Hardaway Contracting Co. v. City of Gretna

191 So. 323
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 16, 1939
DocketNo. 17014.
StatusPublished

This text of 191 So. 323 (Hardaway Contracting Co. v. City of Gretna) 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
Hardaway Contracting Co. v. City of Gretna, 191 So. 323 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

This suit, another chapter in the much litigated controversy which resulted from the paving of portions of certain streets in the City of Gretna, is brought by the contracting company which laid the said paving. The amount claimed, $958.60, is alleged to be the balance due by the contracting company under the two contracts.

In the court below there was judgment in favor of plaintiff, as prayed for, with legal interest from September 15, 1931, which was the day on which the work was accepted. From this judgment the City of Gretna has appealed.

There were two separate contracts — one involving the paving of part of Second Street, the other concerning the paving of a part of Lafayette Avenue. Both were executed under authority of Act No. 3 of the Extraordinary Session of the General Assembly of Louisiana of 1929, which amends Section 34 of Act No. 136 of 1898. Defendant’s principal contention is based on the theory that, where paving is undertaken under authority of the provisions of that Act, as amended, the contractor cannot look to the municipality for payment, but is relegated to claims against the respective abutting property owners for the reason that the said amending statute contains the following language:

“The entire costs, including culverts, headers, filling, grading,, legal and engineering fees and charges, labor, material, etc., of the paving, graveling, or otherwise improving, of streets, alleys, or any portion thereof, as herein provided, shall be paid for by the abutting real estate owners according to the front foot rule herein provided.”

The said statute provides that, when such paving is undertaken, the cost of the work shall be determined, including all legal and other expenses, etc., and that this entire cost shall be apportioned among the abutting property owners and that that portion due by each property on the “front foot” basis shall be assessed to the property and that then the respective property owners, within ten days from acceptance, shall make payment in cash, or may provide for the issuance of notes, payable in installments. The statute further provides that the notes accepted by the municipality may be assigned to the contractor without recourse against the municipality.

Pointing to these provisions of the statute, the defendant maintains in this court, for the first time and by exception of no cause of action, that, though a municipality is authorized to make such a contraer, in doing so it acts as the agent for the abutting property owners, who alone are 'responsible to the contractor, who, because of the said statute, is prevented from seeking to hold the municipality directly liable. Arid it is further argued, thus, that only two remedies are available to the unpaid contractor. One is by mandamus to-compel the municipal authorities to levy the assessments against the abutting property owners should .they fail or neglect to do. so. The other is to look to the abutting property owners for payment through these assessments.'

The contracting company, on the other hand, interprets the provisions of the statute merely as recognizing that the municipality, in undertaking to effect such improvements, shall, as between itself and the abutting property owners, require that the latter be responsible for the cost, but contends that, as between the municipality and' the contractor, there is nothing in the law which relieves the former of its responsibility and liability as the direct contracting party. And the contracting company points to a clause in each of the contracts, under which the City of Gretna, so far as the contractor is concerned, assumed full responsibility for payment of the contract price. That clause in each contract reads as follows:

“And in consideration of the faithful and complete performance of the Contractor of all and singular the obligations by it herein assumed, the Honorable Charles F. Gelbke, on behalf of the City of Gretna hereby agrees to pay unto said Contractor, his heirs, legal representatives and assigns, the cost of the work to be done under this contract in accordance with the bid of said Contractor * *

As we have said, it is not asserted that the contracts, as executed, were not authorized by law.

The contracting company concedes that the acceptance by it of notes of an abutting property owner constitutes payment pro tanto so far as the municipality is concerned and that, to the extent of the total amount of such notes received by it, the City is relieved from all responsibility, and *325 it admits that, on the two contracts, it has received notes aggregating $13,702.50. It also admits that it has received in cash $3,-152.65 and that, therefore, to the extent of the sum of these two amounts, to-wit, $16,-855.15, it has been paid. But it shows that the total amount admittedly earned by it under the two contracts was $17,813.75 and maintains that, to the extent of the difference, $958.60, it has received neither notes nor cash, and is, therefore entitled to judgment for this amount.

We think it quite apparent that it was not the purpose of the framers of Act No. 3 of the Extraordinary Session of 1929 (which, as we have said, is amenda-tory of Section 34 of Act No. 136 of 1898) to exempt the municipality from liability directly to the contractor for such amounts as may not be represented by notes assigned to the contractor and accepted by him, for the statute does not provide that in no. event may the city be liable to the contractor, in fact authorizing the City to issue to the contractor in certain instances its own certificates of indebtedness and providing that, when such certificates are issued, they “shall * * * constitute a direct obligation of the municipality.”

In Cronan v. Municipality No. 1, 5 La.Ann. 537, is found a case presenting a somewhat similar contention. There the contract provided that the municipality itself should pay directly for a certain portion of the paving and that “for the remaining portion the said Cronan [contractor] shall receive the hereinafter described notes from the property holders in front of said paving”. The contractor, unable to collect from some of the property holders for a portion of the work done, brought suit against the municipality. It was contended that the said municipality was not liable and that the contractor could look only to the property owners. The court said:

“Plaintiff contracted directly with the municipality not with the property holders. The stipulation contained in the contract merely designated a mode in which the municipality should be allowed to liquidate a part of its obligations to plaintiff, it did not extinguish those obligations, and that mode of payment not having been complied with, the municipality (which I consider as the debtor) is bound for the debt.”

We may say the same here. The contract and the law merely contain provisions by which the municipality was granted permission to liquidate the indebtedness by the assigning of notes made by the property holders. Had it assigned notes sufficient to cover the entire indebtedness, discharge in full would have been effected thereby since the contract stipulated that the notes should be transferred without recourse against the City. But the trouble here lies in the fact that, obviously, there were not sufficient notes obtained, or not sufficient cash paid to cover the whole indebtedness.

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Bluebook (online)
191 So. 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardaway-contracting-co-v-city-of-gretna-lactapp-1939.