Meriwether Supply Co. v. Baugh

6 La. App. 730, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 234
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 8, 1927
DocketNo. 2265
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 6 La. App. 730 (Meriwether Supply Co. v. Baugh) 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
Meriwether Supply Co. v. Baugh, 6 La. App. 730, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 234 (La. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

'ODOM, J.

Plaintiff appealed from the judgment of the City Court sustaining an exception’of no cause of action against Mrs. Baugh.

The petition alleges that, in the month of August, 1923, the A. & M. Construction Company entered into a contract with Mrs. Baugh for the erection of a building; that said Mrs. Baugh did not cause a written contract for said work to be recorded in the mortgage records of the parish, nor did she require the contractor to furnish bond as required by Act. No. 139 of 1922.

Plaintiff further alleges that it furnished materials and supplies to the contractor for the construction of the building, which were used therein, and that by the failure of Mrs. Baugh, the owner, to have her contract with the contractor reduced to writing and recorded, and by her failure to require the contractor to furnish bond with security, she is responsible to it personally for the payment of the price of the materials furnished the contractor and not paid for by it.

But plaintiff failed to allege that it mailed or otherwise sent to Mrs. Baugh, the owner, or to her architect or other representative, a sworn, itemized statement of its amount, or that it recorded a sworn statement of the amount thereof, or its contract, in the office of the recorder of mortgages of the parish in which the said work was done within [732]*732thirty days after the registry of notice of the acceptance of the work.

Mrs. Baugh, in limine, tendered an exception of no cause of action, which was sustained.

The sole question presented for our consideration is, whether the owner, who has failed to have her contract for the construction of a building reduced to writing and recorded, and who has failed to exact of the contractor b.ond with security and to have the same recorded, is personally liable to a furnisher of materials in case the furnisher of such materials has failed to serve on such owner a sworn, itemized statement of the account and has failed to record a sworn statement of .the amount thereof in the office of the recorder of the parish in which the property is situated, under Act No. 139 of 1922.

Act No. 139 of 1922 relates to building-contracts and provides that bonds shall be given in connection therewith, for the recordation of the contract and bond, and “for the creation, recordation and recognition of liens and privileges and the protection of contractors * * * material men * * * who shall * * * furnish material, machinery or fixtures for any building or other structure upon land in this state.”

Section 5 of the act reads as follows:

“If the bond is found to be insufficient in amount or not to have a proper and solvent surety, or if the owner fails to require a bond, or if he fail to record the contract and bond during the time herein provided, he shall be liable to sub-contractors, journeymen, cartmen, truckmen, workmen, laborers, and mechanics and furnishers of material to the same extent as the surety would have been. And the privilege hereinbefore provided for if recorded as provided in Section 2 hereof, shall remain in full force and effect until all claims against the building or other work erected on the land on which it is situated shall have been paid, unless otherwise ordered by the court. In all cases where surety has been furnished, the surety shall be entitled to make only the same defenses that the contractor for whom he signed the bond is authorized to make except as to the owner who has made payments in anticipation.”

The contention of counsel for plaintiff is that the owner who fails to have his contract reduced to writing and recorded and who fails to exact of the contractor bond and surety, stands in the place and stead of, a surety on the contractor’s bond, and can make no defenses against the claims of laborers and material men which cannot be made by such surety. .

We think counsel are in error.

It is true that under the plain letter of the act if the owner fails to exact bond with surety, etc., to become liable to the

“same extent as surety would have been."

but that does not mean that in case the owner fails to do what the statute requires of him in the way of exacting bond, etc., a material man or laborer is absolved from doing what the statute specifically provides he shall do in order to hold the owner.

The court, in construing that part of Section 5 invoked by plaintiff, must construe it in connection with other provisions of the act.

Section 2 of the act provides that every person having a claim against the undertaker or contractor shall, within certain delays after the work is completed,

“mail or otherwise send a sworn itemized statement thereof to the owner or his architect or other representative, and re[733]*733cord a sworn statement of the amount thereof, or his contract, if it has been reduced to writing, in the office of the recorder of mortgages for the parish in which the said work has been done.”

It is clear under this section of the act that if and when a furnisher of material used hy the contractor in the construction of a building flies his claim with the owner within the delays prescribed and records the same in the office of the recorder of mortgages, there is created and established in his favor a lien and privilege on the building and on the land and an obligation on the part of the owner to pay the same.

But unless and until the claimant complies with this section" of the act, by giving such notice to the owner, there exists no obligation on the part of the owner to protect him.

There is no eontractural relation between the owner of the building and the furnisher of materials. The owner is under no obligation to him except that which is created by the act. The act, insofar as it creates an obligation on the part of the owner in favor of the material man, an obligation which arises without the owner’s consent, is in derogation of common right and must be strictly construed in favor of the owner against whom the act creates an obligation.

Alfred Hiller Co., Ltd., vs. Hotel Grunewald Co., Ltd. 147 La. 129, 84 South. 520.

Cole vs. Schexnadire, 163 La., 111 South. 651.

The court cannot give effect to Section 5 of the act, which counsel invokes against the owner, and at the same time ignore Section 2 thereof which' protects him by requiring the material man whose claim has not been paid to give him notice of that fact.

The owner makes no contract with the undertaker. The owner would be powerless to protect himself against claims against the contractor unless he had notice of their existence.

Inasmuch as there is no eontractural relation between the owner and material men and laborers and therefore no contractural obligation on the owner’s part to protect them, the law points out a method by which they may hold the owner and his property, and that method is by giving him notice and recording their claims.

If the claimant fulfills the requirement of the statute the law creates an obligation on the part of the owner to pay the claim. Can it be said that such claimants may ignore the duty imposed upon them by the statute and still hold the owner merely and solely because he failed to reduce his contract to writing and have it recorded or failed to exact bond of the contractor?

We do not think so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 La. App. 730, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meriwether-supply-co-v-baugh-lactapp-1927.