Fortier v. Sessum

441 So. 2d 1238
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 9, 1983
Docket83-CA-397
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 441 So. 2d 1238 (Fortier v. Sessum) 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
Fortier v. Sessum, 441 So. 2d 1238 (La. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

441 So.2d 1238 (1983)

Frank J. FORTIER, III
v.
Thomas SESSUM.

No. 83-CA-397.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

November 9, 1983.
Rehearing Denied December 19, 1983.

*1239 Stassi & Rausch, Lucas J. Giordano, New Orleans, for Frank J. Fortier, III, plaintiff, defendant-in-reconvention, third-party plaintiff-appellant.

Schaff & Currier, John M. Currier, New Orleans, for Thomas Sessum, defendant, plaintiff-in-reconvention appellee.

Satterlee, Mestayer & Freeman, Henry F. Mestayer, and O'Keefe, O'Keefe & Berrigan, Wayne T. McGaw, New Orleans, for Dixie Bldg. Material Co., Inc., third-party defendant-appellee.

Before BOUTALL, CHEHARDY and GAUDIN, JJ.

CHEHARDY, Judge.

Plaintiff, Frank J. Fortier, III, filed this suit against defendant, Thomas Sessum, for $2,604.59, the amount allegedly due under an oral agreement for concrete work performed at defendant's home, and $86 to file a workmen's lien.

Defendant answered claiming the bill was unpaid because it exceeded the price agreed upon, and the work was performed in a careless and negligent manner. He reconvened for $23,600 in damages.

Plaintiff then filed a third party demand against Dixie Building Material Co., Inc., the corporation which supplied the concrete, in the event judgment was rendered against him in the reconventional demand. He also sought judgment against Dixie if the court should dismiss his claim against defendant on the main demand.

Following trial on the merits judgment was rendered dismissing plaintiff's suit on the main demand. There was judgment in the reconventional demand in favor of defendant in reconvention in the sum of $13,955.91 plus expert fees of $465, and judgment in the third party demand in favor of Dixie, dismissing the claim against it.

Plaintiff has appealed.

The record reflects the following facts:

Mr. and Mrs. Sessum were contemplating buying a hot tub and went to "Nature Spa" to view the merchandise. Fortier is the owner of that business. Sessum explained that before he could purchase the tub he would need some concrete work done. Plaintiff indicated he was also a contractor and qualified to do that work.

That evening Fortier went to the Sessum home to determine the work involved. The original plan was to top the patio area and a shed row in the rear of the property where defendant was keeping some horses, *1240 and create a walkway between the property and the shed row.

Defendant was having a drainage problem and plaintiff was to correct this; however, there is a dispute as to whether or not plaintiff guaranteed he could correct it. Defendant says plaintiff did, but plaintiff claims he only promised to do the best he could and that he could make no guarantee about the drainage.

Both parties agree the original price quoted was $1,601, but at some time prior to the date the work was to begin defendant decided to include topping the driveway area. According to defendant, plaintiff quoted an additional cost of $400, to which he agreed; according to plaintiff all of the work was to be done at cost, which amounted to $2,604.59, the sum for which he billed defendant.

The work was done in one day on May 20, 1980 by plaintiff and six workmen, with concrete supplied by Dixie. The concrete ordered was to have a load-bearing capacity of 3,000 pounds.

The following day defendant called plaintiff to complain the work was unsatisfactory. Fortier went to inspect the job. It was clear that the finish was unsatisfactory. He saw it several times the following week and attempted to correct it with muratic acid, but this was unsuccessful. Some months later it looked much worse.

Plaintiff admits it is steadily deteriorating. Rain and moisture accumulate in puddles in some areas and the water is not draining properly onto the street. The aggregate on the patio and the driveway contains loose pebbles, and there is evidence of chipping and heavy pitting in the shed row.

Everyone agrees that the results are deplorable, including plaintiff, defendant and all of the experts. Quite clearly the work is defective. Therefore, we are called upon to determine who is responsible for the damage and the amount of an award.

It is plaintiff's position that the damages result from defective concrete. It is admitted by all parties that the concrete ordered was to have a load-bearing capacity of 3,000 pounds psi. Dixie claims the concrete supplied fulfilled that requirement at the time of delivery.

The trial court found the concrete supplied was of high quality and there was no fault on the part of the supplier. In arriving at that determination it was aided by the testimony of various experts.

Plaintiff's experts were Dr. Saad Moustafa, an engineer and concrete expert on the faculty at the University of New Orleans, and Donald Maine, president of Delta Testing & Inspection Company.

Maine took four core samples some months after the pour to determine the load-bearing capacity. The concrete tested at 2,200 pounds psi. Moustafa felt the concrete was not as durable or strong as it should have been, and although part of the problem was due to poor workmanship, he concluded the deficiency in strength was responsible for the concrete's later deterioration.

We note here that defendant was not complaining about the load-bearing capacity but only about the cosmetic appearance. The consensus of all of the experts is that there is no correlation between the load-bearing capacity, which is the strength of the finished product, and the cosmetics of the finish.

Edmond Schrenk, an engineer and consultant to the construction industry, and Joseph Scheyd, president of Hammond Construction Co., testified as defendant's experts, and Charles Kuhn, director of quality control for Dixie, testified on its behalf. Arthur Brown, a concrete finisher, and Dr. Eduardo Guevera also testified as experts for Dixie.

Kuhn described for the court the manner in which concrete is made. He explained it is a perishable mixture of four basic ingredients: cement, sand, gravel and water. Everything is weighed and dropped into a truck in specific sequence. The delivery truck's tank which holds the mixture runs very slowly at two to three revolutions per minute so the concrete does not set.

*1241 The concrete is batched at the plant by computer. If the mixture goes bad, a tolerance acceptance switch is activated which stops the machine. It will not accept whatever is below or above the tolerance set.

Guevera confirmed that he had examined the batch tickets on defendant's delivery and the formula shown on the tickets would achieve 3,000 pounds psi mix. In his opinion the finisher let the concrete stay in the truck too long. The final result depends on many factors before, during and after the pour.

The experts agree that the material is perishable and must be handled properly by the concrete finisher to maintain the potential. It is up to the finisher to pour it, treat it and cure it to achieve that potential for which it was designed when it arrives at the job site.

Mr. McPherson, the plaintiff's concrete finisher, did not testify. Plaintiff himself stated he was present when the concrete arrived but he was not present during the entire finishing period. He claims to have seen his finisher spray the concrete with a hose, using a fine water mist, after it was poured. However, defendant and his wife stated the finisher used a hose with a brass nozzle and the water was coming through full force.

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441 So. 2d 1238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fortier-v-sessum-lactapp-1983.