Levingston Supply Co. v. Home Indemnity Co.

161 So. 2d 920, 1964 La. App. LEXIS 1411
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 27, 1964
DocketNo. 6022
StatusPublished

This text of 161 So. 2d 920 (Levingston Supply Co. v. Home Indemnity Co.) 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
Levingston Supply Co. v. Home Indemnity Co., 161 So. 2d 920, 1964 La. App. LEXIS 1411 (La. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinions

REID, Judge.

This is a suit by a furnisher of material against a contractor’s and sub-contractor’s surety to recover the cost of supplies provided for construction of a public building.

Plaintiff, Levingston Supply Company, Inc., was the furnisher of materials to Vince Mechanical Contractors, Inc., subcontractor under a contract dated December 22, 1959, between the State of Louisiana Department of Hospitals, as Owner, and Albert D. Kendrick, as General Contractor, for the construction of the Receiving and Rehabilitation Building at the East Louisiana State Hospital at Jackson, Louisiana. Vince Mechanical Contractors, Inc. agreed to provide all plumbing and heating work specified in the general contract and to furnish all labor and materials in connection therewith. Travelers Indemnity Company was the surety for Albert D. Kendrick and Home Indemnity Company was the surety for Vince Mechanical Contractors, Inc.

Plaintiff alleges it sold plumbing supplies and materials totalling $2684.42 to Vince Mechanical Contractors, Inc. between March 8, 1960 and May 8, 1960 specifically for this hospital job and each invoice was marked for this job. Plaintiff alleges its account became due June 1, 1960, and it filed its sworn statement of its claim with the Department of Hospitals by letter of August 31, 1960, and also recorded it in the mortgage records of the Parish of East Feliciana on August 12, 1960. Plaintiff further alleges it made written demand on the Contractor, the Sub-Contractor, and the two surety companies, by letter of its attorneys dated August 31, 1960; more than 30 days had elapsed since such demands were received by said parties; the account had not been paid; and under the law plaintiff was entitled to an additional 10% on the amount of both principal and interest.

The defendants filed a general denial, but admitted the existence of the contract [922]*922and the subcontract and admitted Travelers Indemnity Company was surety for the Contractor and Home Indemnity Company was surety for Vince Mechanical Contractors, Inc., the Sub-Contractor.

The Trial Judge, for written reasons assigned, rendered a judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant bonding companies in the amount of $2684.42, together with interest and 10% additional on the amount of principal and interest as attorneys’ fees. From that judgment this appeal has been taken.

The issue involved herein concerns whether the supplies sold by the plaintiff to the sub-contractor were actually delivered to the job site and if so, whether the materials went into the construction of the building for which they were intended.

There is no contention that the supplies were not sold by plaintiff, Levingston Supply Company, Inc., to the Sub-Contractor, Vince Mechanical Contractors, Inc., and there is no question as to the price, quantity or quality of the goods sold.

The facts clearly show that with the exception of a few items sent directly to the job site, the bulk of the materials were delivered by plaintiff to the Sub-Contractor’s warehouse in Baton Rouge or were shipped directly to the Sub-Contractor’s warehouse in Baton Rouge by the manufacturer on order from the plaintiff. At the trial plaintiff introduced in evidence its invoices and delivery tickets showing delivery of the materials to the Sub-Contractor at his warehouse.

Mr. Anthony Joseph Graphia, III, who at the time the materials in question were delivered to the Sub-Contractor was the purchasing and expediting agent for Vince Mechanical Contractors, Inc., testified that he ordered all of the items involved in this law suit from plaintiff and they were delivered to the Sub-Contractor’s warehouse for the hospital job. He said there was a take-off by an estimator for the materials needed on each job performed by the SubContractor, a copy of which was given to him as purchasing agent. He further testified the warehouse under his supervision signed delivery tickets on each delivery and certain areas were set aside in the warehouse where the materials for each job were placed. Each job was given a number and this job was given No. 450. Mr. Graphia testified all items which came in were checked by him or his warehousemen and they were either put in bins for future delivery or loaded on trucks for delivery to the job site. Mr. Graphia identified plaintiff’s invoices introduced in evidence and testified this material went to the job site. He further testified he had no information whatsoever that the materials were not actually delivered to the job site and no foreman made a complaint for failure to receive the materials which, he testified, would have happened if the materials had not been delivered. On cross examination he did admit at times they had as many as 25 or 26 jobs under process at one time and it was possible there could be some intermingling of materials and in case of an emergency items purchased for one job would be shifted to another job, but testified this seldom happened. When asked if he knew of his own knowledge that every one of the items listed in Exhibits P-1 through P-10 which were ordered from Levingston were actually delivered to the job, he said:

“A: Let’s put it like this: I’m going to verify that these purchase orders written here was typed by myself, that these approvals for payment were checked by myself, that these items supposedly purchased off this purchase order for the job was for the job. and, as to my knowledge right now, did go to the job.”

Eural Thomas, a warehouseman for Vince Mechanical Contractors, Inc. testified that he knew of his own knowledge that all of the materials involved in the job left the warehouse for the job because he helped load most of the material on the [923]*923Sub-Contractor’s trucks, but lie could not testify the materials arrived at the job site. He did testify he had seen some of the valves in question on the job site.

Mr. Clifton E. McKey, who at the time was supply man and assistant purchasing agent, testified as to the procedure for Tiandling materials as outlined by Mr. Graphia. He also identified the invoices and some of the delivery tickets which were signed by him. He testified he personally delivered the material itemized on the delivery ticket designated as Exhibit P-5-A to the job site.

Mr. William E. Brooks, Superintendent for Vince Mechanical on the job in question, testified all of the material listed on the estimating sheet was on the job site and that when he left the job, when it was ■shut down on August 2, 1960, all of the materials needed to complete the job were on hand at the job site.

Defendants relied primarily on the following facts for the defense that the materials had not been delivered to the job site nor incorporated in the building.

There was evidence to show that after the job was shut down someone broke into the storage shack and removed all of the material, but there was uncontradicted testimony that Mr. Vince himself returned part of the material to the shack and the Trial Judge held this was immaterial since the goods had been delivered to the site.

In attempting to show that all of the material in question had not been incorporated into the building, the defendants produced ■as a witness Mr. Charles W. Hogg, Jr. Mr. Hogg was an employee of J. F. Naylor & ■Company, the plumbing contractor which took over and completed the plumbing subcontract after Vince defaulted. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
161 So. 2d 920, 1964 La. App. LEXIS 1411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levingston-supply-co-v-home-indemnity-co-lactapp-1964.