Minden Presbyterian Church v. Lambert

120 So. 61, 167 La. 712, 1929 La. LEXIS 1680
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 2, 1929
DocketNo. 27605.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 120 So. 61 (Minden Presbyterian Church v. Lambert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minden Presbyterian Church v. Lambert, 120 So. 61, 167 La. 712, 1929 La. LEXIS 1680 (La. 1929).

Opinion

OYERTON, J.

This is a concursus proceeding, provoked by plaintiff. Six furnishers of material for the construction of a church building, whose claims were recorded, are made parties to the proceeding, as well as the contractors, the surety on the contractors’ bond, and the surety’s indemnitor, R. R. Lambert. Plaintiff prays for judgment, ordering • the cancellation of the claims recorded, and for distribution of a balance of $451.75 of the contract price, deposited by it in court.

• The furnishers of material, including the surety’s indemnitor as such a furnisher, appeared and asserted their claims. The surety and its indemnitor also appeared and urged various defenses to the demands against them. Thez'e was judgment in favor of the fuz'nishers of material for the amounts of their claims against the surety and the contracting firm, save as to the surety’s indemnitor, who, though urging a large claim as furnisher of material, was awarded judgment against the contracting firm, alone for the amount thereof, and there was also judgment in favor of the surety against its indemnitor, who was called by it in warranty, for the full amount of the judgment for which the surety was cast, and judgnrezrt in favor of plaintiff, ordering the cancellation of the claims, recorded as liens against the building. The surety and its indemnitor alone have appealed from the judgment rendered.

It appears that plaintiff entered into a contract with the firm of Barnette & Madjarosh, under date of July 3, 1923, for the erection of a church at Minden, La., for the sum of $25,359. Barnette & Madjarosh furnished the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company as surety on their bond, which was for the sum of $25,059. R. Ri. Lambert entered into a contract with the surety to indemnify it for any loss it might sustain by reason of its signing the bond. ’The contract and the bond were recorded in the mortgage records on July 26, 1923. The contractors began the construction of the building, and the work was well under way, though overdue, in the latter part of January, 1924. It is urged by plaintiff that, about that time, the contractor's defaulted on their contract, making it necessary for plaintiff to complete the work under the supervision of the architects, which it proceeded to do, it is claimed, to the knowledge and with the acquiescence of the surety. The building was completed by plaintiff, out of the balance remaining of the contract price, about October 1, 1924. A day or two later plaintiff filed the present proceeding.

Both the surety and its indemnitor filed exceptions of prematurity, and later reiterated them in the form of exceptions of no cause of action. These exceptions were ovewuled. The exceptions of prematurity are based, as also, in part, the exceptions of no cause of action, on the theory that no certificate of the contractors’ default or of the completion *717 or acceptance of the building, was recorded in the mortgage records 30 days prior to the filing of these proceedings, and that-there is no allegation showing that any one of these certificates was so recorded.

The work was done, and this concursus was provoked under Act 139 of 1922. Section 2 thereof gives those having claims against the contractor 30 days after the registry of notice by the owner in the moi’tgage records of the acceptance of the work, or of the contractors’ default, or the architect’s certificate of completion, within which to file their claims. This section also gives to the owner, or any other person at interest, the right, if he so elects, to provoke a concursus if, at the expiration of the 30-day period, there are claims of record. Therefore, strictly speaking, one of these notices should have been recorded 30 days prior to the filing of the petition for a concursus. However, to sustain these exceptions we think would be doing a vain thing. We are satisfied that all of the creditors are before the court. All of the. debts contracted after the owner took charge, in the latter part of January, or in the early part of February, 1924, were paid soon after they were contracted, leaving un.paid only some of the debts due by the contractors. This proceeding was not filed until October 3, 1924, and was not called for trial until June 16, 1925. It) is reasonable, therefore, to conclude that, in the interval which intervened between the taking charge of the work by the owner and the filing of these proceedings, or the calling of the case for trial, all creditors protected their rights by recording their claims and asserting them herein. There is not the slightest suggestion in either brief or argument, or otherwise, that any one of them has failed to do so, though sufficient time has elapsed, even between the completion of the building and the present, for prescription to have accrued on any claim, if such there be, not urged in these proceedings. We therefore find no reason to disturb the rulings of the lower court on the exceptions now before us.

Another question presented is one arising under an exception of no cause of action. That question is ,as follows: The contractors’ bond, which was made a part of the petition, shows that it is dated July 19, 1923, and was given in favor of the First Presbyterian Church, Minden, La., to secure the faithful performance of 9. contract, dated July 19, 1923, to erect a church building for that church, whereas the contract, which is also made a part of the petition, shows that it was entered into, not by the First Presbyterian Church, but by the Minden Presbyterian Church,, and is not dated July 19, 1923, but July 3, 1923. By reason of these discrepancies, it is argued by counsel for the indemnitor that it 'does not appear that the bond sued on is connected with the contract under which the work, involved herein, was done, and therefore that the surety cannot be held liable on the bond, and consequently that the 'indemnitor cannot be held liable to the surety, as relates to that bond, on his contract of indemnity. We think, however, that the petition shows that the bond sued on is the bond given under the contract attached to the petition for the performance of this particular work. It is there distinctly alleged that the bond attached to the petition is the bond given “for the faithful performance of said contract” ; that is, of the contract attached to the petition, and dated July 3, 1923. Therefore the exception of no cause of action, so far as based on these discrepancies, was properly overruled.

Under the exception of no cause of action, it is also urged, that the bond is not conditioned, as provided by section 2 of Act 139 of 1922, on “the true and faithful performance of the contraict and the payment of all subcontractors, journeymen, cartmen, truck-men, workmen, laborers, mechanics, and fur *719 nishers of material jointly as. their interest, may arise,” but is merely conditioned “that we will well arid truly fulfill any and. all the conditions and specifications as specified in the said contract to build said church as shown by contract signed July 19, 1923.” Because the bond so rea"ds, it is urged that the surety is not liable for such claims as those of furnishers of material, laborers, and the like, and therefore that the indemnitor is not liable to the surety for them.

It was the evident intention of the owner to exact of the contractor the bond required by statute, and it was the evident intention of the contractors and the surety to give such a bond.

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Bluebook (online)
120 So. 61, 167 La. 712, 1929 La. LEXIS 1680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minden-presbyterian-church-v-lambert-la-1929.