HB" Buster" Hughes, Inc. v. Bernard

306 So. 2d 785
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 11, 1975
Docket6572
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 306 So. 2d 785 (HB" Buster" Hughes, Inc. v. Bernard) 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
HB" Buster" Hughes, Inc. v. Bernard, 306 So. 2d 785 (La. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

306 So.2d 785 (1975)

H. B. `"BUSTER" HUGHES, INC., in its own right and as Assignee of Plaquemines Parish Commission Council.
v.
Sherman A. BERNARD et al.

No. 6572.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

January 14, 1975.
Rehearing Denied February 13, 1975.
Writ Granted April 11, 1975.

*787 Wheeler & Wheeler, Thomas B. Wheeler and James L. Wheeler, New Orleans, for H. B. "Buster" Hughes, Inc., plaintiff-appellee.

Keiler & Buckley, Sam O. Buckley, New Orleans, for Sherman A. Bernard and Sherman A. Bernard House Moving and Shoring Corp., defendants-appellants.

Deutsch, Kerrigan & Stiles, Cornelius G. Van Dalen and Robert Wiegand, II, New Orleans, for Thomas Jordan, Inc., defendant-appellant.

Before LEMMON, STOULIG and MORIAL, JJ.

STOULIG, Judge.

This litigation involves claims for unpaid rental for the sublease of a manned crane barge and for damages resulting from its negligent operation while the Sherman A. Bernard House Moving and Shoring Corporation (hereinafter called the Bernard corporation) was fulfilling its contract with the Plaquemines Parish Commission Council to move several camps from a proposed hurricane levee construction site to other locations. It is alleged the crane, owned by Thomas Jordan, Inc. (Jordan), and subleased to Bernard by H. B. "Buster" Hughes (Hughes), was improperly utilized to excavate a flotation canal across a marsh and through the base of the proposed levee site. Due to the proposed issuance of a work order for construction under the levee contract, the repair of the damage to its base had to be undertaken immediately. Hughes was persuaded by Chalin Perez, president of the Plaquemines Parish Commission Council, to pay for the filling of the excavation with shell without awaiting the determination of the issue of liability. When the remedial work was completed, Perez, authorized to act by a resolution of the Parish Council, assigned to Hughes any claims the Parish might have arising from this incident.

Hughes then filed suit against Sherman Bernard individually and the Bernard corporation for $6,850 unpaid rental of the crane barge and, as "assignee and subrogee" of the Parish Council, for $25,490.97, the cost it expended on remedial work on the levee base. Alternatively, Hughes named Jordan as a defendant and sought recovery for the cost of repairs on the theory the vessel (barge) was unseaworthy because Jordan had furnished an incompetent *788 crew, in the event it was found the excavation was not directed by Bernard. Through reconventional demands and third party pleadings, the liability, sole or shared, of all the litigants is put at issue.

On the damage claim, Bernard basically takes the position the crew excavated the canal without his knowledge and, alternatively, the assignment by which plaintiff derives this right of action from the Plaquemines Parish Commission Council, is invalid. On the rent issue Bernard admits it is due but he disputes the amount.

Jordan advances the same argument as to the assignment, and alternatively pleads the crew of the barge crane were borrowed servants of Bernard, although employees of Jordan, thus exculpating the lessor from liability.

Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for $6,850 for past-due rental against Sherman Bernard individually and the Bernard corporation; and for $25,490.97 on the assigned claim against all of the defendants. From this adverse judgment all of the defendants have appealed.

The evidence developed at the trial is insufficient to furnish a factual basis upon which we might adjudicate all aspects of this suit. The record does establish the Bernard corporation was awarded a contract by Plaquemines Parish to relocate eight camps from a marshland right-of-way on which the United States Corps of Engineers planned to construct a hurricane protection levee to new sites designated by the Parish. On July 14, 1968, Sherman Bernard contacted Bobby Dagley, Hughes' representative, for the purpose of renting a crane barge to perform this contract. Not having this equipment available, plaintiff through Dagley arranged to lease the barge from Jordan which he sublet to Bernard. The record is silent as to whether Dagley negotiated the verbal contract of sublease with Bernard individually or as a representative of the Bernard corporation. In any event, Dagley testified he quoted Bernard a rental of $42.50 per hour for the manned crane barge with a ten-hour-per-day minimum charge. He further stated that under its lease with Jordan plaintiff was obligated to pay $32.50 per hour with the same daily minimum requirement.

Pursuant to this agreement, plaintiff dispatched a tug to tow the crane barge from the Jordan dock and deliver it to Sherman Bernard in Empire. Bernard advised that it was unnecessary for the tug to remain as he had his own boat with which to move the barge.

Performance of the camp-moving contract proceeded uneventfully for several days. On Friday, July 19, or Saturday, July 20, the barge crew began digging a flotation canal across the marsh to reach two camp sites on Bay Adams rather than proceeding there by a longer indirect route through navigable waters. That Sunday afternoon the barge operator was ordered to stop the excavation by the Corps of Engineers and/or Chalin Perez, and the vessel was seized. At this point the crane had dredged through between two-thirds and three-fourths of the levee right-of-way and, in so doing, had destroyed the marsh foundation upon which the levee was to be constructed.

The operation remained suspended for one or two days, after which either Perez or the Corps of Engineers instructed the operator or Bernard to resume dredging the channel to Bay Adams because (1) the camp-moving contract was behind schedule and (2) the damage to the foundation had been done.

Meanwhile, according to the testimony of Perez, it was essential to repair the levee foundation without delay because the 1968 hurricane season was approaching and the Corps of Engineers would not issue the work order for the construction of the levee until the excavation was filled. In a letter to Perez dated August 9, 1968 (introduced *789 in evidence by plaintiff without objection)[1] the Corps advised:

"This excavation constitutes an adverse change with respect to the levee foundation and, therefore, must be rectified before notice to proceed can be issued to the contractor. An engineering analysis has been made to determine the acceptable method of repair. It was found that the segment of this channel within 161 feet of each side of the centerline of the proposed levee must be filled with shell in horizontal lifts across the full width, * * *. Replacement of the material that was excavated by casting back into the channel will not be acceptable, nor can replacement be made through the closure by hydraulic means."

Perez testified after being unable to contact Bernard he requested the Hughes corporation to assume the responsibility and undertake the remedial work. Hughes contracted with Ayres Material Co., Inc., to furnish the shells and fill the excavation for which it was charged $25,490.97. The record is insufficient to admit of a calculation of how much of the excavation this amount of shells covered; however, it is highly probable that it exceeded the 322-foot area specified by the Corps of Engineers.

We will discuss the areas in which the evidence is incomplete and inconclusive as we consider the various complaints of error raised by the Bernard corporation and Bernard individually.

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Bluebook (online)
306 So. 2d 785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hb-buster-hughes-inc-v-bernard-lactapp-1975.