Pickels v. Brown

431 So. 2d 880
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 3, 1983
Docket15349-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 431 So. 2d 880 (Pickels v. Brown) 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
Pickels v. Brown, 431 So. 2d 880 (La. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

431 So.2d 880 (1983)

Mary S. PICKELS, Plaintiff/Appellant,
v.
Clovis BROWN, Defendant/Appellee.

No. 15349-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

May 3, 1983.

*881 McClure & McClure by John C. Pickels, Alexandria, for plaintiff-appellant.

Rogers M. Prestridge, Bossier City, for defendant-appellee.

Cook, Yancy, King & Galloway by John D. Collinsworth, Shreveport, for third-party defendants-appellees Bamburg Mechanical, Inc., and Northern Assur. Co. of America.

Before MARVIN, JASPER E. JONES and SEXTON, JJ.

SEXTON, Judge.

Plaintiff brought suit against both the contractor who she hired to fix the leaking roof on her veranda, and the sub-contractor who the contractor hired to assist him in making the necessary repairs. Plaintiff alleged that, although she had paid the contractor for his work, he and the sub-contractor had failed to fix the leak. The trial court granted plaintiff a $1,000 judgment against the contractor. Plaintiff now appeals, seeking a judgment against the sub-contractor, and an increase in the amount of the award. We affirm.

Plaintiff-appellant in this cause is Mrs. O.K. Pickels, a 74 year old widow who resides in a residential area of Shreveport, Louisiana. The defendant contractor against whom the trial court granted recovery is Clovis Brown, a remodeler who lives in Bossier City. The defendant sub-contractor against whom all civil claims were dismissed is Bamburg Mechanical Incorporated, a construction firm located in Bossier City.

The roof of Mrs. Pickels' veranda began to leak sometime in the summer of 1980. The leak caused significant interior damage, most notably the deterioration of the veranda's plaster ceiling and sheetrock walls.

After at least two repairmen had unsuccessfully attempted to stop the leakage, Mrs. Pickels discussed the problem with Clovis Brown. In a tersely worded contract dated September 12, 1980, and signed by both Brown and Mrs. Pickels, Mr. Brown contracted for a sum of $1,085, to install a metal roof on the veranda, replace the interior sheetrock wall that had been damaged by rain and paint the newly installed work. The contract included a written one year guarantee by Mr. Brown of the quality of his workmanship and materials. It is clear that Mrs. Pickels indicated to Mr. Brown that she was distraught over the leakage and felt helpless to alleviate it, and that Mr. Brown assured Mrs. Pickels that he would competently address the problem and fix the leak.

Mr. Brown's repair work involved the interior of the stoop, where he replaced and repaired the stoop's damaged interior walls and woodwork and painted the newly repaired walls. Although the inner ceiling was not damaged enough to require the replacement of its sheetrock, Mr. Brown did have it painted.

While Mr. Brown did the necessary carpentry on the inside of the stoop, Bamburg Mechanical sub-contracted with Brown to replace the roof over Mrs. Pickels' veranda. Pursuant to its contract with Brown, Bamburg installed a sheet metal roof on Mrs. Pickels' veranda. Bamburg also installed flashings on, and adjacent to the veranda's metal roof in order to seal any gaps around its perimeter, and the joint between the main roof of the house and the veranda roof. Mr. Brown paid Bamburg $400 for these services.

Mrs. Pickels found the repairs to her veranda satisfactory and aesthetically pleasing, and paid Mr. Brown $1,085 pursuant to the agreement. However, subsequent to the repairs, heavy rains fell and Mrs. Pickels discovered that the leak in the veranda *882 roof still existed, despite Mr. Brown's efforts. The roof continued to leak, causing new damage to the interior walls and ceiling of Mrs. Pickels' veranda. The walls and ceiling of the stoop became water stained, and the plaster in the ceiling began to cave in. This condition was still deteriorating at the time of the trial.

Mrs. Pickels filed suit against Mr. Brown on May 5, 1981, asserting that, because of his defective workmanship, he was legally indebted to Mrs. Pickels in the amount of $4,500. This $4,500 total was constituted by the $3,000 allegedly necessary to repair her front stoop, and by an additional $1,500 representing mental anguish, embarrassment, personal suffering and loss of sleep caused by the deteriorated condition of her veranda. Mr. Brown answered, asserting that the leak was located not in the veranda roof, but in the roof over the main part of the house; Mr. Brown also filed a third party demand against the sub-contractor Bamburg, praying that Bamburg be held legally responsible for any amount for which Brown might be cast in judgment. The plaintiff, Mrs. Pickels, thereafter amended her original petition to join as defendants Bamburg, and its insurer, Northern Assurance Company of America.

After a trial on the merits, the trial court found that Mr. Brown had "contracted with the plaintiff to not only repair the existing damage, but to also fix the leak." The court concluded that "There is no question that Mr. Brown did not correct the leak." The trial court accordingly returned a judgment in the amount of $1,000 in favor of Mrs. Pickels and against Mr. Brown. The court further rejected Mrs. Pickels' claims against Bamburg, and Clovis Brown's third party demand against Bamburg. Plaintiff, Mrs. Pickels, has appealed the trial court's decree, contending in her first assignment of error that she should have been granted a judgment against Bamburg, and asserting in her second assignment that the court improperly evaluated her damages and that her recovery should be increased on appeal. Appellant seeks no further relief with respect to Brown, and we understand the judgment against him has been satisfied. Brown has neither appealed nor answered the appeal. Therefore we do not address the correctness of the judgment against Brown.

The essence of plaintiff's claim against Bamburg is that Bamburg caused her harm by failing to install a watertight roof and flashings over her veranda. We note that, while there is no contractual privity between plaintiff and Bamburg in the ordinary sense, there are several legal theoretic bases which could potentially support a judgment against Bamburg, in favor of Mrs. Pickels, the plaintiff.[1]

Mrs. Pickels could argue that the contract between Brown and Bamburg was a stipulation pour autrui which inured to her benefit; [2] that there was an implied contract between Bamburg and herself;[3] or that Bamburg was liable to her in quasi-contracts *883 under the legal theory expressed by the Latin maxim "actio de in rem verso."[4] Mrs. Pickels could argue that Bamburg had committed a quasi-offense or tort through an allegedly negligent installation of the roof.[5] In short Mrs. Pickels could claim, under a number of alternative theories, that Bamburg had a civil obligation[6] to her which arose either from the consent of the parties or by operation of law.[7]

*884 While these theories of recovery constitute interesting matter for contemplation, our factual determination herein entirely pretermits a discussion of their applicability. Our factual determination, simply stated, is that plaintiff did not prove by a preponderance that the damage-causing leak was located in the metal roof or flashings installed by Bamburg over plaintiff's veranda. Thus, assuming arguendo that Bamburg owed Mrs.

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431 So. 2d 880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickels-v-brown-lactapp-1983.