Orleans Parish Sch. Bd. v. Pittman Const. Co., Inc.
This text of 372 So. 2d 717 (Orleans Parish Sch. Bd. v. Pittman Const. Co., Inc.) 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.
Opinion
ORLEANS PARISH SCHOOL BOARD
v.
PITTMAN CONSTRUCTION CO., INC., et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*718 Polack, Rosenberg, Rittenberg & Endom, Kenneth F. Sills, New Orleans, for third party defendant-appellee Leroy Oubre.
Kilbourne & Dart, Stephen P. Dart, St. Francisville, for Robertson L. Belden.
Bernard, Cassisa, Babst & Saporito, William H. Syll, Jr., Metairie, for defendant-appellee Rock win Corp., Inc.
Reuter & Reuter, Arthur C. Reuter, New Orleans, for defendants-appellants Pittman Construction Co., Inc. and Trinity Universal Ins. Co.
Before SAMUEL, BEER, and GARRISON, JJ.
GARRISON, Judge.
This is an appeal from a judgment which upheld certain dilatory and peremptory exceptions to a third-party petition. When structural failures were discovered within ten years from the completion of McDonough No. 45 school, the Orleans Parish School Board sued the contractors and architects who built it. Pittman Construction Co., Inc., the general contractor, was a defendant in the main demand and filed a number of third-party demands for indemnification. The exceptions raised by Leroy Oubre and Robertson L. Belden to Pittman's third-party demands are the subject of this appeal.
The principal point disputed here is whether Pittman has a cause of action against Oubre, who was clerk-of-the-works for construction and an employee of the architect. Oubre's exceptions of vagueness, prescription, and no cause of action were tried before a Commissioner, who recommended that the district court maintain the exception of no cause of action. The Commissioner reasoned that any action against
*719 Oubre had been barred by the passage of ten years, in accord with R.S. 9:2772. The district court acted on the recommendation, maintaining Oubre's exception. Pittman has appealed.
The text of R.S. 9:2772 reads as follows:
"A. No action whether ex contractu, ex delicto or otherwise, to recover on a contract or to recover damages shall be brought against any person performing or furnishing the design, planning, supervision, inspection or observation of construction or the construction of an improvement to immovable property:
(1) More than ten years after the date of registry in the mortgage office of acceptance of the work by owner; or
(2) If no such acceptance is recorded within six months from the date the owner has occupied or taken possession of the improvement, in whole or in part, more than ten years after the improvement has been thus occupied by the owner; or
(3) If the person furnishing the design and planning does not perform any inspection of the work, more than ten years after he had completed the design and planning with regard to actions against that person.
B. The causes which are pre-empted within the time described above include any action:
(1) For any deficiency in the design, planning, inspection, supervision or observation of construction or in the construction of an improvement to immovable property;
(2) For damage to property, movable or immovable, arising out of any such deficiency;
(3) For injury to the person or for wrongful death arising out of any such deficiency; and
(4) Any action brought against a person for the action or failure to act of his employees.
This pre-emptive period shall extend to every demand whether brought by direct action or for contribution or indemnity or by third party practice, and whether brought by the owner or by any other person.
C. If such an injury to the property or to the person or if such a wrongful death occurs during the ninth year after the date set forth in Sub-section A, an action to recover the damages thereby suffered may be brought within one year after the date of the injury, but in no event more than eleven years after the date set forth in Sub-section A (even if the wrongful death results thereafter).
D. Actions for the causes enumerated in Sub-section B of this Section, against the persons enumerated in Sub-section A of this Section, shall prescribe by the applicable prescriptive periods established by law for such actions.
E. The pre-emptive period provided by this Section shall not be asserted by way of defense by a person in possession or control, as owner, lessor, tenant, or otherwise, of such an improvement at the time any deficiency in such an improvement constitutes the proximate cause of the injury, damage, or death sued upon with regard to any cause of action arising out of the alleged delict, quasi delict, or obligation of any such person arising out of his possession or control of the property.
F. Nothing in this Section shall be construed as modifying the liability of responsibility otherwise imposed by law on the owner of an immovable or the possessor, lessor or lessee of an immovable, by reason of the design, planning, supervision, inspection or observation of construction, or construction of improvements to immovable property.
G. Causes of action which exist prior to July 29, 1964 shall be pre-empted one year from said date or by the applicable pre-emptive period established by this Section, whichever is later."
The time sequence applicable here is as follows:
August 24, 1959______Pittman contracted with
Orleans Parish School
Board to construct school.
September 14, 1960___School Board's acceptance
of construction recorded.
July 29, 1964________Effective date of R.S. 9:2772
(Act 189 of 1964).
*720
September 1, 1968____Approximate date School
Board discovered alleged
structural failures.
August 1, 1969_______School Board filed suit
against Pittman, architects,
and others.
June 29, 1973________Pittman filed third-party
demands against Oubre and
others.
It is obvious that R.S. 9:2772, if applicable, would destroy Pittman's cause of action against Oubre, since more than ten years passed between the date construction was accepted and the date Pittman filed its third-party suit against Oubre, and since the statute's "pre-emptive" period extends to "every demand whether brought ... for contribution or indemnity or by third-party practice ...." (See last paragraph of Section B of statute.)[1]
Appellant Pittman argues that R.S. 9:2772 is not applicable because it did not become effective till July 29, 1964, almost four years after the School Board filed its acceptance of construction, and that to apply it here would give it retroactive application, which Pittman contends cannot be done.
Laws usually are deemed to be only prospective in effect unless their language clearly indicates otherwise. Nonetheless, laws which are interpretive, curative or procedural are exceptions to this rule. Ardoin v. Hartford Acc. & Indem. Co., 360 So.2d 1331 (La.1978). However, a law cannot be retroactively applied in any case where it would operate unconstitutionally to divest vested rights. Lott v. Haley, 370 So.2d 521 (La.1979).
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372 So. 2d 717, 1979 La. App. LEXIS 2855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orleans-parish-sch-bd-v-pittman-const-co-inc-lactapp-1979.