Draube v. Rieth
This text of 114 So. 2d 879 (Draube v. Rieth) 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.
Opinion
Frank V. DRAUBE
v.
Roland J. RIETH d/b/a Rieth Construction Company and American Employers Insurance Company.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.
*880 Mollere, Zaccaria & Gracianette, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellee.
Baldwin, Haspel, Molony, Rainold & Meyer, New Orleans, for defendants-appellants.
JANVIER, Judge.
This suit grows out of the construction of a residence for the plaintiff, Frank V. Draube, by one of the defendants, Roland J. Rieth, a contractor who conducts his business as Rieth Construction Company. The other defendant, American Employers Insurance Company, was surety on the performance bond of the contractor.
The contract contemplated the construction of a residence, the consideration being $19,995.
There are almost no disputes over the facts which gave rise to the controversy, and defendants have appealed suspensively from a judgment in favor of plaintiff and against them solidarily in the sum of $478, the estimated cost of repairing certain defects in areas of the flooring of the building, which defects made their appearance somewhere between two and four months after the building had been completed and accepted by the owner. The defects lay in the fact that the board sub-floor on which the vinyl floor tiles were laid in the areas in question buckled to such an extent that each board edge pushed up the tiles, with the result that that edge showed plainly, and across each such area there were lines showing where these edges had pushed up the tiles.
When these defects made their appearance the contractor, at his own cost, reconstructed the floor leaving out a felt material which had been placed between the wood sub-floor and the tiles. After a few months, the same defects again made their appearance, and the owner obtained from another contractor an estimate which contemplated the elimination of these defects, and it is on that estimate that this suit is based.
That there were defects after the original construction and after the reconstruction of the floors is conceded by defendants who seek to avoid liability for the estimated cost of repairing the defects by contending that the material which the contractor furnished and the work which was performed were strictly in accordance with the plans and specifications which were furnished by the owner, the contention being that, since the work was completed in accordance with the plans and specifications and was accepted by the owner, there can be no liability in defendants unless the owner can bear the burden of showing that there was some defect in the material furnished or that there was improper workmanship. The fact that, after the first defect made its appearance, the contractor undertook at his own expense to eliminate *881 these defects is pointed to by the District Judge as a recognition by the contractor of his liability.
At the time of the trial below the second repair job had not been done, and, so far as we can ascertain, the floor is still in the defective condition in which it was after the contractor had relaid the tiles after the first discovery of their defective condition.
In the contract which was on a standard form of the American Institute of Architects were the following provisions:
"Article 1. Scope of the Work The Contractor shall furnish all of the materials and perform all of the work shown on the Drawings and described in the Specifications entitled House for Frank V. Draube, 101 West Magnolia Boulevard, prepared by Louis Landry * * * and shall do everything required by this Agreement, the General Conditions of the Contract, the Specifications and the Drawings."
* * * * * *
"Article 6. The Contract Documents The General Conditions of the Contract, the Specifications and the Drawings, together with this Agreement, form the Contract, and they are as fully a part of the Contract as if hereto attached or herein repeated. The following is an enumeration of the Specifications and Drawings: * *"
The specifications concerning the floors required that there be laid a concrete base four inches thick; that on top of that concrete base there be laid a wood floor of No. 2 common pine, seven-eighths inches thick and three and one-quarter inches wide and machine sanded only.
The contractor stated that he had followed these specifications to the letter and there is not one word in the record to contradict this. In fact, the owner and his wife and all others who testified on this subject conceded that they knew of nothing to indicate that there was anything wrong with the materials furnished nor with the workmanship. In the concrete base the contractor embedded the necessary wood sleepers to which the wood sub-flooring was affixed and over the wood sub-floor which had been sanded he laid the 15-pound felt, and on top of that the tiles as required. Rieth, the contractor, Elfer, the expert placed on the stand by plaintiff, and Miller, the subcontractor who laid the tiles, all stated that in their opinion the trouble resulted from the fact that there was used the wood sub-floor between the concrete and the felt on which the tiles were laid and that, in their opinion and in the opinion of the manufacturer of the tiles, this was not standard nor good practice. They gave similar reasons for these opinions, the contractor and the expert produced by plaintiff both stating that the reason for this condition is that, when a wood sub-floor is used between the concrete base and the tiles, this sub-floor is so sealed off that it gets no air, with the result that the slightest moisture in the concrete cannot escape, and with the ultimate result that the boards of the sub-floor swell and buckle, the edges being forced up to show through the tiles.
The record leaves in our minds not the slightest doubt that this was the cause of the trouble and that good practice does not permit the use of such a sub-floor. More important still is our certainty that the sub-floor which was required by the specifications was installed exactly in accordance with those specifications.
On whom then should liability for this situation be placed? The plans and specifications were provided by the owner. They had been prepared by a Mr. Palmisano, apparently, though not definitely, shown to be, an architect but who was not called by plaintiff as a witness. The plaintiff's wife admittedly represented her husband in most of the negotiations with the contractor and in the discussions with Mr. Palmisano, who prepared the plans. Rieth, the contractor-defendant, states that when *882 he saw the specifications he felt that the use of a sub-floor was bad practice, and that he asked Mrs. Draube for permission to eliminate that sub-floor and to affix the tiles directly to the concrete since he had had no experience in placing such a wood sub-floor between a concrete base and tiles. He states that Mrs. Draube refused to give him that permission and insisted that the specifications be followed. Mrs. Draube denies that there was any such conversation, but she states that the contractor was told that the specifications should be followed. It appears that the contract and plans were prepared by Louis Landry who is referred to by Mr. Draube as "a boy by the name of Landry." Mr. Draube says he does not know whether Mr. Landry was an architect. The specifications were prepared by a Mr. Palmisano. Mr. Draube says that when the specifications were brought to them he and his wife made some changes in them, thereby indicating what they required.
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114 So. 2d 879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/draube-v-rieth-lactapp-1959.