Land and Marine Services, Inc. v. Diablo Data Systems, Inc. of Louisiana

471 So. 2d 792
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 13, 1985
Docket84-CA-668
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 471 So. 2d 792 (Land and Marine Services, Inc. v. Diablo Data Systems, Inc. of Louisiana) 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
Land and Marine Services, Inc. v. Diablo Data Systems, Inc. of Louisiana, 471 So. 2d 792 (La. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

471 So.2d 792 (1985)

LAND AND MARINE SERVICES, INC. and Wilfred M. Beauford, Individually
v.
DIABLO DATA SYSTEMS, INC. OF LOUISIANA, "A" Computer Service, Computer Products International & Computer Services Corporation.

No. 84-CA-668.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

May 13, 1985.
Rehearing Denied July 17, 1985.

*794 George Kim Johnson, Baton Rouge, and James D. Maxwell, Kenner, Michael A. Lombard, Metairie, Associate Counsel for plaintiffs-appellees.

C. James Gelpi, New Orleans, for defendants-appellees.

Veronica A. Cubit, Howard E. Sinor, Jr., New Orleans, for defendant-appellant Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent Carrere and Denegre.

Before BOWES, CURRAULT and DUFRESNE, JJ.

BOWES, Judge.

Defendant, Digital Computer Controls, Inc. (hereinafter DCC), has appealed a judgment of the trial court in favor of the plaintiffs, and also granting defendant Diablo's third party demand against them. Plaintiffs, in turn, have cross-appealed the damages award, averring that the judgment is inadequate to compensate them for their losses. Finally, Diablo has answered the appeal, alleging that the attorney's fees granted in its third party demand were insufficient. To sketch the facts, we quote partially from the reasons for judgment:

What seemingly could have been under other circumstances a simple transfer from the originator of the system to the ultimate user became, because of the complexities of modern business, a series of transactions involving to some extent an apparently inordinate number of persons and firms, most of which or whom have been at one time or another parties to this convoluted litigation.
The parties plaintiff are Mr. Wilfred Beauford and Land & Marine Services, Inc., a corporation of which Mr. Beauford is the president, and in which he holds 90% stock ownership. Of the large number of parties impleaded as defendants or third party defendants, those remaining at the close of the trial are: Data General Corporation, Digital Computer Controls, Inc., Diablo Data Systems of Louisiana, Inc., and Compunetics, Inc. Named as plaintiffs are Mr. Wilfred Beauford and Land & Marine Services, Inc.
In April of 1979, Mr. Wilfred Beauford entered into a purchase agreement with Diablo Data Systems of La., wherein the former agreed to purchase and the latter sold a computing system, consisting of hardware, operating system or software, and applications program or software. The computing system was ultimately delivered, *795 and, in July of 1979, Mr. Beauford leased it to Land & Marine Services, Inc., for use in that concern's accounting operation.

As a necessary prerequisite to flesh out these bare facts, the configuration of companies involved in the present matter is described below:

Dan Ellis and Leon Sampere each owned 50% of the stock of Diablo, of which company Ellis was president. Additionally, Sampere and Ellis each owned 50% of the stock in a company called Compunetics, Inc. Compunetics was the "agent company" for Diablo, and one of five corporations which formed another company called Computer Products International, hereinafter referred to as C.P.I. C.P.I. buys computers and software, and, in 1978, became distributor for Data General and Digital Computer Controls (DCC), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Data General. Data General manufactures the hardware, DCC the operations and applications software.

Wilfred Beauford is president of and major stockholder in Land and Marine Services, Inc., a marine insurance investigating and adjusting firm.

In late 1978, and early 1979, Mr. Beauford was faced with a retiring bookkeeper and a steadily growing business. He sought to replace, or perhaps more properly augment, the human element with a computer which would perform bookkeeping services. In February of 1979, the plaintiff made various contacts with a number of dealers, ultimately settling on Diablo Data Systems, Inc. The computer system which interested Mr. Beauford, which was distributed by Diablo, was manufactured by Data General. There was a demonstration of the computer's general functions, given by Leon Sampere. After obtaining from Mr. Beauford information relative to the amount of work (number of bills sent out, number of payroll checks, etc.) involved, Mr. Beauford was told that he needed a ten megabyte computer, with a 64KCPU (Central Processing Unit) and one hundred and twenty line printout.

Beauford was given a master menu detailing the programs available on the computer, which consisted of 12 programs. Sampere gave Beauford estimates on the prices of systems within the range that Land and Marine could afford. Beauford knew that Land and Marine was not in a position to purchase the computer; he determined that he would personally acquire the computer and lease the machine to Land and Marine. The necessary corporate measures were taken to approve this transaction.

In April, 1979, a sales contract between Wilfred Beauford and Diablo was executed. The contract specified the Data General Computer with its accompanying keyboard, printer (manufactured by Texas Instruments), and disk system. Programming for the following applications was also sold: General ledger, accounts payable, payroll, and time and charges billing to accounts receivable.

Once purchased, Roy O'Neil, a systems analyst on behalf of Diablo, began to work with Mr. Beauford to do systems analysis; this was a detailed study of the operations of Land and Marine, and a proposed conversion of the company's manual bookkeeping system into the computer.

As a result of the analysis, O'Neil drew up a set of specifications for a timekeeping system. These specifications were designed "from scratch" by O'Neil, who stated that he assumed there was no software available for that program.

Eddie Crist, a contractor doing systems design and programming for Diablo, was assigned the task of writing the timekeeping program based on O'Neil's notes. Having observed a package known as "Appl-W", manufactured and controlled by DCC, Crist felt that that program was "very close already, and by using the Apple-W (sic), we could decrease significantly the amount of time necessary to generate this package rather than write it from scratch."

Appl-W, according to Barbara Lowig, a former employee of DCC, is a wholesale distribution package "written for warehouse *796 application." Appl-W has an accounting portion, known as Appl-A. Appl-A is specifically geared to a warehouse invoice type of business.

The timekeeping program was far and away the most important part of the programs purchased by Land and Marine. After reviewing the proposals of Mr. Crist, Beauford opined that such a system met approximately 60% of his requirements. It was agreed that the system would be inaugurated, and, once functioning in place, the programmers (Diablo) would proceed to complete the remaining 40% of the plaintiff's requirements.

From the time of the installation of the computer, the system never worked properly. In splendidly-rendered reasons for judgment, the trial judge summed up the nature of the plaintiff's problems with the computer:

From its first application to the business affairs of Land & Marine, the computing system rendered a work product that was totally unacceptable. Data were loaded in, never to be recovered; figures were entered, only to be lost. The general ledger went awry, with accounts receivable and accounts payable data in disastrous state.

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