Ruston Brick Works v. Heard

177 So. 494
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 3, 1937
DocketNo. 5478.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 177 So. 494 (Ruston Brick Works v. Heard) 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
Ruston Brick Works v. Heard, 177 So. 494 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff, whose place of business 'is in the city of Ruston, La., furnished defendant the bricks, plaster, mortar mixture, an,d forty sacks of the cement used in the erection of a brick home in the village of Bernice, La., and after crediting the account with $400, the value of a lot in Ruston, which will be hereinafter discussed, brought this suit to recover $279.90, the alleged balance due on the account, and to have recognized and enforced against the home a furnisher’s lien and privilege, the evidence of which had been timely inscribed in the mortgage records of Union parish.

Defendant admits that said material was sold and delivered to him by plaintiff, but specially denies that it was sold or purchased on open account, as alleged. He denies that he now owes any part of the account, and affirmatively avers that the price of the material listed thereon has been settled in full by compliance, on his part, with an agreement made with plaintiff precedent to delivery of any part of said material. The substance of the agreement relied upon, disclosed from the answer, appears to be: That in April, 1936, after defendant had decided to erect a new home, he, accompanied by his carpenter, J. T. Tucker, went to Ruston and interviewed Mr. J. W. Jimmerson, owner of the Ruston Brick Works, with regard to furnishing the bricks, plaster, mortar mixture, and cement necessary to the completion of the proposed building, a plan of which, prepared by said Tucker, was then displayed and explained to Jimmerson; that defendant stated to Jimmerson that he and his wife owned a lot in Ruston, which they were willing to convey to him in order to procure the said material; that after viewing the lot, Jim-merson studied said plan and made estimates of the quantity of each kind of material needful to the erection of the building, and then and there accepted defendant’s proposition with the exception that he agreed to furnish o.nly forty sacks of the needed cement; that defendant consented to this exception; and that it was upon the faith of this mutual agreement that all of said material was delivered to defendant at the site of his new home. Fie further avers that when said contract was entered into, a well in search of oil and/or gas was being drilled five miles from Ruston, and that the plaintiff well knew, and so informed defendant, that should said well come in as a producer, said lot would enhance in value and be worth not less than $1,000; that the possibility of this hoped for happening had a controlling influence upon plaintiff’s decision to take the lot as full payment of the material, but that before defendant’s home was completed, the well was abandoned as a “dry hole,” to plaintiff’s knowledge, and it was then he decided he had made a bad bargain with defendant and immediately began to seek means to escape his obligations under the contract, this suit being the result of his repudiation of its terms.

Defendant further alleged that on July 2, 1936, he and his wife went to Ruston and, at Jimmerson’s request, executed to his wife, before the clerk of court, a warranty deed conveying said lot in Ruston, in keeping with the agreement between them, and that “at the time of the execution of said deed the plaintiff herein instructed the said Ross C. Neill when drafting said deed of conveyance that he wanted the consideration to show it was for building materials furnished by plaintiff and that the said Notary Public informed plaintiff that he would have to state a cash consideration and that such a statement as to the true *496 consideration could not be inserted therein, that thereupon respondent stated that he had kept the property assessed at a $250.00 figure, and that they could use such a figure in the deed as the consideration therefor, but that thereupon plaintiff informed the said Notary Public to insert the sum of Four Hundred & No/100 ($400.00) Dollars, in cash, in said deed and it was so done; that said recitation of the consideration in said deed is and was erroneous; that the true consideration was for building materials furnished by plaintiff to your respondent and used in the construction of the dwelling in Bernice, Louisiana, as alleged herein, and the same should be so recognized, that before respondent would permit such transfer to the said Mrs. Cornelia Russ Jimmerson for and on behalf of plaintiff the said plaintiff informed your respondent that as to the disputed difference, if any were due, they would submit the matter to arbitration, but that on July 15th, 1936, an invoice was mailed to respondent by plaintiff informing respondent there was a balance due of $279.80 and a notation thereon ‘Judge Walker will decide our case/ and thereafter an affidavit was placed on the Mortgage Records of Union Parish, Louisiana, by plaintiff seeking to preserve and perpetuate a lien and privilege as a furnisher of materials and thereafter this suit was filed by plaintiff.” He prays that plaintiff’s demands be rejected, his suit dismissed, and the registry of the purported lien against his property be erased from the records.

The lower court, giving written reasons therefor, ruled against defendant and gave judgment as , prayed for by plaintiff. Defendant appealed.

Tersely stated, plaintiff’s contention is that the lot was to> be accepted by him on the price of, the material at a value of $400. If the cost of the material exceeded this valuation, defendant would pay the difference; if less, plaintiff would pay defendant the difference. Defendant contends that the transfer of the lot was to extinguish fully the entire cost of the material.

The judge a qua held that the testimonial proof bearing upon this question of fact was about of equal weight; that the defense to the suit was virtually one of payment under which defendant carried the burden of proof; and that the recitals of the deed to the lot unbalanced the scales in favor of plaintiff. To reach this conclusion, the trial judge ruled that parol testimony was incompetent to prove a greater consideration than that expressed in the deed because, as he thought, the allegations of error in the answer (quoted above) were not sufficiently specific to admit such testimony. It was admitted, subject to objection, but finally rejected. Brewer v. New Orleans Land Co., 154 La. 446, 97 So. 605, 607, was cited to support the ruling.

Plaintiff is skilled in the art of estimating the quantity of material needed to erect a brick structure of given dimensions, etc., and being a dealer in such material, of course, knew the current sale prices thereof. He estimated that 30,000 brick were needed to complete the building. 29,100 were required to do so. These cost $496.50. The other material cost some $173.

Plaintiff says that he calculated that the entire cost of the material would not exceed $370, and that he would have to pay defendant some difference on the lot. In explanation of the material’s cost being so much in excess of his estimate, he testified that the plan introduced in evidence by defendant was not the plan shown him when the agreement was reached; that a porch and driveway had been added, and these necessarily increased the quantity of material.

Without detailing the evidence germane to the identity of the plan, we are convinced that plaintiff is in error in regard thereto.' The plan was made up by Mr. Tucker and his testimony, supported by that of defendant and his wife, satisfies us on this issue of fact.

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Bluebook (online)
177 So. 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruston-brick-works-v-heard-lactapp-1937.