Madison Lumber Co. v. Globe Indemnity Co.

161 So. 775, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 572
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 10, 1935
DocketNo. 16105.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 161 So. 775 (Madison Lumber Co. v. Globe 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
Madison Lumber Co. v. Globe Indemnity Co., 161 So. 775, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 572 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Dendinger, Inc., doing business as Madison Lumber Company, and hereafter, for convenience, referred to as the Madison Company, is a furnisher of lumber, building materials, and supplies. John J. Julian is a contractor, and Globe Indemnity Company is a corporation engaged in the business of issuing various kinds of bonds, policies, and insurance contracts.

The Madison Company seeks solidary judgment against Julian and the surety in the sum of $749.59, together with interest and attorney’s fees, alleging that to be the balance due for materials furnished by it and used by Julian in the execution of a building contract in which Julian was contractor, Nicholas Schiro was owner, and Globe Indemnity Company surety for Julian. Both defendants deny the correctness of the various charges made for materials alleged to have been delivered, and particularly charge that in addition to the credits shown on the books of the Madison Company as representing amounts paid to it by Julian, the contractor, an additional sum of $471.45 has been paid which has not been properly credited to the account, although, so both defendants allege, the officials of the said Madison Company well knew, when they received the payment of $1,000 out of which the $471.45 referred to was credited to other accounts, that the entire payment of $1,000 represented the proceeds of a sum paid by Mr. Schiro, the owner, to Mr. Julian, the contractor, under the particular building contract out of which this litigation arose.

The surety, by call in warranty, seeks solidary judgment against Julian, the contractor, and also against Salvador Petrie for such amount as it may be condemned to pay to the Madison Company on the main demand, alleging that Petrie, as indemnitor, and Julian executed in its favor, when it wrote the bond, an indemnity agreement under which they agreed to hold it harmless in the event of loss.

Petrie contends that he is not liable as war-rantor, but we shall set forth his reasons and our discussion of this question after we have disposed of the principal controversies.

In the district court there was judgment in favor of the Madison Company solidarity against both defendants in the full amount prayed for, and there was judgment on the call in warranty in favor of the surety and against both Julian and Petrie solidarily for the full amount and also for attorneys’ fees in the sum of $100. The surety has appealed from the judgment against it, and Petrie has appealed from the judgment rendered against him on the call in warranty.

We first direct our attention to the principal question which is involved in the controversy between the plaintiff and the two defendants on the main demand, i. e., whether or not the Madison Company was within its legal rights in imputing a part of the payment of $1,000 made by Julian, the contractor, to other accounts on which Julian was indebted to it.

When Julian made the payment of $1,000, he used the proceeds of a cheek which had just previously been given him by Schiro, as a payment under the building contract on which the Globe Indemnity Company was surety, and it is conceded that the Madison Company imputed only $528.55 of that $1,000 to the particular account which was entered on its books as the “new Schiro job” and applied the balance, $-471.45, to other accounts on which Julian was indebted to it.

It is not strenuously contended that the officials of the Madison Company did not know the source of this particular payment of $1,-000. In fact, Mr. Dubose, the salesman of the Madison Company, who had sold some of the materials for use in the “new Schiro job,” testified as follows:

“Q. Did you know where this money came from that was paid on this job? A. Ves, I did. From the Schiro job.-
“Q. Did Mr. Sander know where it came from? A. Yes, he did.
“Q. From where? A. From the new Schiro job, or the second Schiro job you better say.
“Q. You mean the one involved in this law suit? A. Yes sir.”

The Mr. Sander mentioned is the credit manager of the Madison Company. He makes no denial of the fact that he knew or, at least, suspected the source of the payment. In fact, when asked whether he knew “that this $1,- *777 000.00 check came from funds derived from the Sehiro joh,” after first stating that he did not know, he finally said, “I might have assumed it.”

However, although practically conceding knowledge of the source of the funds, the Madison Company contends that the imputation to the various accounts was made as the result of an agreement with Julian, the contractor, and it maintains that an imputation so made cannot he set aside whatever may be the effect upon others.

The evidence shows that Mrs. Julian, the wife of the contractor, was authorized to sign cheeks on the account of her husband, and that it was customary for her to do so. It also appears that when Mr. Sehiro paid to Julian the money, out of which the $1,000 was drawn for payment to the Madison Company, Mrs. Julian drew a cheek to the order of the Madison Company and made a notation on it reading “Sehiro joh,” and that when the officials of the Madison Company noticed that notation they sent the cheek back and asked that another one be issued without any notation, because they desired to impute part of the payment to various older accounts and did not intend to apply all of it on the “Sehi'ro job.”

It is conceded that the notation “Sehiro job” referred to the new work out of which this litigation has arisen, and not to the old “Sehiro job” which had been completed long previously.

Julian denies that he consented to the application of any of this fund to any other account than the “new.Sehiro job,” but we find it unnecessary to determine whether his version of this phase of the controversy is the true one because we believe it to be well settled that where a materialman has on his books several accounts against the same contractor and receives a payment and knows the source thereof, he cannot impute any part of that payment, even with the consent of the contractor, to any other account than that for which it was originally intended so long as the right or interest of the owner of the building or of the contractor’s surety will be adversely affected by such imputation.

This question was interestingly discussed by this court in the matter of Roca v. Garuso, 7 Orl. App. 451, in which this court said: * * ⅜ js * * * unfair for a fur-nisher of material, knowingly to receive of a contractor money paid to the latter under one contract, and impute the same to some other account whilst the debt incurred in connection with the contract remains unpaid. By that simple system any furnisher of materials would have it in his power to prejudice of the rights of one surety or owner to the advantage of another, as his pleasure or interest might suggest. He might even recoup losses due to his own negligence or laches, by imputing such payments to some worthless account, and in due course falling on a new surety or owner for the whole amount of the new account.”

In Hortman-Salmen Co. v. Naquin, 12 La. App. 491, 126 So.

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Bluebook (online)
161 So. 775, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madison-lumber-co-v-globe-indemnity-co-lactapp-1935.