Crescent Coating Co., Inc. v. Berghman

480 So. 2d 1013
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 16, 1985
Docket85-CA-371
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 480 So. 2d 1013 (Crescent Coating Co., Inc. v. Berghman) 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
Crescent Coating Co., Inc. v. Berghman, 480 So. 2d 1013 (La. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

480 So.2d 1013 (1985)

CRESCENT COATING COMPANY, INC., Through its President, Patsy KNIGHT
v.
Joseph BERGHMAN.

No. 85-CA-371.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

December 16, 1985.
Rehearing Denied January 17, 1986.

*1014 Joseph Neves Marcal, III, New Orleans, for Crescent Coating Co., plaintiff-appellant.

Ronald P. Thibodeaux, Duplechin & Associates, Gretna, for Joseph Berghman, defendant-appellee.

Before BOUTALL, CHEHARDY and CURRAULT, JJ.

CHEHARDY, Judge.

This is a suit for $1,027.62 for services rendered and materials furnished under an oral building contract between plaintiff, Crescent Coating Company, Inc., and defendant, Joseph Berghman, an owner of the property.

Berghman answered in the form of a general denial and reconvened for damages for remedial work allegedly necessitated by plaintiff's unworkmanlike performance. Following trial on the merits judgment was rendered dismissing plaintiff's claim on the main demand and in favor of Berghman in the sum of $9,460 on the reconventional demand. Plaintiff has appealed.

To clarify this complex dispute, a detailed recital of facts is necessary; we will attempt to reconstruct the matter in chronological *1015 order since the parties differ in their interpretation of almost all of the facts.

Mr. and Mrs. Berghman own the property in suit in Terrytown, Louisiana. In 1981 the Berghmans decided to make certain improvements on their home consisting of construction of a driveway and enclosing a patio at the rear of the property. In August 1981 the Berghmans secured the necessary parish building permit for this work. The "owner" was listed as the contractor on the permit.

The driveway was constructed by Mr. Berghman, but the enclosure of the patio was a more complicated problem and Berghman sought estimates from various contractors. He was interested in quality work at the cheapest price. One of the companies which Berghman called was Crescent Coating Company, Inc. Mrs. Patsy Knight is president of the corporation and handles the bookkeeping duties and Frank F. Knight, Sr., her husband, is the company manager and estimator.

The Knights were just starting their business and the Berghmans appear to have been one of their first customers. The company ran an ad in the newspaper to do waterproofing, caulking, exterior painting and masonry repairs. According to Mr. Knight during this period he received a telephone call from Berghman asking if masonry repairs included laying a small brick wall.

Berghman admits he phoned Knight, but denies it was in response to the ad. He claims he never reads the newspapers and that he called Knight upon the recommendation of others. He knew he was dealing with a corporation, but at all times believed Knight was a general contractor.

Knight denies he ever represented himself as a general contractor, but he has a subcontractor's license. As a waterproofer he was closely associated with the brick laying trade and knew a professional bricklayer who could do that part of the job. Knight is used to working from plans and specifications and has 20 years of experience.

Following the phone conversation Knight went to see the patio. It was a standard 12-by-24-foot concrete patio adjacent to the back wall of the house. The Berghmans had no formal blueprints, plans or specifications. They wanted the room to have five floor-to-ceiling windows separated from each other by brick columns, a brick fireplace in the center of the room, and a back door.

Knight told them windows to the floor were impractical and dangerous when mowing a lawn, that a brick fireplace would be too heavy for the foundation without pilings, and that brick columns would take up 8 inches of space, leaving a very small room. He suggested starting the windows 18 inches above the floor, substituting a metal heatilator for the brick fireplace and enlarging the area by removing the existing slab and laying a larger one.

The Berghmans accepted all of the suggestions except that of removing the old slab. They did not want to build a new slab because it was too expensive. It is very clear from the record that money was uppermost in their thoughts in all areas of this construction.

Knight claims he then suggested repairing a crack in the existing slab, topping the slab with 2 inches of epoxy and extending it, but Berghman was concerned that there might not be enough headroom with the addition of 2 inches to the slab.[1]

Berghman then asked if they could add to the existing slab and Knight indicated he could add a 10-inch-by-10-inch footing and connect it with the existing slab and put the brick wall up from the footing.

We conclude from the testimony that the parties agreed to the footing and the brickwork as above described and that the work was to begin the following Monday.

*1016 Berghman was to supply the cement and plaintiff was to supply all other materials including the forms and bricks, make the concrete and supply two workmen to do the job. The work was to take one week. The footing was to be tied into the existing slab and the walls where necessary were to be joined onto the existing house. Plaintiff contends the price was to be $2,500, and defendant's understanding of the agreement was that the cost would run between $2,000 to $2,300.[2]

Plaintiff was responsible only for building the footing and the brick wall. It was not called upon to provide or install the windows, the door or the roof, as Mr. Berghman was doing as much as he could himself or with the help of friends.

In an effort to speed up the work, before the men were to arrive that Monday, Berghman tilled the soil around the slab and dug out the area where the addition to their existing slab was to be poured. This was not his responsibility and it was certainly not discussed or contemplated by the contract.

For reasons unexplained in the record, no one arrived to work on Monday. On Tuesday afternoon four men arrived and spent three hours making and laying the wooden forms to receive the concrete. The forms were placed in the trench dug by Mr. Berghman. It is unclear how deep the trench was. Berghman says he merely ran the tiller around the outside perimeter of the existing slab to make it easier for the crew to pour the concrete and that it was not intended to be a finished product.

However one of the workmen said the trench was deep, another described it as small, and Mrs. Berghman in a letter to the Better Business Bureau shortly after the footing was completed, and after defendant had received a bill, stated the bill was excessive because her husband had done 50% of the work.

Mrs. Berghman started to keep accurate records of the work done and the hours spent when four men arrived on Tuesday, presumably because of a possible increase in the cost of the job, since the contract called for only two men.

On Wednesday the men returned and spent seven hours mixing the 40 or 50 bags of cement supplied by her husband in a wheelbarrow to make and pour the concrete. She did not consider this professional as she expected the concrete to be made in a truck.

On Thursday the slab was drying and on Friday it rained. This lack of progress on the job was distressing to the Berghmans as they expected the work to be completed within a week. Mr. Berghman had arranged to take his vacation that week to be available if needed, according to him, but according to plaintiff, to supervise the job. Mr. Knight came by occasionally to check his workers' progress throughout the week, and Mr. and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
480 So. 2d 1013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crescent-coating-co-inc-v-berghman-lactapp-1985.