Folse v. Maryland Casualty Co.

193 So. 385
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 30, 1940
DocketNo. 2055.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 193 So. 385 (Folse v. Maryland Casualty Co.) 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
Folse v. Maryland Casualty Co., 193 So. 385 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

LeBLANC, Judge.

On January 25, 1937, the defendant Alcide J. Falgoust entered into a contract with Clarence Kemper to construct for him a residence for the price and sum of $15,690. The plaintiff herein, Edgar P. Folse, engaged in the manufacture of millwork at New Iberia, contracted with Falgoust to furnish certain material estimated at the sum of $3,502.05. He also sold him extra material to the amount of $494.67. All the material so furnished by plaintiff was used by Falgoust in the construction of the Kemper residence. The account was credited with various amounts totalling the sum of $2,645.94 leaving a balance due of $1,361.25.

The contract between Falgoust and Kemper was bonded by the Maryland Casualty Company to the amount of $15,690 in order to secure its performance by Falgoust and to secure the payment of all “merchandise and furnishers of material.”

Falgoust failed to pay the balance of $1,361.25 which he owed plaintiff and the purpose of this suit is to secure a judgment on behalf of the latter against Falgoust and the bonding company, for that amount, plus the further sum of $136.12 as attorneys fees.

To the petition of the plaintiff which sets out the facts stated, but in greater detail, the defendant Falgoust filed an answer in which he denied all the allegations made except those referring to the contract and the payments made to plaintiff as therein alleged. He then assumes the position of a plaintiff in reconvention, and, alleging that under his contract with the plaintiff the material to be furnished by the latter was to be delivered within a period of sixty days from the date of the order and that the same was to be first class material and pass the inspection of the architect, he claims that by reason of the plaintiff’s failure to make delivery in the time agreed upon and also his furnishing material which was inferior, he was deprived of making the profit which he expected and which he figured to be $1,690, and that he also suffered damages to the amount of $4,500, for all of which he is entitled to obtain a judgment in reconvention against the plaintiff in the sum of $6,190. The damages in the sum of $4,500 which he claims, are not specified in any manner whatever.

In its answer to the plaintiff’s petition, the Maryland Casualty Company admits that it bonded the Falgoust contract but it disclaims any liability for extra material not contemplated within the terms of the bond. Besides it sets out credits in addition to those listed in plaintiff’s petition of $300 and $500, all of which it contends reduces Falgoust’s indebtedness' to the plaintiff to the sum of $93.97. It of course denies all liability on certain legal grounds which will be later referred to. It also reconvenes, adopting all the allegations made by Falgoust in his reconventional demand, and asks for judgment against the plaintiff in its favor for a like amount of $6,190.

It might be stated at this time that the note of evidence shows an abandonment by the Maryland Casualty Company of its reconventional demand.

During the trial of the case there was produced before the court an affidavit signed by Jeffrey Folse, a son of the plaintiff, and upon noticing that it contained a statement to the effect that he was a part owner and a partner in the business conducted as Edgar P. Folse, each defendant filed an exception of no cause or right of action on the ground that the real plaintiff before the court was a partnership and that Edgar P. Folse could not prosecute a cause of action in its behalf, as an individual. This exception was referred to the merits and in deciding the case on its merits, the district judge overruled the same. Judgment was then rendered in favor of the plaintiff against both defendants in solido in the sum of $1,352.25. The claim for attorneys’ fees was rejected. Both defendants have appealed and plaintiff has answered asking that the judgment be amended by increasing the amount of the award to the original demand and that he be further awarded the attorneys’ fees prayed for by him.

*387 Taking up for consideration the exception of no right or cause of action first, we might state at the outset that we find-that the trial judge was correct in overruling the same.

In connection with the affidavit which formed the basis of the exception, it developed further from the testimony that plaintiff’s wife had died some four years preceding the transactions involved in the contract between plaintiff and Falgoust for furnishing material on the Kemper job. Apparently she died intestate. Neither Mr. Folse nor anyone else had ever taken any steps whatever to have her succession opened and administered and he continued to operate his business in his own name as he had done before.. Besides Jeffrey Folse there were other children, issue of the marriage between the plaintiff and his deceased wife. Jeffrey, and his sister Miss Julian Folse, worked for their father, the former as a salesman and the latter as bookkeeper. It is not disputed that the property owned by the business was community property and that Mr. Folse had the usufruct thereof as the surviving spouse. The children who worked for the business were paid salaries but neither they nor any of the .other children participated in the profits. It is clear that under the provisions of Article 916 of the Revised Civil Code, plaintiff, as surviving spouse, held the usufruct of the property, which in this case was the business he was conducting, during his natural life or until he remarried. Until the expiration of the usufruct, he could enjoy his rights as usufructuary by himself (C.C. Art. 555) and could maintain all actions necessary to insure him in their enjoyment (C.C. Art. 556).

The mere statement in the affidavit signed by Jeffrey Folse does not of itself constitute proof that any partnership exists between him and his father, especially when all other testimony is to the effect that Mr. Folse conducts his business as owner in his own name with usufruct of the community interest which belonged to his deceased wife. He therefore is the proper party to maintain the present action and as already stated, we agree with the district judge in his ruling on the exception of no right -or cause of action.

Falgoust’s defense on the merits of the case does not impress the court very strongly. Whilst he denies the indebtedness in his answer, he several times admitted that all of the material sold and delivered to him by the plaintiff was used in the construction of the Kemper residence, that all of the credits shown on the statement are correct and that the balance remaining due is also correct.

On his reconventional demand he maintains that there was a time limit stipulated in his order given to plaintiff for the material, but the order itself, constituting the estimate agreed upon between them, contains no such stipulation. His sons testified that there was a time limit of sixty days agreed upon for the delivery of the material but this is denied by the plaintiff and his witnesses and it is shown by their testimony that any agreement under which a furnisher of millwork is limited by time in the delivery of the material, is against the custom of that trade. It is necessary, as stated by the plaintiff’s witnesses, that even after all estimates are made, measurements have to be taken at frequent intervals while the work is in progress. Besides, as Mr.

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193 So. 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/folse-v-maryland-casualty-co-lactapp-1940.