Lichtentag v. Feitel

1 Teiss. 172, 1904 La. App. LEXIS 37
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 4, 1904
DocketNo 3221
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Teiss. 172 (Lichtentag v. Feitel) 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
Lichtentag v. Feitel, 1 Teiss. 172, 1904 La. App. LEXIS 37 (La. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

MOORE, J.

This litigation grows out of a building contract and involves construction and interpretation of Act No. 180 of 1894 entitled: “An act relative to contracts for buildings and the security of workmen and furnishers of materials,” to the extent of ascertaining and determining what measure of security is accorded to workmen and furnishers of materials, and what are the relative rights and obligations of owner, of undertaker and of the latter’s surety, inter sese, and as to the workmen and material men, under said act.

It appears that on the 15th day of May, 1902, the plaintiff entered into a notarial contract with John H. Petry, whereby, for a stipulated sum to be paid by the plaintiff at stated periods, Petry was to erect two certain buildings according to plans and specifications made part of the contract, on the property owned by the plaintiff; all materials to be furnished by the said builder or under[174]*174taker. It was stipulated in the contract that “inasmuch as the contractor has not furnished a surety at the signing of this contract but agrees and binds himself so to do on or before the foundations, sills and joists are laid.none of the payments.to be made .until such bond and surety is furnished.”

Subsequently, on the 7th day of June, 1902, Maurice Feitel intervened in the act and bound himself “jointly and in solido with John H. Petry in the full sum of $3485.00 (the amount of the contract) for the faithful performance of and execution by the said Petry contractor, of the said contract, in conformity with the plans, drawings, specifications and general instructions therein specified and referred to as part thereof, etc.” On the 10th day of June, 1902, the contract and bond was recorded in the Mortgage office. At this time the work of construction had not been commenced. Simultaneous with the signing of the bond by him, as surety, Feitel required of and obtained from Petry a written authorization on the plaintiff to pay over to him, Feitel, “all payments due and to become due under the contract.” This was accepted by the plaintiff and Feitel collected thereunder the sum of two thousand dollars from time to time as the payments matured.

On the 19th of August, 1902, Petry defaulted on this contract and abandoned the work, whereupon, his surety authorized the plaintiff, in writing, to complete the same at his, Feitel’s expense.

Under this authorization the owner completed the buildings expending $912.60. Of this sum $729.95 was actually employed in the completion of the buildings and the sum of $188.65 was paid to laborers for wages due them for work done before Petry’s default, in accordance with Feitel’s authorization to plaintiff so to do. Having paid to Feitel in cash, as per Petry’s written instructions.$2000 00

And having expended for the completion of the building after Petry’s default. 912 60

There remained a balance due by plaintiff under said con-. tract of. 572 40

To complete the amount plaintiff obligated herself to pay, to wit.$3485 00

At a time a number of furnishers of materials, whose claims aggregated $1840.79, had recorded liens against plaintiff’s property and had instituted suits against her and the surety on Petry’s bond to recover judgments against them in solido for the amount of their respective claims. Thereupon plaintiff, depositing in the registry of the Court the balance due on her said contract, $572.40 formed a concursus and cited all parties in interest to assert whatever rights* they had against this fund; all the independent suits being consolidated with this proceeding. The Lhote Lumber Manufacturing Company, asserting a claim of $1017.74 being for materials fur[175]*175nished, intervened in the concursus and, alleging that inasmuch as the contract between the plaintiff and Petr}' exceeded one thousand dollars and as no contract and bond were recorded within one week after the contract was signed and before the work was commenced, the plaintiff, with the surety on the bond, are, under the provisions of Act No. 180 of 1894, liable in solido to said company for the amount of its claim, prays judgment iu solido against the said owner and the said surety on the undertaker’s or contractor's bond.

To both the petition of the plaintiff in the concursus, and to the petition of intervention of the Lhote Manufacturing Co., Feitel interposed exceptions of no cause of action, and upon their being overruled filed answers specifically denying any liability' on the bond for the reason, substantially, that he was discharged from his obligation as surety because the contract and bond were not recorded within one week after the contract was signed and before the work was commenced.

To the Lhote Company’s petition in intervention Mrs. Lichten-tag answers, substantially, that the contract and bond were duly recorded in the Mortgage office “before the work had been commenced and before any materials or supplies had been furnished to said buildings;” that the Lhote Compány had recognized Feitel as the surety, called on him several tirjies, demanded payment of its bills and in fact accepted two separate payments from him on account of its claim;- that before any supplies or materials were furnished to the contractor by the Lhote Company the latter first received the sanction and approval of said Feitel, surety, for the same who guaranteed their payment; that by the conduct and acts of said intervenor, it is estopped from denying that said Feitel is the surety, and estoppel is specially pleaded.

There was judgment ordering a distribution among the inter-venors of the sum of $572.40, amount deposited by the plaintiff; cancelling the liens and privileges recorded against the buildings; rejecting the demands of the intervenors for a personal judgment against Mrs Lichtentag; and awarding judgment in favor of the several intervenors against John H. Petry and Maurice Feitel, his surety, for the amount of their respective claims, reserving to them the right to proceed against Mrs. Lichtentag in the event of said intervenors being unable to realize their respective claims out of Maurice Feitel and in the event said Maurice Feitel should become insolvent.

From this judgment the Lhote Company and Maurice Feitel alone appeal. As Feitel’s pleas of no cause of action are founded on the same ground as that urged by the answer, they will be considered with the merits. As stated, the building contract was signed on the 15th day of May, the bond twenty-three days thereafter— June 7; both, however, were recorded within one week after the [176]*176signing of the bond and before the work was commenced. The argument of the learned counsel for the appellant, Feitel, the surety on the bond, is, substantially, first: that where, as in the instant case, the bond is furnished ostensibly under the Act of 1894, and the bond and the contract, the faithful execution of which the bond is intended to secure, are not recorded in the Mortgage office within the period prescribed by the Act, the penalty is that the owner of the building shall alone become liable for all balances due to the workmen and furnishers of materials used in the building, and that as a consequence of the personal liability thus imposed on the owner the surety on the bond is discharged therefrom as against the owner, the workmen and the furnishers of materials.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Teiss. 172, 1904 La. App. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lichtentag-v-feitel-lactapp-1904.