situated, in favor of any such person who shall have performed service or labor or delivered material in connection with the said work of improvement, as his interest may appear.”

It is manifest, therefore, that the method prescribed in section 2 of the act for creating and preserving liens, that is, by having the contract for the work reduced to writing and recorded, is not exclusive. The method prescribed in section 12 of the act “creates liens and privileges” in cases like the one here presented. Rockhold owned the land on which he erected houses for his own account, or “for the account of said owner.” He let no contract for the building Of the houses; he was his own contractor, his own builder. Gable, the plumber, did precisely what this section of the act says one shall do when he does work for the owner who under[173]*173takes the work of construction for hipiself. He made out a sworn statement of his account, and had it recorded in the clerk’s office of the parish where the work was done. Such recordation, if done in time, created a lien in his favor on the building and the lots on which they were situated.

In the case of Hortman-Salmen Co., Inc., v. White, 168 La. 1067, 123 So. 715, 716, the Supreme Court held that the method prescribed by section 12 of this act is applicable where the owner lets no contract for the erection of the building. See Jahncke Service, Inc., v. McGuire et al., 9 La. App. 698, 119 So. 765.

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Bluebook (online)
128 So. 702, 14 La. App. 170, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-rockhold-lactapp-1930.