Lolley v. Cameron Parish Water Works District No. 1

416 So. 2d 1354
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 2, 1982
DocketNo. 82-71
StatusPublished

This text of 416 So. 2d 1354 (Lolley v. Cameron Parish Water Works District No. 1) 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
Lolley v. Cameron Parish Water Works District No. 1, 416 So. 2d 1354 (La. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

STOKER, Judge.

The plaintiff sued on a contract to paint a water tower and tank. After completion of the work the owner refused to pay, claiming the work was defective. The owner also asserted reconventional demands. The trial court found the work defective. It also held the owner’s claims were valid, and denied both claims. Both the contractor and owner have appealed.

Curtis Lolley, doing business as Hercules Tank and Iron Works (Lolley) was the contractor. He agreed to paint a tower and tank belonging to defendant and reconve-nor, Cameron Parish Water Works District No. 1, a political subdivision of Cameron Parish, Louisiana. Lolley sued both the waterworks district and the “Parish of Cameron”. Both answered and filed recon-ventional demands. We shall refer to the “District” to designate both the waterworks district and Cameron Parish.

FACTS

The parties entered into a written contract for the'work done for a total of $15,-900. Of this price $11,900 covered painting the exterior of the structure and $4,000 covered painting the interior of the tank. Lolley finished his job, but the District refused to pay for the work. After some time the District took the position that the work on both the exterior and interior was defective, and large sums would be required to correct the deficiencies. In addition, the District claims that Lolley owed various third parties for damages to private property caused by sprayed paint evidently carried by the wind. The general proposition that damage to some parties did occur is not in dispute. The District established that it paid $8,529.91 to correct the damage to property of third parties, primarily automobiles. The District claims that shortly after Lolley completed his job, rust began to show through the exterior paint applied by Lolley’s workmen. It also discovered that paint was peeling from the interior of the tank.

The District and the Parish answered Lolley’s suit denying his claims. The district reconvened for $30,000 to cover the cost of remedying the defective paint work. On August 17, 1981, the trial court signed an order permitting the District to amend its reconventional demand increasing the demand in reconvention to $132,500. The case was fixed for trial on August 20, 1981. On the day of the trial Lolley filed in open court a pleading denominated as Exceptions and Answers to Supplemental and Amending Reconventional Demand. The trial proceeded without disposition of the exceptions.

Lolley did not provide a performance bond and did not have in effect liability insurance to cover his job for the District. The Cashier and Secretary of the District, Barbara Lou LeBlanc, notified Lolley when third parties began to report damage to their automobiles and other property from spray paint. In response Lolley sent an adjustor or representative to look into the situation. Lolley’s company is an out of state concern. The adjustor made arrangements with an automobile repainting shop in Lake Charles, Louisiana, to clean the paint-damaged vehicles. LeBlanc maintained at trial that Lolley authorized her to pay the paint shop for its work from sums due Lolley under his contract with the District. Lolley denies he gave such authorization and claims that he merely authorized withholding the sums from the contract price until the matter was resolved. After working on about four vehicles, the Lake Charles firm declined to take any more work. LeBlanc contacted Lolley and, according to her testimony, Lolley instructed her to make arrangements with any other firm which would do the work. Lolley denies this.

Barbara Lou LeBlanc testified that she expended some $4,400 to $4,500 having ve-[1356]*1356hieles cleaned when Lolley instructed her to stop expending any of his money on third party claims. LeBlanc testified she complied with these instructions and did not spend any more funds under Lolley’s authorization.

The trial court found that the defective exterior paint work resulted from the attempt of Lolley’s painting crew to spray paint under adverse weather conditions and in high winds. No explanation for the problem with the interior paint job was found. The testimony convinced the trial court that the interior paint, although it met contract specifications, was not adhering and was peeling off of the interior surface in such degree as to justify a complete removal of the interior paint and application of a different treatment — the coating of the interior with a wax material. The low bid for this work was $5,900, the work was completed and the District paid the bid price.

The trial court concluded from the evidence that a “spot brush program” estimated to cost $6,000 would rectify the exterior paint problem.

Lolley complained that he was neither given an opportunity to check the work the District claims was defective nor to rectify any work which was actually defective. Lolley also claims the District actually accepted the job. The District did not make complaint of defective work until some time after Lolley completed his work, but also there is no evidence of an acceptance of work by the District itself. The District showed that the exterior paint supplier warned the job superintendent not to try to paint in adverse weather conditions.

In opposition to Lolley’s position the District claims Lolley refused to come to Cameron Parish to inspect the defective work.

TRIAL COURT’S ACTION

The trial court gave written reasons for judgment. We do not find the trial court was clearly wrong in its factual findings. The trial court found in favor of the District relative to the failure of Lolley’s work to hold up, but found the work was done in accordance with specifications. Therefore, the trial court’s reasons must be read as finding that Lolley’s crew performed the work in a defective manner. The exterior paint was actually selected by the District. The trial court’s reasons for judgment also indicate that Lolley substantially performed the work called for under the contract although with the results indicated. The trial court held that Lolley failed to comply with the terms of the contract which required that he carry liability insurance.

The trial court found that Barbara Lou LeBlanc paid $4,400 to $4,500 in third party damages claims with Lolley’s authorization given by telephone at which point Lolley directed LeBlanc to pay no more claims. The trial court found that the District paid a total of $8,529.11 in third party claims.

The trial court held Lolley’s breach of the obligation to carry liability insurance caused the District “to incur expenses of $8,529.91 for the payment of third party claims”. The trial court also held the “implied obligation of all contracts that the work will be performed with the measure of skill required was breached”. It found the repair costs for the interior work was $5,900 and the estimated cost of correcting the interior work was $6,000. The trial court stated in its reasons for judgment that the expenses mentioned above exceeded the contract price due Lolley; thus any amount due Lolley was “voided by this offset”.

The trial court held Lolley was not entitled to recover under the theory of quantum meruit. The trial court rejected the demands of Lolley as plaintiff and also rejected the reconventional demands of the District. The concluding portion of the trial court’s reasons for judgment are as follows:

“The demands of the plaintiff are rejected.
“The reconventional demand of the parish is without merit.

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Bluebook (online)
416 So. 2d 1354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lolley-v-cameron-parish-water-works-district-no-1-lactapp-1982.