Parkerson v. Home Protection Service

24 So. 2d 256, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 497
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 21, 1945
DocketNo. 2764.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 24 So. 2d 256 (Parkerson v. Home Protection Service) 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
Parkerson v. Home Protection Service, 24 So. 2d 256, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 497 (La. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinions

The plaintiff Parkerson sues to recover the sum of $697.93 for a breach of contract, and said plaintiff and Rudolph Dupuis ask for judgment against the same defendants for the sum of $150, also for a breach of contract. The defendants are the Home Protection Service, Inc., a company engaged in the extermination of termites and hereafter called the termite company; A.H. Shrauger, the representative of the termite company, and the United States Fidelity Guaranty Company, the surety on the bonds given by the termite company, and hereafter called the surety company.

Parkerson alleges that he entered into three contracts with the termite company, through its said representative, to exterminate the termites in three buildings owned by him in the City of Lafayette. Two of these agreements are in the form of an application for service membership in the termite company for the extermination of the termites in buildings owned by Parkerson and described in the applications. These applications are dated in July, 1942, and recite that said plaintiff paid a fee of $15 for one and $25 for the other. The applications provide that a regular standard service contract will be issued to the applicant when the total fee shall have been paid in full. There is no allegation to the effect that the full fee was paid and a regular service contract made for guaranteed service to the two buildings mentioned in the applications.

On November 26, 1941, Parkerson entered into a written contract with the termite company, through its said representative, whereby the termite company agreed to exterminate the termites in said plaintiff's residence and service it for a period of two years for a consideration of $168.35. The following clause appears in this contract in bold printed type:

"It is understood and agreed that this contract is entered into with full cognizance of Act 141 of 1936 of the Legislature of the State of Louisiana, and in accordance with the regulations of the Louisiana Horticultural Commission, and that termite control work to be done hereunder by the Home Protection Service, Inc., is guaranteed for a period of two years in accordance with the bond on file with the said Commission".

At the foot of the contract after the signature of the parties there is a note stating that this form of contract has been adopted after its approval by the Louisiana Horticultural Commission. The contract and the applications referred to are annexed to and made a part of the petition. *Page 258

The two plaintiffs, Parkerson and Dupuis, allege that they entered into a verbal agreement with the termite company, through its said representative, in August, 1942, for the complete termite treatment of the Azalea Courts owned by these plaintiffs.

In compliance with an exception of vagueness filed by the surety company, plaintiffs filed a supplemental petition elaborating on some of the allegations in the original petition. The pertinent allegations in the original and supplemental petition relative to the violation of the two agreements made by Parkerson with the termite company in accordance with the applications referred to and the violation of the verbal contract entered into by Parkerson and Dupuis with the termite company are to the effect that these plaintiffs paid the amounts stated to the said representative of the termite company, and neither the company nor its representative performed the services contemplated by these contracts, and did nothing in the way of treating the buildings covered by these contracts for the eradication of the termites, and they are asking for a recovery of the amounts paid on these contracts.

The allegations of Parkerson with reference to the written contract of November 26, 1941, are to the effect that the representative of the termite company entered the premises described in the contract for the purpose of rendering treatment for termites therein and worked on the residence of plaintiff for several weeks, but that the work was improperly done and substantial damage was done to the sills, woodwork and foundations of the building, which damages are set out in detail in the supplemental petition.

It is alleged in the original and supplemental petitions that the termite company furnished a bond with the defendant surety company guaranteeing the faithful performance of all contracts, agreements and work undertaken in the State of Louisiana by the termite company, which bond is held by the Horticultural Commission of Louisiana. Photostat copies of two bonds dated October 7, 1937, with continuing certificates of said bonds up to October 7, 1942, were filed with and made part of the supplemental petition.

The surety company filed an exception of no cause or right of action, which exception was sustained, and the suit as to the surety company was dismissed. Plaintiff took an appeal from this judgment, and the only question before us on the appeal is the correctness, vel non, of that judgment. It is therefore unnecessary to detail the status of the other two defendants.

The trial judge sustained the exception of no cause or right of action filed by the surety company on the theory that the bond signed by this company was a statutory bond given in accordance with Act 141 of 1936, section 4 of which act authorizes the Horticultural Commission to require a licensee performing services in the State covered by the act to give a bond conditioned that such licensee shall "honestly conduct said business"; that in order to hold the surety, it was necessary to allege and prove that the termite company did not honestly conduct its business in the State of eradicating the termites, and the petitions in this case do not so charge. The court based its ruling largely on the case of Anders v. Evans Co., Inc. et al., La. App., 187 So. 109.

There were two bonds given by the surety company and filed with the Horticultural Commission for $1,000 each, running in favor of the Commission. The condition of one of these bonds is that the said termite company will honestly conduct its business of termite control, and recites that it is given in accordance with Act 141 of 1936. If this were the only bond signed by the surety company and declared on in the case, it is obvious that the case of Anders v. Evans Company, supra, would be applicable and decisive of the case as the situation would be almost exactly the same as it was in the cited case. However, the surety company signed another bond for the termite company in compliance with a regulation passed by the Horticultural Commission requiring licensees performing services under Act 141 of 1936 (such as termite control), and who entered into contracts guaranteeing their services, to give a bond and file it with the Commission. This regulation was passed by the Commission evidently under the assumption that it had the authority to pass such a regulation under Section 1 of said Act wherein the Commission is given the power "to make rules and regulations governing the qualifications and the practicing of a person engaged in the professional services herein defined." The apparent object of the regulation was to protect the public against those persons practicing these professions *Page 259 who went so far as to guarantee their services in order to obtain contracts.

The termite company accepted and complied with this regulation of the Commission, and so noted its compliance therewith in the contract it signed with Parkerson on November 26, 1941, as is shown from the extract from said contract already quoted. The surety company likewise took cognizance of and complied with said regulation as will appear from the following quotation from the bond which it signed and which bond is annexed to the supplemental petition, viz:

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Bluebook (online)
24 So. 2d 256, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parkerson-v-home-protection-service-lactapp-1945.