Electrodata Mfg. Corp. v. Domed Stadium Hotel, Inc.

362 So. 2d 1122, 1978 La. App. LEXIS 2994
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 18, 1978
Docket9292
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 362 So. 2d 1122 (Electrodata Mfg. Corp. v. Domed Stadium Hotel, Inc.) 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
Electrodata Mfg. Corp. v. Domed Stadium Hotel, Inc., 362 So. 2d 1122, 1978 La. App. LEXIS 2994 (La. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

362 So.2d 1122 (1978)

ELECTRODATA MANUFACTURING CORPORATION
v.
The DOMED STADIUM HOTEL, INC., et al.

No. 9292.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

August 18, 1978.
Rehearing Denied October 19, 1978.

Sylvan J. Steinberg, Bronfin, Geller, Feldman & Steinberg, New Orleans, for plaintiff.

Richard C. Baldwin, New Orleans, for defendants.

Before REDMANN, LEMMON and BOUTALL, JJ.

*1123 REDMANN, Judge.

Domed Stadium Hotel, Inc., Rault Petroleum Corporation and Joseph M. Rault, Jr. appeal from a judgment for the bulk of the price of a hotel "room status system" which Domed Stadium Hotel alone contracted for.

There are two major issues. The first is the effect of plaintiff's failure to put defendant Hotel in default in respect to having its building specially wired to receive the system. The second is the effect of plaintiff's selling to another hotel the system components worth $9,758.21 for only $400, without notice to defendant Hotel, several months after bringing this lawsuit.

Why the petition alleged that Rault Petroleum Corporation and Rault individually had contracted for the system is not evident from the record; their being cast in the judgment was presumably the result of a clerical error unnoticed by the trial judge. We reverse as to them for lack of evidence. "Defendant" hereafter refers to Hotel.

As to defendant Hotel, we reduce the judgment from $10,610.10 to $893.38 (the price of orders for electric cable and boxes apart from the system order). We conclude that plaintiff's failure to put defendant in default and plaintiff's resale of the system at an unreasonable price as "junk" without notice to defendant defeats the balance of plaintiff's claim.

The room status system for a 175-room hotel like defendant's consists of 175 interchangeable room units made of brushed stainless steel, one mounted in each room in a standard electrical switch or outlet box connected by wires to two central display panels (front desk and main housekeeping) showing all rooms and one "remote housekeeping" panel showing only the rooms on one floor (there being one such panel for each floor). The system operates by magnetic "keys" used by room cleaners and inspectors which cause flashing or steady lights to display a room's status as uncleaned, being cleaned, cleaned or cleaned and inspected so that both front desk and housekeeping personnel are informed at a glance of a room's availability for renting or of its need of cleaning or inspection. The system also includes a simple card rack for guest registration cards; upon inserting or removing the quest's registration card lights are extinguished or lit to show occupancy of the room.[1]

Plaintiff on December 7, 1973 offered, by a 13-page written "quotation" addressed to defendant, to supply and install such a system for defendant's building, then being repaired after a major fire and being converted from offices and apartments into a hotel at an expense of $3,000,000. Defendant on January 14, 1974 accepted by written purchase order. The contract thus struck did not specify a time for supply and installation, but it did specify terms for payment of the $11,900 price as "net 30 days", contemplating, plaintiff's president testified, that the price was to be paid 30 days after installation.

In respect to time of performance, however, plaintiff's president testified that defendant's "technical coordinator" had ordered the system in November 1973, and had "stressed very strongly" that installation was to be completed by Mardi Gras (February 26) 1974. Although defendant's *1124 president testified that construction progress was such in November that there was "no way" for the building to be ready for February, we may assume that the trial judge believed plaintiff's president.

Plaintiff began making the system on December 12, 1973. Plaintiff's president testified that in early February 1974 they learned that the hotel completion date was "postponed" to May. Plaintiff completed fabrication of the system components in March and on March 29 billed defendant $9,716.72 for manufacture of the system.

Under the written contract, there was no agreement to pay for the equipment before its installation and there was no agreement fixing any amount as a price for the uninstalled equipment. Accordingly, any right plaintiff might have had to collect $9,716.72 (or any other amount) had to arise from some source other than the mere terms of the contract.

The presumable source is defendant's theoretical breach of the contract by not having the building ready for delivery and installation of the system by February (or at least, in view of the written contract's silence on time of performance, by the reasonable time implied by law, La.C.C. 2050 and La.R.S. 10:1-204[2]).

It was reasonable for plaintiff to desire some payment once it learned in February that the hotel would not be ready for the system until May. Plaintiff had invested the bulk of its costs in the manufacture of the system and should not have had to wait indefinitely for its payment when the (oral) bargain was that it should be ready to perform in February. And, although plaintiff was supposed to install before being entitled to payment, the delay in plaintiff's performance was attributable to defendant's delay in readying the building for the installation.

We conclude, nevertheless, that plaintiff was not automatically entitled to its charge for manufacturing the system merely because of defendant's failure to have the building ready for installation at the agreed time (or by a reasonable time). We reason that plaintiff was first obliged to put defendant in default in respect to readying the building.

Plaintiff's obligation to install the system was one subject to a condition, C.C. 2021, the condition being the event of defendant's having the building wired to receive the system. (The contract for the system expressly excluded any obligation upon plaintiff to supply or install the indispensable building wire. Thus that defendant wire the building was an implied condition, implied from the nature of the contract, C.C. 2026.) Certainly plaintiff could not perform unless defendant readied the building (although defendant did not obligee itself towards plaintiff to ready the building, and defendant's readying the building was not causa [the civil analogue of consideration] for plaintiff's obligation to make and install the system). If defendant had obliged itself towards plaintiff to ready the building, readying the building (in addition to being an obligation) would equally remain a condition of plaintiff's obligation to perform. Yet, in that case, plaintiff could not rescind or collect damages unless it put defendant in default; C.C. 1933. That defendant fulfill the condition constituted, however, something akin to an obligation: "Every condition must be performed in the manner that it is probable that the parties wished and intended that it should be." C.C. 2037. Consider also, at least by analogy, that it is an "obligation" of a buyer to receive delivery, C.C. 2549: and a buyer "who neglects to obtain delivery of the thing sold, after having been put in default, is answerable [for damages]", C.C. 2555 (emphasis added).

We conclude that, ordinarily, when a suspensive condition of an obligation is an event to be accomplished by the obligee, delay in fulfilling the condition does not entitle the obligor to damages (or *1125 to rescission) unless the obligee has first been put in default with respect to the fulfillment of the condition.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Weinhoffer v. Davie Shoring
Fifth Circuit, 2024
Van Mol v. Beasley
184 So. 3d 280 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2016)
Timothy M. Van Mol, Et Ux. v. Ken Beasley
Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2016
US EX REL. QUALITY TRUST v. Cajun Contractors
486 F. Supp. 2d 1255 (D. Kansas, 2007)
Graf v. Jim Walter Homes, Inc.
713 So. 2d 682 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1998)
Coffin v. Bd. of Sup'rs of La. Univ.
620 So. 2d 1354 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1993)
Ernest Simon & Son, Inc. v. Perma-Clad of Georgia, Inc.
459 So. 2d 213 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1984)
Electrodata Manufacturing Corp. v. Domed Stadium Hotel, Inc.
365 So. 2d 825 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1978)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
362 So. 2d 1122, 1978 La. App. LEXIS 2994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/electrodata-mfg-corp-v-domed-stadium-hotel-inc-lactapp-1978.