Red River Construction Co. v. Nordstrom

120 So. 655, 10 La. App. 474, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 84
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 12, 1929
DocketNo. 3196
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 120 So. 655 (Red River Construction Co. v. Nordstrom) 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
Red River Construction Co. v. Nordstrom, 120 So. 655, 10 La. App. 474, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 84 (La. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

This suit involves a settlement of accounts between the Red River Construction Company, plaintiff, and C. Nordstrom and D. Laborde, arising out of a contract to construct portions of a highway in the Parish of Natchitoches.

The plaintiff alleges that it entered into a contract with the Louisiana Highway Commission to construct certain portions of the road designated as projects 429-D and 430-A, located in the Parish of Natchitoches; that it sub-contracted to C. Nordstrom certain portions of the work and that it has paid to the said Nordstrom the entire amount due him; and further alleges that said D. % Nordstrom, claiming an indebtedness against it, has filed liens amounting to ?1638.60; that the claim of Laborde against it is without foundation, and it asks that the liens filed by Laborde be cancelled and erased from the records of the Parish of Natchitoches.

It is further alleged that the claim of Laborde and the liens filed by him are the result of a conspiracy entered into between Nordstrom, its sub-contractor, and Laborde to collect an amount from plaintiff not due; that .plaintiff had paid to Nordstrom all that was due him and, admitting that Laborde did some work on the road, it is claimed that he was working for and under Nordstrom, as foreman. Plaintiff asks that both Nordstrom and Laborde be cited and that there be judgment cancelling the liens filed by Laborde.

[475]*475Both Nordstrom and Laborde answered. Nordstrom denied that there was any conspiracy between him and his brother-in-law, Laborde, and that he had no knowledge as to the account claimed by Laborde; and further set up that plaintiff was indebted unto him in the sum of $2324.02 for which he reconvened and asked judgment.

Laborde, in his answer, alleged that the amount which he claimed and for which he filed a lien was due for work done by him under contract with the plaintiff company, and that it had no connection with Nordstrom’s contract. There was judgment in the District Court in favor of Nordstrom on his reconventional demand for $1060.15, rejecting Laborde’s demands against plaintiff, and ordering the lien cancelled. Prom this judgment, plaintiff, Red River Construction Company, appealed, and under its appeal the entire transcript was sent up to this Court. This-judgment was rendered on October 22, 1927.

On June 14, 192S, Laborde petitioned the Court for a devolutive appeal, which was granted by the Court under written order and the bond was fixed at $100.00, which was promptly given and filed.

In this Court, Nordstrom filed a motion to increase the amount allowed him, and plaintiff moved to dismiss Laborde’s appeal.

ON MOTION TO DISMISS LABORDE’S APPEAL.

Counsel for plaintiff company on the first day of the present session of this Court moved to dismiss Laborde’s appeal on the ground that he had failed to file any transcript whatever of his appeal in this Court within the return date.

The facts are that Laborde took no appeal at the time judgment was rendered in the District Court. But, within twelve months thereafter, he filed a written motion asking that he be granted a devolutive appeal, and that the bond therefor be fixed. The Court granted the appeal and fixed the bond at $100.00; and fixed the return date for July 9, 1928. The Clerk of Court at Natchitoches, Louisiana, forwarded the application and order for the appeal, together with the appeal bond, to the Clerk of this Court on July 9. When it was received by the Clerk of this Court, those documents were placed in the transcript already brought up and filed by plaintiff. But he failed to mark such documents “PILED”. As the documents appeared in the record, there was nothing to indicate the date on which they were received by the Clerk of this Court, and counsel for plaintiff conlend that the appeal should be dismissed, as the record does not affirmatively show that the documents were filed in this Court on time.

On having his attention called to the fact that there was nothing to show that said documents were filed in this Court on time, the Clerk, looking through his files, found a letter from the Clerk of Court at Natchitoches, dated July 9, 1928, in which he stated that he was enclosing said documents, naming them, and asking that they be placed in the record as part of the transcript. The Clerk of this Court now certifies that said documents were received. by him in due mail and that he promptly placed them in the record. AS1 the documents were mailed out of Natchitoches on July 9, the return date fixed by the Judge, and as appellant had three days of grace in which to file his appeal, we think there is no question but that they reached this Court in ample time, and that the failure to mark them "PILED” on arrival was not due to any [476]*476negligence on the part of appellant, and that we should not penalize him for a mistake or error for which he is not responsible. The motion to dismiss is, therefore, overruled.

OPINION.

As already stated, C. Nordstrom filed a reconventional demand against the plaintiff, claiming an indebtedness of something over $2,000.00. If the Court had to depend upon the testimony of Nordstrom himself, it is perfectly clear that no judgment could be granted in his favor. However, the record is clear that the plaintiff owes him $1060.15. We arrived at that amount from the admissions made by defendant’s witnesses, and not from testimony given by the plaintiff. Nordstrom, did not take the stand as a witness in his own behalf. He was called on cross-examination by counsel for plaintiff and was asked specifically about the claim of Laborde. He was not asked about his own account. At the close of this cross-examination, he was excused and was never called back to the stand.

Mr. Marston, as a witness for the plaintiff company, admitted that his company was due Nordstrom the sum of $16,767.18, and that it had paid him only $15,707.03, leaving a balance of $1060.15.

The only testimony in the record which tends to support the claim of Nordstrom that plaintiff owes him any amount in excess of that above mentioned -is found on pages 31 and 32 of the transcript. While Mr. Marston, a member of the plaintiff company, was on the stand as a witness, and while on cross-examination, he was questioned by counsel for Nordstrom with reference to certain items which it seems appeared on an itemized statement of Nordstrom’s claim which counsel then had before him. Counsel refers to such an account as taken from Nordstroms’ books and we, therefore, infer that there was such an account, or at least, a memorandum of the account in Court, and we find on page 32 this statement, coupled with a question:

“Q. The whole of that figures up $17,-858.78j which has been reduced by the testimony by about $90.00. What are your figures on both projects?
“A. $16,767.18.”

If we assume that the total indebtedness claimed by Nordstrom on his statement was $17,858.78, taking Marston’s admission that plaintiff owed $16,767.18, it will be seen that there was a difference of $1091.60. Counsel for Nordstrom insists that we should adopt Nordstrom’s figures as the total amount due him on both projects. We are unable to do so for the reason that Nordstrom gave no testimony as to the correctness of his account—but, on the contrary, Marston swore that his company owed him only $16,767.18.

When Mr. Marston was first interrogated about the amount which his company was due Nordstrom, he testified that it was due him nothing.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Home Finance Service of Lafayette Parish, Inc. v. Black
131 So. 2d 547 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1961)
Dreher v. Guaranty Bond & Finance Co.
192 So. 246 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 So. 655, 10 La. App. 474, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/red-river-construction-co-v-nordstrom-lactapp-1929.