Slagle-Johnson Lumber Co. v. Landis Const. Co.

379 So. 2d 479
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 28, 1980
Docket63701
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 379 So. 2d 479 (Slagle-Johnson Lumber Co. v. Landis Const. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slagle-Johnson Lumber Co. v. Landis Const. Co., 379 So. 2d 479 (La. 1980).

Opinion

379 So.2d 479 (1979)

SLAGLE-JOHNSON LUMBER COMPANY, INC., Plaintiff-Appellant-Relator,
v.
LANDIS CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC. and Seaboard Surety Company, Defendants-Appellees-Respondents.

No. 63701.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

May 21, 1979.
Dissenting Opinion June 27, 1979.
On Rehearing January 28, 1980.

R. L. Davis, Jr., Theus, Grisham, Davis & Leigh, Monroe, for plaintiff-appellant-relator.

Wood T. Sparks, Thompson, Sparks, Cudd & Dean, Monroe, for defendants-appellees-respondents.

TATE, Justice.

The plaintiff lumber company seeks recovery from a general contractor (Landis) and its surety (Seaboard) for some twelve thousand dollars of lumber and nails used to construct wooden forms for pouring of concrete. The forms were used in the construction of a concrete football stadium for a state university, pursuant to a public contract between the state and the general contractor. The materials had been sold to a defaulting subcontractor.[1]

The plaintiff's suit was dismissed. 366 So.2d 206 (La.App. 2d Cir. 1978). The trial *480 and intermediate courts held that the statutory lien granted to materialman and suppliers for construction of public works, La. R.S. 38:2241, 2242, did not extend to materials such as these, which were only indirectly used in construction, even though they were to an appreciable extent consumed during the performance of the construction contract.

In so holding, the previous courts followed our decision in Hayes Lumber Co. v. McConnell, 176 La. 431, 146 So. 14 (1932). There, we denied a statutory lien under facts similar to the present for lumber and nails used to make forms for concrete bridge piers constructed in performance of a public highway contract.

I.

We granted certiorari, 367 So.2d 379 (1979), to re-examine our holding in Hayes that materials entirely consumed in the performance of the contract, if not physically incorporated into the work, were not within the lien protection accorded those who do work, perform labor, or furnish material and supplies for the construction, alteration, or repair of public works. La.R.S. 38:2241-48, originally enacted as Act 224 of 1918 (sometimes referred to as the Public Works Act).

We entertained doubt as to the viability of the Hayes interpretation of so restricted a statutory intent, because of amendments to the original 1918 act which expanded the lien protection to materials or services used in the construction of the work, although not actually physically part of the completed construction.[2] Likewise, we were concerned by the plaintiff's arguments that a supplier who delivered materials to a job-site, ordinarily protected by a presumption of a statutory lien upon such delivery, Bernard Lumber Company v. Sayre, 230 La. 17, 87 So.2d 713 (1956), might be readily deprived of it upon the contractor's diversion (or self-serving assertion of such diversion) of the lumber or other materials to a purpose other than of incorporation in the completed structure.

Further, the holding in Hayes is to some extent inconsistent with our earlier holding in Long Bell Lumber v. S. D. Carr Const. Co., 172 La. 182, 133 So. 438 (1931). Therein, we recognized a statutory lien for dynamite, fuses, and caps used in clearing ground in the performance of a highway contract, because these items were necessary to and entirely consumed in the performance of the highway construction contract.[3]

*481 Despite these persuasive considerations to the contrary, however, we decline to overrule Hayes, for reasons more fully stated below.

II.

The facts show:

Landis, the general contractor, had entered into a subcontract with a construction company (Crutcher) for it to construct the first and second level concourse platforms of the stadium and the ramps leading to it. Crutcher purchased the materials for the forms from the plaintiff lumber company (Slagle-Johnson), but defaulted after two months, with the subcontract then being about thirty percent complete. (Crutcher ultimately declared bankruptcy.)

Landis took over Crutcher's subcontract, using some of the material purchased from Slagle-Johnson, which Crutcher had abandoned at the job-site. At the conclusion of the construction contract, the remaining materials used and re-used for the forms were stacked up and remained at the job-site. The evidence is conflicting whether this remainder is still re-usable, it having been sawed up into particular lengths and having been previously used one or more times.

The materials which were the basis of the lien consisted primarily of timbers or lumber (2 × 4's, 2 × 6's, and 4 × 4's, etc.), plyform (a special grade of plywood made especially for concrete forms), and nails. According to the record, to the knowledge of both buyer and seller the lumber and nails were purchased for the purpose of constructing the forms; there is no claim that the seller was misled or ignorant as to the destination of the materials delivered by it to the construction site.

A contractor builds the forms to particular specifications for the concrete forms to be used, and he removes the material when the concrete is set. Some of the form material is damaged or destroyed in removing it; some of it is of such shape or size as to be of little or no further utility; but much of it can be cleaned, oiled, and re-used to build other forms as many as six times. Whether to use or discard a specific item is a judgment decision of the foreman, which is based upon his evaluation of the utility of the material (based upon its shape, size and condition) and the labor cost of cleaning and preserving the material or of transporting it to a new job-site.

In this particular case, much of the material was used and re-used on the job-site until it had become useless as forming material. Some of it survived and allegedly would have been suitable for use on another job, although actually it was abandoned by Landis (as well as Crutcher) at the job-site.

III.

The issue before us is whether the lumber and nails used to construct the forms are lienable "materials or supplies for the construction" of a public work, La.R.S. 38:2242, within the meaning of the Public Works Act.

Both previous courts, citing Hayes, held that the material was not, within the statutory intention, "material or supplies furnished for the construction" of the stadium. The facts in Hayes are similar to the present case. Lumber and nails were used in the construction of concrete forms and trestles at the construction site. None of the timber or nails were permitted to remain and become a part of the completed structure. All of the nails and 75% of the lumber were materially injured or destroyed in the course of construction.

In Hayes, we held that the material was not lienable, since it "did not enter directly into the improvement, but only in an indirect and secondary manner, and, in no sense, goes to make up the completed improvement," 146 So. 16, and was, similar to a tool used in construction, neither consumed *482 nor incorporated into the construction. See footnote 3 above, for full quotation.

In so concluding, we distinguished our earlier decision in Long Bell Lumber Company v. S. D. Carr Const. Co., 172 La. 182, 133 So. 438 (1931), wherein dynamite and caps were held to be protected by the lien because they were destined for consumption into the construction. As noted above (footnote 3), Hayes stated that in the Long Bell

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379 So. 2d 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slagle-johnson-lumber-co-v-landis-const-co-la-1980.