Hughes v. Will

35 So. 2d 241, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 463
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 10, 1948
DocketNo. 18797.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 35 So. 2d 241 (Hughes v. Will) 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
Hughes v. Will, 35 So. 2d 241, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 463 (La. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Plaintiff, John R. Hughes, is a houseraiser and shorer, doing business under the name "Orleans Houseraising and Shoring Company." George J. Cameron, Sr., defendant, is the owner of a building which he desired to have raised and remodelled. O.R. Will is the son-in-law of Cameron and, having been in the military service during the last World War, was entitled to certain priorities in the securing of material and fixtures. Joseph Gould, at the time of the occurrences with which we are concerned, was a building contractor in New Orleans operating under the name "J. Gould Company."

On April 30, 1946, Gould, as contractor, entered into a contract with Cameron and Will, as owners, for the raising and remodelling of the said building. This contract was not recorded. Gould employed Hughes to do the raising of the building under a subcontract which provided for a payment of $600. This contract also provided for an allowance of twenty-one days for the free use of the jacks on which the building was to be raised after the completion of the raising, and for a charge of fifty cents per day for each jack should the jacks be required to remain under the building for more than twenty-one days.

Gould, the general contractor, defaulted on the contract and Cameron, who was, in fact, the owner of the building, undertook to complete the work himself. The raising contract was carried out by Hughes and after this subcontract had been completed Hughes, on August 8, 1946, recorded in the Mortgage Office of the Parish of Orleans an affidavit in which he set forth the fact that he had entered into the subcontract; that he had been paid only $200; that there was a balance due of $400 on the contract, and that there was due "in addition thereto, fifty cents per day for each of five jacks remaining on the job since July 9th, 1946." In this affidavit he stated that O.R. Will was the owner of the building.

On October 29, 1946, Hughes recorded in the Mortgage Office another affidavit in which he stated that George J. Cameron, Sr., was the owner of the building and in which he also stated that there was a balance due on the contract of $400 "plus demurrage of fifty cents per day per jack for each jack used on the building." On that same day, to wit: October 29, 1946, he also recorded an affidavit in which he stated that he desired "to supplement and amend the original affidavit filed herein," that is to say, the lien filed on August 8th as against Will, by stating that the said *Page 243 premises were owned by George J. Cameron, Sr.

Hughes then filed suit against Will and Cameron and also the general contractor, Gould, claiming $400 as the balance on the stipulated contract price and $594.50 as the amount due for the retention of jacks beyond twenty-one days after the completion of the raising contract. He later filed a supplemental petition in which he claimed an additional $28.13 for lumber left on the job after the completion of his work.

His right to sue the owner and his right to a lien for any balance due on the contract price of $600 are not disputed, it being conceded that because of the provisions of Act No. 298 of 1926, since the contract was not recorded, and since the owner obtained no bond from the contractor, the owner may, himself, be held liable to subcontractors, laborers and furnishers of material, and that a lien may be filed against the building. But defendants first of all contend that Will is not one of the owners and they further aver that the liens were not filed within the time limit fixed in the said statute, and they also contend that the amount claimed for the use of the jacks beyond the free time period fixed in the contract is a claim for which a lien may not be filed, and, finally, they claim that if such a lien may be filed, the amount claimed is not correct.

The owner, Cameron, by reconventional demand, asserts that the work was not done in a careful and proper manner; that his building was damaged and that as a result he is entitled to a judgment in reconvention against Hughes in the sum of $1,286.

There was judgment in favor of Hughes dismissing the suit as against Will, but against George J. Cameron, Sr., and Gould, the contractor, in the sum of $907, recognizing the lien and privilege in favor of Hughes, and dismissing the reconventional demand of Cameron. From this judgment Cameron has appealed.

The record shows that the work of Hughes in raising the house was completed more than sixty days before the recordation of any of the three liens referred to and defendant, calling attention to this, maintains that because of this delay no right to a lien remains in Hughes, and that he, therefore, has no right to assert his claim against the owner.

This identical question, that is whether the lien of a subcontractor, laborer or materialman must be filed within sixty days from the time at which that particular work is completed or that particular material is delivered, was considered by the Supreme Court in National Homestead Association v. Graham, 176 La. 1062, 147 So. 348, 351, wherein the Supreme Court held that such a lien may be filed at any time within sixty days of the completion of the general contract. In that case the Supreme Court stated the contention and its conclusion as follows:

"The contention made by the homestead company is that in order that a laborer, materialman, or any other may obtain a lien he must file and record his claim within sixty days from the date on which he performs his last labor, or furnishes the last material. We do not so construe the language of the act. We construe it to mean that the claim must be filed and recorded within 60 days after the last labor is performed on or last material is furnished for the building by any one. In other words, if the claim is filed within 60 days after the final completion of the building, it is in time, even though the laborer or furnisher of material did not file his claim within 60 days after he performed his last labor or furnished his last material on the building."

[1] The record shows that the principal job was not complete until long after the recordation of the three liens referred to and, therefore, the recordation was well within the time limit as construed by the Supreme Court in the Graham case.

Defendant's next contention is that there can be no lien for the amount which was charged for the rental of the jacks which remained supporting the building after it had been raised and before the new foundation was constructed under it. It is argued that a statute authorizing a building lien and permitting a claim to be made directly against an owner is in derogation *Page 244 of common right and must be strictly construed and that, therefore, the language of such a statute can not be so broadly interpreted as to permit it to include a claim for rental of machinery.

[2] It is true, of course, that lien statutes must be strictly construed. Griffith v. Williams, La. App.,19 So.2d 277; Yellow Pine Lumber Co. v. Maniscalco et al., La. App.,9 So.2d 320, and Lawrence v. Wright et al., 11 La. App. 703, 124 So. 697.

It is true, too, that in several cases it has been held that where a contractor or subcontractor finds it necessary to rent or purchase machinery or tools to carry out his contract, no lien against the work itself and no personal claim against the owner of the building may be asserted by the renter or seller of the machinery.

In Colonial Creosoting Co. v. Perry et al., 169 La. 90,124 So. 182, 184, the Supreme Court said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 So. 2d 241, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-will-lactapp-1948.