Kerner v. Gilt

296 So. 2d 428
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 20, 1974
Docket6017
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 296 So. 2d 428 (Kerner v. Gilt) 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
Kerner v. Gilt, 296 So. 2d 428 (La. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

296 So.2d 428 (1974)

Charles J. KERNER, Jr., and Vincent L. Piraro, d/b/a K. P. Builders
v.
Mr. and Mrs. Emil GILT.
Joseph F. BUA
v.
Emil J. GILT et al.
W. J. GEAGAN LUMBER COMPANY, INC.
v.
Charles J. KERNER, Jr., and Vincent L. Piraro, d/b/a K. P. Builders.

No. 6017.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

June 6, 1974.
Rehearing Denied July 3, 1974.
Writ Refused September 20, 1974.

*429 George J. Dowd, Chalmette, for Mr. & Mrs. Emil J. Gilt, defendants-appellants.

Kenneth C. Hughes, Metairie, for Charles J. Kerner, Jr. & Vincent L. Piraro, plaintiffs-appellees.

E. E. Huppenbauer, Jr., New Orleans, for Joseph F. Bua, plaintiff-appellee.

Thomas L. Hollis, New Orleans, for W. J. Geagan Lumber Co., Inc., plaintiff-appellee.

Before REDMANN, SCHOTT and MORIAL, JJ.

SCHOTT, Judge

These consolidated cases arose out of a remodeling job on the house owned by Mr. and Mrs. Emil J. Gilt in Harahan, Louisiana. The principal suit by Charles J. Kerner, Jr. and Vincent L. Piraro, d/b/a K. P. Builders, as the contractor, was a claim for $6,650.76, based on allegations of a written contract between them and the Gilts. The second suit by Joseph F. Bua, a roofing contractor, against K. P. Builders and the Gilts was a claim for $1,400.00 for labor and material in finishing the roof on the house, and the third suit was by Geagan Lumber Company, Inc., a supplier of lumber, against K. P. Builders and the Gilts claiming $483.72 for materials installed in the house.

In response to the claim of K. P. Builders, the Gilts alleged that the work was performed pursuant to an oral contract between them entered into on April 12, 1970, under the terms of which certain work was to be done for a lump sum of $8,685.00. They alleged that the written contract entered into subsequently was to cover extra work on the basis of its cost plus 20% profit to the contractor. They allege that K. P. Builders breached the contract in that they abandoned the project before completion and in that the work done was defective. The Gilts reconvened for the cost of completing the work and for damages to the contents of the house and mental anguish and physical suffering sustained by Mrs. Gilt, allegedly caused by the negligence of K. P. Builders in performing their work. In response to the Bua claim for the roofing job, the Gilts contended that the work was defective and that the material used on the job was not of the quality Bua represented it to be.

As to the claim of the lumber supplier, while there is no question but that the amount is owed there is disagreement between the Gilts and K. P. Builders as to who is liable for the amount. This is a dispute without substance. Both are liable since there was no timely recorded general contract; LSA-R.S. 9:4812.

*430 In written reasons for judgment, the trial judge found that the parties did enter into "an extremely loose agreement" for work on the Gilts' house; that the written contract sued on by K. P. Builders was only a memorandum of discussions between the parties and that K. P. Builders was justified in failing to complete the job because of the Gilts' failure to make progress payments. He found further that K. P. Builders was entitled to recover the full amount of labor and materials shown on invoices submitted by K. P. Builders to the Gilts during the performance of the work plus 20% of profit on the amounts charged for items other than labor performed by K. P. Builders, resulting in a judgment in favor of K. P. Builders in the amount of $3,829.18. The reconventional demand of the Gilts was dismissed on a finding by the trial judge that they failed to carry their burden of proof concerning defects and poor workmanship. A judgment was awarded to Bua against Gilt in the amount of $1,400.00, but Bua's claim against K. P. Builders as well as the reconventional demand of Gilt against Bua was dismissed. Judgment was rendered in favor of W. J. Geagan Lumber Company, Inc. against the Gilts and K. P. Builders jointly and in solido for $483.72. The liens in favor of Bua and Geagan were recognized and maintained. From these judgments only the Gilts have appealed.

The evidence shows that for some period of time prior to any meetings between the Gilts and K. P. Builders the Gilts had been considering some remodeling of their home and had secured a set of plans outlining the work to be done. Vincent Piraro, one of the two partners owning K. P. Builders, met the Gilts in April or May, 1970, and agreed to study the plans for the purpose of submitting an estimate to do the work desired. On May 9, 1970, an agreement was struck between the parties which included the following:

"Article 1. Scope of work-Contractor shall furnish all labor and material to perform all work as per plan's and owners specifications.
2. Time of completion—Ninety (90) days or sooner pertaining to weather conditions.
3. Contract Sum—Owner agrees to pay labor and material plus 20% of complete cost.
4. Progress payments—to be agreed upon by owner and contractor.
5. Final payment—upon completion of job. All to be presented and 20% attached."

Gilt testified that the written document was drawn to cover any extra work which he wanted done during the course of construction but that an entire detailed scope of work was orally agreed upon between the parties on April 12, 1970, for a lump sum price of $8,685.00. Although the written contract refers to plans and specifications, and although a set of plans was introduced at the trial (not found in the record before us on appeal), there were never any written specifications.

It is clear from the testimony of the parties that they generally understood and agreed that the scope of the work to be performed was 1) an extension of an open cement patio located in the rear of the house enclosed on three sides by outer walls of the house, and 2) the covering over of that patio by extension of the existing roof on the house with enclosure of the extended patio on the fourth side by the construction of a new exterior wall. With this work would come a two-story addition to the house, and it was contemplated that dormer windows would be installed in the original as well as the extended roof over the area of the new downstairs room where the open patio formerly existed. There is no basis for our disturbing the trial judge's rejection of the Gilts' theory of an oral contract to do this work for a lump sum since that issue was resolved primarily on the basis of a resolution of conflicting testimony of Gilt *431 and Piraro. The evidence shows that the parties agreed that the general scope of work described above was to be done on the basis of the cost of the labor and material required plus 20% as a gross profit to the contractor with the specifications or details to be supplied as the job progressed. The evidence further supports Piraro's testimony to the effect that it would have been impractical for him to do this work on a lump sum basis because the cost could not be estimated in advance.

The work commenced on May 18, 1970, and on June 10 the first bill was presented to the Gilts in the amount of $2,230.70 for lumber, gravel and concrete, studs, braces, nails, form lumber, labor for concrete finishing, and labor supplied by employees of K. P. Builders between May 18 and June 12. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
296 So. 2d 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kerner-v-gilt-lactapp-1974.