Smith v. Ly
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Opinion
Stephen E. SMITH, Husband of/and Kathryn Kempf Smith
v.
Binh LY, Husband of/and Eva Ly.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
James E. Stovall, Jackson and Stovall, New Orleans, for plaintiffs and appellees Stephen E. Smith, husband of/and Kathryn Kempf Smith.
*129 Harvey Green, Metairie, for defendants and appellants Binh Ly, husband of/and Eva Ly.
Chester A. Fleming, III, Terry Deffes, Boggs, Loehn & Rodrigue, New Orleans, for defendant and appellee Joseph A. Neyrey.
August J. La Nasa, New Orleans, for defendant and appellee Neyrey Park, Inc.
Joseph Bishop, Jr., Mandeville, for defendant and appellee Brister Stevens.
Ronald P. Whittington, St. Rose, for defendant and appellee Poley's Sheet Metal, Inc.
H.A. Vondenstein, Wayne C. Guidry, Gretna, for defendant and appellee Parish of Jefferson.
Before KLIEBERT, GRISBAUM and DUFRESNE, JJ.
KLIEBERT, Judge.
This is a devolutive appeal by Binh Ly and his wife, Eva, defendants and third party petitioners, from judgments dismissing on exceptions of prescription their third party petition against Joseph A. Neyrey, Brister Stevens, Inc. and Poley's Sheet Metal, Inc. Only Joseph A. Neyrey had made an appearance in this court. We reverse and set aside the trial court's ruling and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
On October 3, 1980, Steven and Kathryn Smith, plaintiffs, purchased a house from Binh and Eva Ly. Within one year of the purchase, i.e., on October 1, 1981, the Smiths filed suit against the Lys in quanti minoris seeking $20,000.00 for repairs of alleged latent defects in the house. In response the Lys, at different times, filed third party demands against: (1) Joseph A. Neyrey, individually, Neyrey General Contractors, Inc., and Neyrey Park, Inc., all alleged to be involved in the planning, construction, or sale of the house, and against (2) Tulane Hardwood Lumber, Inc., Krestmark Industries, Inc., Poley's Sheet Metal, Inc., and Brister Stevens, Inc., all alleged to be subcontractors, sellers, or manufacturers of windows, flashing or the air condition system, all alleged to have latent defects.
A panel of this court in Smith v. Ly, 470 So.2d 326 (La.App. 5th Cir.1985) upheld the trial court's grant of motions for summary judgment (based on a finding the causes of action, if any, were prescribed under Civil Code Articles 2534 or 2546) filed by Tulane Hardwood Lumber Company, Inc., the seller, and Krestmark Industries, the manufacturer, of allegedly defective windows. However, the same panel reversed the trial court's maintenance of an exception of prescription filed by Neyrey General Contractors, Inc. and remanded the case for further proceedings. The reversal was based on a finding there was insufficient evidence to show the house had been built by Neyrey General Contractors, Inc. as a speculative venture whereupon the only contract was of sale. As such, the prescriptive period for a claim in redhibition would be one year (See Civil Code Articles 2534 and 2546) as opposed to a claim for indemnification or on an actual or implied warranty which would be subject to a ten year prescriptive period. (See Civil Code Article 3500.)
Prior to the time this Court handed down its decision on the motions for summary judgment the trial court maintained exceptions of prescription filed by Poley's Sheet Metal, Inc., the installer-supplier of flashing; Brister Stevens, Inc., the installer-supplier of the air conditioning system; and Joseph A. Neyrey, individually, the planner and designer of the house. These rulings are the subject of the appeal brought by the third party petitioners, the Lys.[1]
*130 The trial court's basis and reasons for maintaining the exception of prescription filed by Poley's Sheet Metal and Brister Stevens was the same as its basis and reasons for maintaining the exception of prescription filed by Tulane Hardwood and Krestmark Industries. Additionally, its basis and reasons for maintaining the exception filed by Joseph A. Neyrey individually and Neyrey Park, Inc. were the same as its basis and reasons for previously maintaining the exception of prescription filed by Neyrey General Contractors, Inc.
The prescription issue here turns on whether Ly's claims are construed as causes of action in tort or redhibition or as claims for indemnification or claims predicated upon a direct or subrogated actual or implied warranty.
As was stated by this court in our previous decision at 470 So.2d 326 (5th Cir.1985) Ly's claims against Tulane Hardwood and Krestmark Industries, Inc., as the seller and manufacturer of the alleged defective windows, were claims in redhibition and hence prescribed, whether the prescriptive period provided for by Civil Code Article 2534 (good faith seller) or by Article 2546 (bad faith seller) was applied. Here, however, unlike the situation where this court upheld the exception of prescription, the third party defendants are either the contractor, subcontractor, or designer of the building and not merely the seller-manufacturer.
The Lys argue that they are subrogated to all the rights in warranty Neyrey Park, Inc., its vendor, has against Neyrey General Contractors, Inc., the contractor; Poley's Sheet Metal and Brister Stevens, subcontractors; and Joseph Neyrey, architect. Consequently, the applicable prescriptive period is the ten year liberative prescription of Civil Code Article 3500.[2] Additionally, the Lys contend their claim is one for indemnification; hence, prescription does not commence to run until the party seeking indemnification (the Lys) is itself cast in judgment.
The Lys couched the third party demands as claims for indemnification based on allegations that all defects enumerated by the Smiths were the fault of the third parties. It has long been held that a party not actually at fault, whose liability results from the faults of others, may recover by way of indemnity from such others. See Bewley Furniture Co., Inc. v. Maryland Casualty Co., 285 So.2d 216 (La.1973). As noted in McKneely v. Don Coleman Construction Co., Inc., 441 So.2d 497 at 500 (La.App. 2nd Cir.1983):
"The rule of indemnity ... is founded upon the general obligation to repair the damage caused by one's fault (La. Civ. Code Art. 2315) and the moral maxim that `no one ought to enrich himself at the expense of another.' La. Civil Code Art. 1965. More specific authority is found in La. Civ. Code Articles 1930, 2106 and 2767." Bewley Furniture Co., Inc. v. Maryland Casualty Co., 285 So.2d 216, 220 (La.1973).
As a general rule, prescription on a claim for indemnification does not begin to run until the party seeking indemnification has been cast in judgment. Blue Streak Enterprises, Inc. v. Gulf Coast Marine, 370 So.2d 633 (La.App. 4th Cir.1979); Guidry v. Hoogvliets, 411 So.2d 629 (La.App. 4th Cir.1982). An exception to the general rule is set forth by La.R.S. 9:2772, which establishes a ten year pre-emptive period in which all claims for damages arising out of deficiencies in the surveying, design, supervision or construction of buildings must be brought.
Since Ly's third party claims for indemnification involved here were filed as of August 30, 1984, if the residence was constructed less than ten years prior to that date, the prescriptive period for their third party claims have not yet run.[3]
*131 In Aizpurua v. Crane Pool Co., Inc.,
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