Prat v. Heymann
This text of 410 So. 2d 343 (Prat v. Heymann) 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
Mr. and Mrs. Fernand G. PRAT, Jr.
v.
Mrs. Gladys L. HEYMANN.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*344 Edward F. Wegmann, Geoffrey H. Longenecker, Wegmann & Longenecker, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellees.
Matthew H. Greenbaum, E. Sue Bernie, Fawer & Greenbaum, New Orleans, for defendant-appellant.
Before SCHOTT, GARRISON, and KLEES, JJ.
KLEES, Judge.
On January 17, 1977, the plaintiffs offered to purchase from Mrs. Gladys L. Heymann, the defendant, the house and property at 4039 Vendome Place, New Orleans, Louisiana for the price of $195,000 cash, and on January 20, 1977, the offer was accepted by defendant.
Prior to the time the plaintiffs occupied the home, which was built by defendant in 1939, they inspected it on several occasions in the presence of one or more people. When inspected by the plaintiffs, the house appeared to them to be in excellent condition and free and clear of any defects with the exception of a section of faded wallpaper in the dining room and a minor crack in the front wall which the defendant agreed to repair at her cost.
On May 20, 1977, approximately six weeks after the plaintiffs moved into the home, they began to encounter difficulty in opening and closing the front door, and *345 observed a rather substantial crack on the inside of the entrance porch. Later they observed that the grill work at the entrance porch had pulled away from the wall at the back of the porch and noticed a very large crack in the front wall just below the window. In the weeks thereafter, other defects began to manifest themselves and the plaintiffs then tendered the property to the defendant and made demand upon her for the return of the purchase price and all expenses incurred by them to preserve the property.
Upon the refusal of the defendant to accept plaintiffs tender of the property and accede to their demand for a return of the purchase price, plaintiffs engaged the services of a contractor at a cost of $80,183.41 to repair and renovate the buildings and other improvements situated on the property, so as to place them in the condition they appeared to be in at the time they agreed to purchase the home.
Plaintiffs sought a rescission of the sale and a return of the purchase price, together with expenses, damages and attorney's fees. Alternatively plaintiffs asked for a reduction in the purchase price of the property, to the extent of the $80,183.41 necessary to repair and renovate the buildings and improvements, together with expenses, damages and attorney's fees.
The only defense asserted on behalf of the defendant is that the defects complained of were apparent, or should have been apparent to the plaintiffs, upon simple inspection and ascertainable by any prospective purchaser making the simple inspection required of them by law.
The trial court ruled in favor of the plaintiffs but rather than rescinding the sale reduced the purchase price by $65,018.99. His reasons for judgments are as follows:
"REASONS FOR JUDGMENT"
"The evidence convinces me that at the time of the Prats' visits prior to the sale, the house appeared to be free of defects discoverable by simple inspection. It was always kept in mint condition by Mrs. Heymann, and cracks that had appeared had recently been filled and painted.
`The house nevertheless was fatigued at the time of the sale, as subsequent events so dramatically demonstrate.
`Whether the slab was then cracked, or cracked later, or whether, if cracked, the crack was of significance, is really of no moment. As Mr. Warshaw explained, the house had for years been on a roller coaster of shrinking and expanding soil until it finally reached the point where it could tolerate stress no longer and failed. Though the sudden failure occurred after the sale, the continuing stress and gradual fatigue had been of such long duration that at the time of the sale, the inherent inability of the house to tolerate further stress rendered it defective.
`I do not believe Mrs. Heyman knew of this defect. I doubt if anyone could have known the house had reached, literally, the breaking point.
`She knew the house had recurrent cracks, and had been told by Mr. Abry in 1974 that the house should be shored. But these are conditions caused by the soil common to the area, and would not, of themselves, render the house defective. Stack v. Irwin, 144 So.2d 648.
`But such knowledge would lead no one to the conclusion that the house was so fatigued, that it would fail at the next soil subsidance.
`The sale price should be reduced to cover the cost of correction, less the cost of pouring piles, which though necessary, were not part of the thing bargained for, see concurring opinion Phillips v. Schmidt, 311 So.2d 471.
`In addition to disallowing $13,200.00 for piles, also disallowed are $680.00 for Van Electric Co.; $268.00 for shower pan replacement; $232.42 for Carrollton Plumbing; $784.00 for Trendle, Inc.
`The award will include:
Bonura .................. $60,122.02
Roofer .................. 350.00
Mr. Schrenk ............. 790.00
Landscaping ............. 2,922.71
Landscaping ............. 834.26
__________
$65,018.99
*346 `New Orleans, Louisiana, this 21st day of December, 1979.
/s/Gerald P. Federoff Judge"From this judgment the defendant appealed asserting that the judgment in favor of the plaintiffs was in error. The plaintiffs answered the appeal and sought an award for the items which were disallowed plus attorney's fees pursuant to Civil Code Article 2545.
In a redhibitory action the plaintiff must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the item sold contained a hidden defect before the sale which was not apparent by ordinary inspection and which rendered the thing unfit for its intended use or so imperfect that the purchaser would not have bought it had he known of the defect. C.C. 2520, 2521, 2530, Moreno's Inc., v. Lake Charles Catholic High Schools, Inc., 315 So.2d 660 (La.1975).
The record disclosed that a few years prior to the sale of the home in January of 1977 the house had been experiencing cracking in the walls, separation of the grillwork from the home and other defects. During the years prior to the sale to the Prats, the defendant constantly had people repairing the cracks and other defects which would return approximately every six months. In particular the record reveals that the residence was repaired by Charles Lang, a painter and plaster repairman, as late as October, 1976 and by the defendant's handyman, Floyd Villavasco, just prior to his retirement in September of 1976. Furthermore, Mr. Herman Abry, a contractor specializing in house raising and shoring testified that he advised Mrs. Heyman as far back as 1975 that the house was experiencing soil sinkage and should be shored.
Based on these facts the trial judge concluded that although the severe cracking and other damage manifested itself four to five months after the sale, the home was nevertheless defective at the time of the sale. We can find no manifest error in this factual conclusion.
The defendant-appellant does not seriously contend that the home did not contain severe cracks and that the foundation was sinking.
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