Gachassin v. Southern Drive-In Theatres, Inc.

58 So. 2d 216, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 537
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 9, 1952
DocketNo. 3544
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 58 So. 2d 216 (Gachassin v. Southern Drive-In Theatres, 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
Gachassin v. Southern Drive-In Theatres, Inc., 58 So. 2d 216, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 537 (La. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

DORÉ, Judge.

In this suit, plaintiff seeks to recover the sum of $1,116.10 from the defendants Southern Drive-In Theatres Inc., the Trinity Universal Ins. Co., Gulf Insurance [217]*217Company and Houston Fire & Casualty Insurance Co., in solido, based on the following allegations:

Plaintiff alleges that under an oral contract entered into with T. H. Cook, a representative of the said named defendant insurance companies, and Louis J. Michot, Jr., president and general manager of the said defendant Theatres, Incorporated, he sold and delivered to the said defendant parties, on premises described in his petition, certain materials and 'furnished labor to the amount of $1,11.6.10; that, after having made demand several times for the payment of balance due, he executed an affidavit under date of March 16, 1949, before a Notary Public, which affidavit was recorded in the Mortgage Records of Iberia Parish; that thereby he has a materialman’s and a laborer’s lien and privilege upon the property described in his petition; that he has made amicable demand upon the defendants for payment of the amount claimed to’ no avail.

The defendants filed exceptions to the jurisdiction ratione personae, which exceptions were overruled. These exceptions are not urged in this court and are treated as abandoned.

Thereafter, defendant Southern Drive-In Theatres,. Inc. filed an answer in which, after admitting its corporate name and demand made upon it and denied, it made a general denial of the plaintiff’s allegations. In further answer, it averred that in November, 1948,. it was the operator, under lease, of a drive-in theatre known as the “Iberia Drive-In Theatre”, located on the Abbeville Highway, four miles west of New Iberia; that in November, 1948, a windstorm knocked the screen structure of the said drive-in theatre to the ground, the said structure of the screen remaining unbroken and intact; that it, through Louis J. Michot, its president, engaged the services of the plaintiff 'for the purpose of raising the screen to its upright position, at a cost not exceeding $500 which was to include any and all labor or materials used in connection with said work; that during December, 1948, pursuant to said agreement, plaintiff attempted, with the use oí trucks, to raise the said picture screen, and in such attempt, ■plaintiff negligently and carelessly allowed the said picture screen to drop forcefully to the ground, breaking- the structure of the screen so- that the same could not be erected without being rebuilt; .that thereupon plaintiff advised defendant that he would dismantle said picture screen and rebuild it in an erect position, as he was required to do- under the said agreement with it.

It further avers that after considerable delays, plaintiff, with the help oí two carpenters and with materials purchased from Indes Lumber Company of New Iberia, began the work of rebuilding the said screen; and when the said screen was approximately one-half completed and in an unfinished state, a windstorm knocked it down again; and that plaintiff, since that time has never attempted to complete the work which he undertook to do; that after several months’ delay during which it attempted to have plaintiff complete the work as agreed but to no avail, it was compelled to engage another contractor who constructed the said screen in an efficient and workman-like manner, at a- cost of $400 to the contractor, and using the materials obtainéd from the Indes Lumber Company, to the amount of $312, which it paid to the said lumber company.

The -answer of the defendant insurance companies is likewise a general denial. In further answer, they make practically the same averments as.contained in the answer of their co-defendant Theatres, Inc. They categorically denied that T. H. Cook contracted with plaintiff, in any wise, to do any repair work on the screen structure; they aver that they paid Theatres, Inc. the sum of $1,115.19, it being the total amount of damages caused by the storms to the screen structure and other structures. In the alternative, they denied the authority o-f Cook to enter into a binding contract between the plaintiff and the defendants.

Upon these issues, the case was tried, resulting in a judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant Southern Drive-In Theatres, Inc., in the sum of $803.75 with legal interest from judicial demand until paid,.and in 'favor of the de[218]*218fendant insurance companies and against plaintiff, dismissing his suit against them. Defendant Theatres, Inc. has appealed.

In this court, the plaintiff-appellee filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground and for the reason that no final judgment has been signed in this matter.

We find no merit in the motion. In the record, we find that on October 9, 1951 the trial judge handed down written reasons for his judgment. At the conclusion of his reasons for judgment we find the following:

“For these reasons therefore let there be judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant, Southern Drive-In Theatres, Inc. in the amount of $803.75 with legal interest thereon from date of judicial demand until paid, and in favor of the defendants, Trinity Universal Insurance Company, Gulf Insurance Company, and Houston Fire & Casualty Insurance Company and against the plaintiff dismissing his action against them.

“Rendered in Open Court at New Iberia, Parish of Iberia, State of Louisiana, this 9th Day of October, 1951.”

“Signed: S. O. Landry,
“Judge, 16th Judicial District
Court.”

In the extract of the minutes of date of October 9, 1951, there appears a minute entry of the decree in the words and phrases as above set out.

Although the decree does not set out that it was read aloud and signed in open court, it must be presumed that the presiding judge followed the law in that regard. We are of the opinion that the decree is sufficient as a signed judgment. The motion is overruled.

Since the Theatres Incorporated is the only appellant before this court, plaintiff having failed to appeal from that part o'f the judgment dismissing his demand against the insurance companies, that part of plaintiff’s case against the insurance companies is not before this court and has passed out of the case.

In November, 1948, the Southern Drive-In Theatres, Inc., was operating a drive-in theatre about four miles south of New Iberia, on the New Iberia-Abbeville paved highway. It carried windstorm insurance on its screen structure, equipment and fence with the three defendant insurance companies, through their local agent, De-rouren Insurance Agency, at New Iberia, Louisiana.

On the night of November 18, 1948, a windstorm knocked the screen structure or tower of said theatre to the ground and damaged the fence enclosing the said theatre and its loud speaker; but the screen structure or tower remained unbroken and intact.

Shortly thereafter, Mr. T. H. Cook, an insurance adjuster and the Lafayette branch manager of the General Adjustment Bureau, contacted the plaintiff with the view of having him make the necessary repairs. Likewise, it appears that independently of Mr. Cook, Mr. Louis Michot, Jr., the President of defendant Theatres, Inc., sought out the plaintiff to engage him to repair the damage.

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79 So. 2d 505 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
58 So. 2d 216, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gachassin-v-southern-drive-in-theatres-inc-lactapp-1952.