Favalora v. Bourgeois

114 So. 119, 164 La. 521, 1927 La. LEXIS 1778
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 11, 1927
DocketNo. 26869.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 114 So. 119 (Favalora v. Bourgeois) 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
Favalora v. Bourgeois, 114 So. 119, 164 La. 521, 1927 La. LEXIS 1778 (La. 1927).

Opinion

BRUNOT, J.

This is a concursus proceeding. Michel Bourgeois contracted with Frank G. Favalora to build a dwelling on the latter’s property for the sum and price of $8,840, to be paid in eight installments, six of said installments of $1,000 each to be paid during the progress of the work, one of $1,-240 when the work was finished and accepted by the owner, and one of $1,600, 45 days thereafter. A contract and specifications covering the proposed work was executed and recorded and the New Amsterdam Casualty •Company bound itself as the contractor’s surety for the performance of the contract and the payment of all labor and materials used in the construction of the building. After the building was completed and plaintiff had recorded his acceptance of it, he obtained a certificate- of mortgages, which showed that several claimants had recorded liens, as furnishers of supplies and materials, against the building and lot on which it was erected. These liens, together with the amount admitted to be due for extra work, aggregated a total in excess of the balance alleged to be due the contractor. The plaintiff thereupon filed this proceeding, deposited the balance alleged to be due by him to the contractor in the registry of the court, made the lienholders named in the certificate of mortgages, and the defendant and his surety, the New •Amterdam Casualty Company, parties to the suit, and prayed that they be cited accordingly. He also prayed for a judgment ordering the cancellation of the liens and for attorney’s fees. Other liens were recorded after the petition was filed and the holders thereof were made parties to the suit in á supplemental petition.

The contract provides that no extra work shall be done upon the building over and above the contract price, except upon a written contract between the parties covering the extra work to be done and 'fixing the cost thereof, and it is alleged in the petition that the total cost of all extra work agreed upon between the parties amounted to $112.

All of the lienholders answered the petition and prayed for judgment against the owner, the builder, and the surety for the full amount of their respective claims, with interest thereon and for costs, and A. Stef & Co., one of the claimants, prayed for 10 per cent, additional as attorney’s fees,' basing this demand on the provisions of Act 225 of 1918.

Michel Bourgeois, the contractor, after joining issue on the material averments of the petition, reconvened and prayed that plaintiff’s suit be dismissed and that judgment be rendered in his favor and.against the plaintiff, on his reconventional demand, for $12,088, less $3,852, the amount deposited by the plaintiff in the registry of the court, with legal interest on the difference between said sums from June 20, 1922, until paid and for costs. This defendant’s claim in reconvention is based upon many alleged arbitrary and fraudulent demands made upon him by the plaintiff and his architect or superintendent, and for alleged extra work done and for damages. The answer of the New Amsterdam Casualty Company admits that the contract requires a written order for extra work, but it avers that this provision of the contract was waived by the parties. With respect to the substitution of pressed brick for the brick called for by the specifications, this defendant alleges that the said substitution was made without its knowledge. In all other respects the answer is in the nature of a general denial.

Upon issue being thus joined, the court, under the provisions of Act 52 of 1912, appointed Mr. Henry B. Curtis, special commis *525 sioner, to examine and report on the law and the facts applicable to this concursus proceeding. The special commissioner sat for several days hearing the testimony and the arguments of counsel, and, some time thereafter, filed a lengthy and exhaustive report of all proceedings had before him, together with his findings of fact and his recommendations as to the proper judgments which should be rendered thereon. The learned trial judge concurred in all of the commissioner’s findings of fact and recommendations, except as to the amount of the judgment to be rendered in favor of the contractor on his reconventional demand, and the commissioner’s finding that the plaintiff is not entitled to attorney’s fees, and, with these two exceptions, the commissioner’s recommendations were made the basis of the court’s judgment. From this judgment the contractor and his surety both appealed.

The appellants show that they were not served with the supplemental petition filed by the plaintiff, and, as issue was not joined between them and the lienholders named in the supplemental petition, they contend that no judgment can be rendered against them herein in favor of said creditors. The commissioner found that both appellants 'were served with the original petition. Neither objected to a want of citation, in limine, and neither objected to the proof offered by the creditors in support of their respective claims, and, as the point was not made until after the issues had narrowed down to those between the owner and the contractor and his surety, it was the court’s duty to render judgment on the merits of the demands of all of the creditors. This finding was thus approved by the trial judge:

“By appearing and trying out their eases contradictorily with the parties, they waived citation and” subjected themselves to the jurisdiction of the court. Had they not appeared, a different case would be before the court.”

As to the claim of the Stef Lumber Company, the commissioner found that the claimant was entitled to recover for all of the lumber sold and delivered by it to the contractor for use in the building, but that the claim of this creditor for 10 per cent, attorney’s fees should not be allowed for the reason that attorney’s fees, under the provisions qf Act 225 of 1918, are only recoverable when a suit is filed by the creditor against the contractor and bis surety. The commissioner says:

“I do not consider the intervention filed by the lumber company as a suit against the principal and surety within the meaning of the terms of the act.”

The commissioner found that Acme Brick Company is entitled to judgment for the amount of its recorded lien, but is not entitled to interest thereon, because it filed no pleadings in the case, and interest, unlike the costs of court, must be judicially claimed.

The commissioner found that the claim of Frank Comment should be rejected, because it results from an alleged breach of contract between the claimant and contractor, whereby another party did the work he had contracted to do. His only remedy is a suit for damages against the contractor, for the claim is neither for supplies furnished nor for work done on the building.

In the same manner and with equal clarity the commissioner separately considers the claims of the other creditors and recommends the rendition of a judgment in favor of each and against the contractor and his surety for the amount of the respective asserted claims, and, as to these claims, he recommends that judgment be rendered in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant as prayed for in the original and supplemental petitions. The commissioner’s reasons for reaching this conclusion are as follows:

*527 “He (the owner) appears to have strictly adhered to the letter of the law.

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Bluebook (online)
114 So. 119, 164 La. 521, 1927 La. LEXIS 1778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/favalora-v-bourgeois-la-1927.