D'Albora v. Tulane University

274 So. 2d 825, 1973 La. App. LEXIS 5794
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 6, 1973
Docket4964
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 274 So. 2d 825 (D'Albora v. Tulane University) 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
D'Albora v. Tulane University, 274 So. 2d 825, 1973 La. App. LEXIS 5794 (La. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

274 So.2d 825 (1973)

Thomas J. D'ALBORA
v.
TULANE UNIVERSITY et al.

No. 4964.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

February 6, 1973.
Rehearing Denied April 3, 1973.

*826 Henican, James & Cleveland, C. Ellis Henican, New Orleans, for Thomas J. D'Albora.

Adams & Reese, Edward J. Rice, Jr., and John T. Cooper, New Orleans, for Frank J. Rooney, Inc. and Aetna Cas. & Surety Co.

Montgomery, Barnett, Brown & Read, Peter H. Beer, New Orleans, for Administrators of Tulane Educational Fund.

Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrere & Denegre, Claude D. Vasser, New Orleans, for Baldwin Equities Corp.

Lemle, Kelleher, Kohlmeyer, Matthews & Schumacher, Paul B. Deal, New Orleans, for S. K. Whitty & Co., Inc.

*827 Before REDMANN, LEMMON and BAILES, JJ.

REDMANN, Judge.

Plaintiff claimed damages to his buildings in the French Quarter in New Orleans resulted from construction of a hotel on immediately adjacent land. Plaintiff alleged damages of $2,500 to a recently-constructed four-apartment building on the rear of his lot and $19,591 to one wall of a 75- or 100-year-old building on the front of his lot. Plaintiff also demanded loss of rental income and other damages.

Defendants were the adjacent land's owner (The Administrators of the Tulane Educational Fund), the long-term lessee (Baldwin Equities Corporation), the lessee's general contractor and the contractor's insurer (Aetna), and the pile-driving subcontractor. (One other defendant, lessee of the future hotel building, was dismissed and is here disregarded.)

Tulane third-partied Baldwin and its insurer (Travelers), asserting a contractual obligation to indemnify and defend. Baldwin third-partied the contractor and its insurer, and they in turn third-partied the subcontractor, for indemnity. Defendants also excepted that the claim was prescribed by one year.

The prescription exceptions were overruled. There was judgment against defendants in solido for the claimed property damage. There was also judgment over in favor of Tulane against Baldwin, with further judgment for $3,105 as cost of defense. Other third-party demands were dismissed.

All defendants appealed. Plaintiff answered the appeals, seeking $5,000 increase for loss of rental, inconvenience, etc.

Issues include prescription, damage existence and causation, and liability of the various parties to plaintiff and among themselves (including Baldwin's liability for cost of Tulane's defense).

PRESCRIPTION

Defendants argue from Pachi v. Kammer, 130 So.2d 417, 421 (La.App.1961), that the one year prescription, C.C. art. 3536, commenced to run "when the plaintiff had sufficient knowledge to put him on inquiry and on his guard to ascertain the true facts."

Evidence that the damages were done more than a year prior to the November 26, 1965 filing of this suit includes: (1) a Shilstone Testing Laboratory, Inc. detailed report dated October 29, 1964 on an October 26, 1964 survey of damages to plaintiff's buildings; (2) a similar report on an October 30, 1964 resurvey restricted to the rear apartments' north wall; and (3) a November 10, 1964 letter from the contractor's project manager to an insurance agent noting "wall cracks" to plaintiff's buildings and promising copies of the Shilstone reports of damage when available.

But plaintiff claims that the damages became worse as construction continued. Plaintiff quotes Craig v. Montelepre Realty Co., 252 La. 502, 211 So.2d 627, 632 (1968), (quoting another case), in arguing that "the operating cause of the injury is a continuous one, giving rise to successive damages from day to day, and, under our law, in such cases prescription, whatever the length of time, has no application." The two Shilstone reports showed part of the damage became markedly worse in four days of continued pile-driving. More importantly, because of its date, the contractor's assistant project manager's report of January 8, 1965 shows damage not included in the October 1964 Shilstone surveys: the interior of the north wall of the apartment building has a ¼" to ½ separation from the ceiling.

It is undisputed that pile-driving continued beyond the October dates of the Shilstone reports. There is evidence—a Shilstone report of falling-pin seismometer behavior during pile-driving—of driving until November 18. That report does not indicate that it covers the last of the pile-driving *828 (and it did not cover the first). Although it was testified that logs were kept which would have established the last date of pile-driving, they are not in evidence.

The record does not establish the date of last damage to plaintiff's buildings. Nor does it establish the date of the last pile-driving, which arguably could have been the date of plaintiff's last damage.

As Craig points out, it is defendant's burden to prove prescription. Here, the proof at best shows that some (detailed) damage was evident at a specific date more than a year prior to suit. But the evidence shows that pile-driving continued beyond that specific date, and that damage increased.

We interpret Craig to imply that there is no multiplicity of causes of action and of prescription-accrual dates for a continuously damaging operation such as pile-driving: there is one cause of action and one prescriptive period, which runs from the date the last part of the damage is done.

Defendants here did not prove plaintiff's cause of action prescribed. Their exceptions of prescription were properly overruled.

LIABILITIES

Although the record is eight volumes long, there is no evidence in this case of negligence. Liability therefore cannot be founded on negligence.

For damage to adjacent property resulting from work the owner causes to be done on his own property, the owner has been held liable under C.C. art. 667[1] without any showing of negligence on anyone's part; Hauck v. Brunet, 50 So.2d 495 (La.App. 1951), writ refused.[2] In other cases, such as Craig, supra, art. 667 has been accepted as the basis of the owner's liability.

A plurality opinion in Reymond v. State Dept. of Hwys., 255 La. 425, 231 So.2d 375 (1970), views C.C. art. 667 as inapplicable in cases of damage caused by the act of construction, and states that earlier cases (like Hauck and Craig) "fallaciously interpreted" art. 667 (though their results may be correct on other grounds).

However, in Chaney v. Travelers Ins. Co., 259 La. 1, 249 So.2d 181 (1971), the court reasserted the validity of founding the owner's liability on art. 667. Very importantly for our purposes, the court added (249 So.2d at 186):

"And the proprietor is likewise responsible not only for his own activity, but also for that carried on by his agents, contractors and representatives with his consent and permission. This liability which the law imposes attaches also to the agent or contractor, who, as in this case, becomes solidarily liable with the proprietor if his activity causes damage to a neighbor."

It must be noted that in fact neither agent nor contractor was involved in Chaney, and accordingly the quoted language is not a holding which we are obliged to follow without further examination. But apparently a majority of our supreme court is of the view that art. 667 is a basis to hold not only owner but "agent or contractor" as well.

The Chaney

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274 So. 2d 825, 1973 La. App. LEXIS 5794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dalbora-v-tulane-university-lactapp-1973.