Dalgarn v. New Orleans Land Co.

111 So. 271, 162 La. 891, 1927 La. LEXIS 1557
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 3, 1927
DocketNo. 25918.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 111 So. 271 (Dalgarn v. New Orleans Land 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
Dalgarn v. New Orleans Land Co., 111 So. 271, 162 La. 891, 1927 La. LEXIS 1557 (La. 1927).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

This is a suit to recover judgment for a balance of $10,090.75, with legal interest on various installments thereof .from the maturity of each installment until payment is made. Of the foregoing sum $8,-064 is alleged to be due for work done under a contract, and the balance, amounting to $2,-026.75, for profits, which plaintiff alleges he was prevented from earning by reason of a breach of the contract by the New Orleans Land Company, one of the defendants herein, occasioned by said company’s refusal to permit him to complete the work undertaken.

*893 The contract was one entered into between the New Orleans Land Company and plaintiff. The West End Country Club was made a defendant in the suit on the theory that it was the principal contractor, but was eliminated as a party thereto, before judgment, in the trial court. The suit, as it now stands, is therefore against the New Orleans Land Company alone. The defense is that plaintiff breached the contract by failing and refusing to comply with its terms.

The suit grows out of an effort on the part of the New Orleans Land Company to make suitable for a golf course a tract of land, consisting of 100 acres, which it had agreed to sell to the West End Country Club after having first placed it in condition for the purpose stated.

The third article of the contract by which the New Orleans Land Company agreed to sell the land to the West End Country Club relates to the obligation it assumed to clear and level the property and to place it in the condition desired by the club. The article, in part, reads as follows:

“Third: The party of the first part (the New Orleans Land Company) hereby agrees and binds itself to clear said site (including the entire area dedicated for canal purposes, if the sewerage and water board permits, the whole not to exceed one hundred acres) of all underbrush, growth, and roots, and to remove same from the property sold; to remove from said site and area all trees, except such as party of the second part (the West End Country Club) may determine to leave upon the property and may designate for that purpose, said designation to be made within thirty (30) days from date of deed of sale; to cut all stumps not less than eighteen (18") inches below ground level, and to remove all roots not less than eighteen (18") inches below ground level; and to remove all débris from the land sold.
“Party of the first part further agrees and binds itself to fill all holes with good dirt filling, and to clear, grade, level, and harrow said ground.
“It is further understood that, when all of said work has been done, party of the first part shall furnish and plant the said ground with Bermuda grass and that said grass tufts or seeds shall be planted at not over eighteen (18") inch centers.”

Plaintiff secured indirectly from the New Orleans Land Company a memorandum of what was to be done and made a bid to do the work for $385 an acre. The company’s secretary, after receiving the bid, notified plaintiff that he wished to see him. When plaintiff reached the company’s office, its secretary told him that his bid was too high, handed him a package of papers, and told him substantially that they would inform him what was to be done. Plaintiff then requested permission to take the papers home with him, but the secretary declined to grant the request, and advised plaintiff that he would have a copy of the specifications made for him, and asked him to call for it the next day. The secretary, in the meantime, had his stenographer typewrite the specifications, instructing her to make two copies thereof. When plaintiff returned the next day, the secretary gave him the carbon copy of ¡the specifications that he had had his stenographer make.

On June 11, 1919, plaintiff delivered in person to the New Orleans Land Company the following bid, attaching to it the copy of the specifications given him, to wit:

“I submit the following proposition for clearing the 100 acres of land for the West End Golf Club (meaning the West End Country Club) between the New Basin Canal and the Seventeenth Street Canal,, as shown on map outlining same, survey made by S. A. Calongne,' C. E.
“I will furnish all labor and materials to do all the work on same as outlined in article 3 of your agreement with the Country Club, as per copy attached, for the sum of $335 per acre, payments made monthly, on approximate estimates on a 90 per cent, basis of estimate.
“I will give bond for 50 per cent, of the amount of the contract for faithful performance of the contract.
“Said work to be completed nine months from the date of signing the contract.
“The 10 per cent, retained from payments on monthly estimates to be paid upon completion of job.”

*895 The copy of the- specifications delivered to plaihtiff did not contain (apparently, purposely so) the clause, relating to the planting •of grass, contained in the agreement, entered into between the New Orleans Land Company ■and the West End Country Club, and quoted above. When plaintiff delivered his bid with the specifications attached, his attention was called to the fact that the New Orleans Land Company was also under obligations to plant the land with Bermuda grass, after it had been harrowed and leveled, and with his consent the grass clause was added, and also ■one to the effect that all work must be done ■to the satisfaction of the West End Country ■Club. When these additions were made to the specifications, plaintiff signed the latter for the purpose of showing his approval of the clauses that were added, and, as thus .amended, his bid was accepted by the New ■Orleans Land Company.

Plaintiff and the New Orleans Land Company concluded to have their agreement evi•denced by a notarial act, and on June 20,1919, .an act, which purports to embody it, was executed by them before a notary public. The wording of the act, relating to the work to be done, is identical with article third of the .agreement between the New Orleans Land Company and the West End. Country Club, ■quoted in part, supra, save that the'clause reading, “And .to remove all roots not less than eighteen (18") inches below ground level,” is omitted, and the words, “All work to be done to the satisfaction of the West End ■Country Club’s representative,” which, with •plaintiff’s approval, were, in substance, inserted in the specifications when he submitted his bid, are found added to the paragraph setting forth the provision relating to the planting of grass. It may be here said, by way of explanation, that one of the contentions of the New Orleans Land Company is that the clause relative to the removal of roots 18 inches below ground level was accidentally omitted by the notary in copying the specifications into the notarial contract, and that the clause should be treated as part of that contract.

The ground to be cleared and leveled was once swampy. It had upon it many old cypress stumps and knees and a few trees and some underbrush. The ground was level, save that around each stump or tree, or most of them, there was a slight elevation.

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Bluebook (online)
111 So. 271, 162 La. 891, 1927 La. LEXIS 1557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dalgarn-v-new-orleans-land-co-la-1927.