Pierce v. Robertson

200 So. 669, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 76
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 4, 1941
DocketNo. 2196.
StatusPublished

This text of 200 So. 669 (Pierce v. Robertson) 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
Pierce v. Robertson, 200 So. 669, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 76 (La. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

OTT, Judge.

The seven plaintiffs are the owners of an undivided seven-eighths interest in a small house and the furnishings therein located at a place called A-Bend in Ascension Parish. These plaintiffs with their sister, Evelyn Pierce, acquired the property by inheritance from their deceased father and mother.

They allege in their petition that during the latter part of 1936, the defendant without their permission and authority undertook to make certain repairs on the said house, and that the defendant did this repair work in a very improper and unskillful manner; that he removed the roof and permitted the interior to be exposed to the weather for several days, resulting in damage to the floors, wall paper, piano and other furnishings from rains pouring into the building. They further allege that the defendant caused the said building to be seized and advertised for sale under a judgment which he obtained against Evelyn Pierce in the justice court, thereby requiring them to employ an attorney to get their property released from the said illegal seizure and which illegal seizure was a trespass and slander against their property.

*671 They claim damages in the sum of $1,-005 made up of the following items: necessary expense to put the house in shape, or the condition it was in before defendant undertook the repairs, $50; damage to wall paper, $60; damage to piano and other furniture, $70; co'st of repairing water damage to floor, $50; damage from illegal seizure, $250; attorney’s fees, $25; and an additional sum of $500 for humiliation and annoyance by reason of having this house and its contents exposed to public view.

Numerous exceptions were filed, including one of nonjoinder of parties plaintiff and parties defendant. All of these exceptions were overruled except the one of nonjoinder which was sustained to the extent of requiring the plaintiffs to make Evelyn Pierce, the other co-owner of the property, a plaintiff in the suit. The ruling on this exception was taken to the Supreme Court on a writ, and the ruling was modified so as to require plaintiffs to make Evelyn Pierce a party defendant in order that she might have an opportunity to assert any claim that she has to share in the alleged damages. See Pierce et al v. Robertson, 190 La. 377, 182 So. 544. This co-owner was made a party defendant in compliance with the decree of the Supreme Court. No mention is made of any of the other exceptions in this court and we assume that they have been abandoned.

The defendant answered denying that he was due plaintiffs any damages whatever. He alleged that in the latter part of 1936 he entered into a contract with Evelyn Pierce and Hugh Pierce who were acting for themselves and who stated that they had authority to act for all the other co-owners, to make certain repairs on the said house whereby defendant was to do the work for $80.70; that he was to be paid weekly and the balance was to be paid when the job was completed; that he performed the work which he agreed to do in a good and workmanlike manner, and denied that he had caused any damage to the property by the manner in which he performed the work. He alleged that he had been paid only $30; that he did extra work worth the sum of $24.50 which he is entitled to recover. He then prays that Evelyn and Hugh Pierce be called in warranty; that plaintiffs’ suit be dismissed, and that he have judgment in reconvention against plaintiffs in solido for the sum of $105.20 (the alleged contract price for the repairs, plus the extras) ; and further, in case he is condemned in the action, that he have judgment against Evelyn and Hugh Pierce on his call in warranty for whatever amount he may be condemned to pay the plaintiffs.

There was judgment below in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendant for $25, the amount of attorney’s fees paid to secure a release of the property from seizure under the judgment in favor of defendant against Evelyn Pierce; a judgment in favor of the defendant and against the seven plaintiffs on the reconventional demand for $50 (the balance which defendant claimed to have been due on the contract, less his claim for extras), and a judgment in favor of defendant and against Evelyn and Hugh Pierce as warrantors in the sum of $25, the amount which defendant was condemned to pay the plaintiffs for attorney’s fees.

The plaintiffs took an appeal, and the defendant answered the appeal and asks that the judgment be amended by rejecting the claim of plaintiffs for attorney’s fees. Evelyn Pierce did not appeal nor answer the appeal, and, of course, the judgment as to her cannot be affected by the decision of this case on appeal.

We might say in the outset that, in our opinion, the evidence shows that the contract for making the repairs on this house was made between Evelyn Pierce and the defendant contractor. At the time the contract was made, Evelyn was living in the house with her mother who was then living, and Evelyn was teaching school and making her own money. While Plugh Pierce was living in the same vicinity and knew the work was going on and made no objection to the repairs being made, he did not make the contract with the defendant and apparently did not know a great deal about the details of it. In fact, the defendant himself considered that he made the contract with Evelyn as he looked to her for the purchase of the necessary material for the work and made all of his demands for payment on her, and when he could not collect all of the contract price, he filed a suit in the justice court against her alone and secured a judgment for the amount of the balance he claimed to be due under the contract. All of the other co-owners of the property, except Evelyn and Hugh Pierce, did not live near the prop *672 erty, some of them even living out of the state.

It is therefore obvious that there was no contractual relation between these seven plaintiffs and the defendant with reference to the repair of the house in which they owned an undivided seven-eighths interest. As th'-'y contend that none of the work done by defendant on this house inured to their benefit, but on the contrary caused them damage, there is no question of implied ratification of the contract on their part. Their suit must therefore he looked upon as one sounding in tort for damage to their property by reason of the alleged illegal and negligent acts of the defendant in the various respects set out in their petition.

According to the defendant, he agreed to jack up the low parts of the house, put a new sill in front, ceil one room, put three posts on the front and change the two roofs on the house and make it into one roof. He was to do the work and Evelyn Pierce was to furnish the material. From pictures of this house in the record and from the evidence relative to its condition and the kind of material used in the building, we judge it to be a small and rather cheaply constructed residence which had been occupied by the family of these colored people for some time.

Defendant’s version as to what he actually did to this house is about as follows: jacked up the house, put in two sills, changed the two roofs into one, ceiled the back room, put in weather boards where they were needed, cut two new doors and made one new back door and put in the three posts on the front. It seems that a dispute arose about putting in another post— Evelyn wanting it put in and the defendant contending that it was not in the contract.

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Related

Pierce v. Robertson
182 So. 544 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1938)
Madison Lumber Co. v. Alson
128 So. 46 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
200 So. 669, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierce-v-robertson-lactapp-1941.