Jung v. Gwin

139 So. 774, 174 La. 111, 1932 La. LEXIS 1628
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 4, 1932
DocketNo. 31215.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 139 So. 774 (Jung v. Gwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jung v. Gwin, 139 So. 774, 174 La. 111, 1932 La. LEXIS 1628 (La. 1932).

Opinion

ST. PAUL, J.

Some time before April 16, 1928, the defendant, O. M. Gwin, who is a general contractor doing business as the O. M. Gwin Construction Company, entered into a building contract with plaintiffs by which he agreed to construct an annex to the building known as the Jung Hotel in the city of New Orleans; one of the provisions of said contract being that:

“All questions subject to arbitration under this contract shall be submitted to arbitration at the choice pf either party to dispute.
“The contractor shall not cause delay of any work during the proceedings of arbitration.
“The award of the arbitrators shall be in writing and it shall not be open to objection on account of the form of the proceedings or the award, unless otherwise provided by the controlling statutes.
“In the event of such statutes providing on any matter covered by this article' otherwise than as hereinbefore specified, the method of procedure throughout and the legal effect of the award shall be wholly in accordance with the said statutes, it being-intended to lay down a principle of action to be followed, leaving its local application to be adapted to the legal requirements of the jurisdiction having authority over the arbitration.”

■ Another provision of said contract is as follows:

_ “If the owner should fail to pay the contractor within seven days of its maturity and presentation any sum certified by the architect, or awarded by the arbitrators, then the contractor may, upon seven days written notice to the owner and architect, stop work or terminate this contract and recover from the *115 owner payment for the work executed and any loss sustained upon any plans or materials and reasonable profit and damages.”

I.

During the course of excavating for the foundation, a flow of quicksand was struck, which caused considerable damage and delay, and a controversy arose between the contractor and the owner as to who must bear the burden of said damages and delay; whether the flow of quicksand was merely an unexpected difficulty encountered by the contractor in the execution of his work and of which he alone bore the risk (Picard Construction Co. v. Board of Commissioners, 161 La. 1002, 109 So. 816;. O’Leary v. Board of Port Commissioners, 150 La. 649, 91 So. 139; U. S. v. Gleason, 175 U. S. 588, 20 S. Ct. 228, 44 L. Ed. 284), or an occurrence which should have been foreseen and provided against by owner’s architects, but was not.

II.

Thereupon the contractor demanded an arbitration, as had been provided for in the building contract, to wit, April 16, 1928.

This was before the effective date of our present excellent law on arbitration, Act No. 262 of 1928 (August 1, 1928); and hence, even by the very terms of the building contract itself, the arbitration, and all the proceedings before the arbitrators, as well as the effect of their award, were to be governed by the former provisions of the Civil Code and Code of Practice on the subject of arbitration.

III.

Accordingly, the arbitrators proceeded to their labors, and on August 29, 1928, gave their award in favor of the contractor and against the owners; whereupon the owners demurred and threatened to appeal'from the decision of the arbitrators.

Thereupon the contractor, in his turn, gave notice to the owners that, if the award were not paid at the end of seven days, he (the contractor) “will (would) exercise the right accorded to him under the contract, to stop work or terminate' the contract” (Milner, Atty., to Danziger, Atty., September 10, 1928); meaning thereby that he would avail himself of the right accorded him by the contract, if the owner should fail to pay the contractor within seven days of its maturity and presentation any sum certified by the architect or awarded by arbitrators, “to stop work or in the alternative, to terminate the contract and sue the owner for all profit, loss, damages, etc.” (Milner, Atty., to Danziger, Atty., September 7th, 1928.)

IV.

On September 10, 1928, to wit, on the same day on which the owners received the contractor’s notice that he would cease work or terminate the contract, the owners went into court and prayed for judgment “reversing, setting aside, annulling and vacating, the award of said arbitrators” on numerous technical grounds, principally on the ground that the arbitrators (a majority of them) erred in their construction of the building contract and appreciation of the respective rights of the contractor and the owners.

V.

On September 13 (14th), 1928, the owners, in order that the contractor might not stop work or attempt to terminate the contract as ha had threatened to do, paid to the con *117 tractor, under protest, the amount of the award against them; to wit, the sum of $14,-616.60, which amount the contractor received, acknowledging in the receipt which he gave that said payment had been made by the owners “under protest and with full reservation of your (their) rights.”

VI

Of course the suit to reverse, set aside, annul, and vacate the award of the arbitrators, the award having been paid, is a purely futile and inane proceeding, unless it be preliminary to a suit to recover the amount of the award so paid; and the courts will not pass upon purely academic questions. Hence, at the very threshold of this suit we are met with the necessity of inquiring whether, if the award be set aside, these plaintiffs may then recover the amount which they paid under that award “because of the threat of Mr. Gwin (the contractor) to stop work, and because my (Mr. Danziger’s) clients, under no condition wishing to have this threat carried out, because of the tremendous loss it would entail upon someone, deem it best to pay the amount named by the arbitrators (erroneous as their decision may be), under protest, with reservation of all the rights of the Jung (the owners’) interests.”

If plaintiffs, even though they paid under protest and with full reservation of all their rights, none the less cannot recover the amount paid, then any action to recover said amount must be fruitless; and this suit then raises a mere moot question, not justiciable.

vn.

If plaintiffs can recover at all, they can only do so as having paid by mistake, or through coercion, something they did not owe. Rev. Civ. Code, art. 2302.

Article 2302 reads as follows:

“He who has paid through mistake, believing himself a debtor, may reclaim what he has paid.” (Italics ours.)

But there is no such case here. Plaintiffs may not have owed the amount of the award, but they were laboring under no mistake as to that. They at no time believed that they owed this amount; on the contrary, they at all times believed that they did not owe it, .and protested vigorously that they did not. So the payment was not made because of any mistake as to their owing or not owing the amount they paid. When they paid it, they did

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Bluebook (online)
139 So. 774, 174 La. 111, 1932 La. LEXIS 1628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jung-v-gwin-la-1932.