Mohana v. Woodall

69 So. 2d 163, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 904
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 18, 1953
DocketNo. 3767
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 69 So. 2d 163 (Mohana v. Woodall) 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
Mohana v. Woodall, 69 So. 2d 163, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 904 (La. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

CAVANAUGH, Judge.

The plaintiff sues the defendant for $531.35, with interest thereon at 8% per annum from November 19, 1951 until paid and 15% additional on said principal and interest as attorney’s fees, which sum plaintiff claims due him as a balance on defendant’s promissory note for $611.35, dated August 27, 1951, due and payable in 61 weekly installments, the first installment being in the-sum of $11.35, due and payable on September 4, 1951, and 60 installments of $10 each beginning on September 10, 1951 and every week thereafter until paid. It is further alleged that payments of $80 had been made on the note commencing on September 24, 1951 through November 17, 1951.

The defendant admits signing the note sued upon but denies that he is indebted on said note except as specially pleaded; and further answering he sets out a special defense that during the months of February and March, 1951 he entered into an oral contract with plaintiff, whereby plaintiff agreed to furnish and erect for him at his place of business, a neón sign, together with the tubing, on a part of his building.;' that the purpose of said sign was to advertise his business of a drive-in at night; and that the defendant agreed that he would erect said sign in a good workmanlike manner which would advertise his business at night; that the sign was completed during the month of March, 1951; that a few weeks after the sign and tubing were installed, the tubing burnt a hole in the side of his building, which he reported to the pláintiff, who promised to repair the bad workmanship and put- it in good condition; that he told the plaintiff that the sign was useless unless it was illuminated, and that the plaintiff advised him that the sign had been placed too close to his building, and that at different times he requested the plaintiff to put the sign in good condition, and rriake it fit for the purpose for which he had purchased it. The defendant further pled that the plaintiff charged or invoiced him for $491.92 for the ■ sigh and that the difference between that sum and the $611.35 was for other merchandise purchased by him from plaintiff; that the sign and neon tubing had redhibi-tory defects which were unknown to him at the time said sign and neon tubing were installed and delivered, and that vices and defects made them useless for the purpose for which he intended to use it to advertise his business with neon lights at night and contends that the contract between them for the purchase, erection and installation of the sign and tubing should be voided because of the vices and defects in the sign, neon tubing and the installation thereof. The defendant further pled that the vices and defects existed before the contract was completed, and appeared immediately thereafter, and that since that time, the plaintiff has, from time to time, promised and agreed to correct the defects, but had failed to do so and that said sign and neon tubing are useless to him, and that plaintiff should be required to take said sign and neon tubing down at his own expense. The defendant, deposited in the registry of the court the sum of $51.31 which he claims represented $39.43 owed by him to plaintiff for other merchandise purchased from him with 8% per annum interest thereon from November 19, 1951, amounting to the sum of 28^, plus a minimum collection charge of $7.50 which defendant admitted owing and tendered it to the court. He obtained an order from the District Judge to deposit the sum in the'registry of the court in payment of the principal, interest and attorney’s fees to the date said sum was deposited along with the filing of -his answer and his demand against plaintiff on December 21, 1951.

Upon the issues reflected by the pleadings, the Lower Court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for $51.31, and for all costs up to the trial, and ordered the Clerk of Court to pay the $51.31 deposited by the defendant to the plaintiff out. of the funds deposited in the registry of the court; and rendered judgment in favor of the defendant against the plaintiff avoiding, annulling and rescinding the sale of the neon sign and tubing for the price of $491.92 and declaring the plaintifi to be the owner of said property and ordering him to remove the same from the premises of the defendant, together with all costs incidental to the trial of the suit.

[165]*165The plaintiff appealed from the judgment and the defendant has answered the appeal praying that the judgment of the Lower Court be amended to allow the plaintiff and appellant the sum of $51.31 without costs, or the sum of $47.21 plus the costs to the filing of the answer.

The learned trial judge has tiioroughly reviewed the pleadings and testimony in the case in his written judgment, from which we quote; approvingly:

“ * * * Plaintiff and defendant contracted orally for the erection of a neon -sign and the.installation of neon tubing around the building occupied by defendant, the purpose,of which was advertising. All installational details except the location of the sign were left to the discretion of plaintiff. A statement, of Mohana’s Electrical Construction, Co., of which plaintiff is owner, dated March 31, 1951, and introduced in evidence as Exhibit ‘D-l’, shows a cost of $491.92, including taxes. The entry date of March 3rd on said statement indicates the probable erection and installation date. The installation was an addition to the original wiring of the building, the .connection having been made inside the attic and an extension made to the outside. The City of Houma supplied the electricity to the premises. No permit was secured from the City of Houma before installation, nor any inspection made after completion. The installation was made by Joe Haddad, an 'electrician employed by plaintiff, who had had about three or four years’ experience installing neon signs before military service and about six years after service. The tubing installed on the building was second-hand, while that on the sign was new. The sign operated properly for two or' three days, after which one side ‘burned out’. The tubing around the building never operated properly, but either blinked or was partly extinguished. About three or four weeks after' the installation, a ‘short’ developed which caused a fire at the corner, of the building and damaged the structure. Defendant’s wife saw the fire and turned off the main switch, and several persons present extinguished the fire. One wire appeared to' be burned in two-. The sign and tubing were then disconnected because of the fire hazard, and were never lighted thereafter. On August 27, 1951, defendant executed the note declared upon for the principal sum of $611.35,, covering the cost of the neon sign and1 tubing in the sum of $491.92 and a balance due on appliances previously purchased. He paid $40.00 on account on September 24, 1951,' and four installments of $10.00 each on October 1st, 9th and 22nd, and November 17th, 1951.
if if if if if if
“An important fact in dispute is whether defendant timely complained.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 So. 2d 163, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mohana-v-woodall-lactapp-1953.