Southern Acoustics, Inc. v. Ritman
This text of 272 So. 2d 417 (Southern Acoustics, Inc. v. Ritman) 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
SOUTHERN ACOUSTICS, INC., Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Abe RITMAN, d/b/a Abe's Sea and Sirloin Restaurant, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*418 Feist, Schober, Gray & Howell, by James Fleet Howell, Shreveport, for plaintiff-appellant.
Cook, Clark, Egan, Yancey & King, by James E. Clark, Shreveport, for appellee.
Before AYRES, PRICE and HALL, JJ.
HALL, Judge.
Plaintiff, Southern Acoustics, Inc., brought suit against defendant, Abe Ritman, d/b/a Abe's Sea and Sirloin Restaurant, seeking to recover the sum of $1,125 allegedly due for labor and materials involved in the installation of a tile ceiling in defendant's restaurant. Defendant answered denying liability on the basis that the type ceiling installed was not the acoustical-type ceiling specified by him in his negotiations with plaintiff. Defendant reconvened seeking to recover the sum of *419 $2,195.95 for the cost of removing the ceiling installed by plaintiff and installing a new ceiling, loss of income, and overtime charges incurred by defendant due to plaintiff's delay in completing the original work as specified.
After trial of the case the district court rendered judgment rejecting plaintiff's demands, awarding defendant and plaintiff-in-reconvention the sum of $814.86 (less a credit of $421.25, said credit being allowed by way of an award for quantum meruit) leaving a net judgment of $393.61, and allocating court costs in the proportion of 65.92 per cent to plaintiff and 34.08 per cent to defendant.
From this judgment plaintiff appealed and, in its brief, asks that the judgment be reversed and plaintiff be awarded the sum of $421.25 under quantum meruit and that the reconventional demands of defendant be rejected. Defendant and plaintiff-in-reconvention answered the appeal praying that the judgment be affirmed insofar as it rejects the demands of plaintiff and that the judgment be amended by increasing the award to plaintiff-in-reconvention from $393.61 to $2,195.95.
In the early part of July, 1970, Ritman, who was planning some remodeling work at his restaurant, contacted officers of the plaintiff corporation and asked them to come by to discuss the installation of a new ceiling in his main dining room. The plaintiff corporation had in previous years installed acoustical tile ceilings in the kitchen, bar and small dining area of defendant's restaurant. Plaintiff's officers, Harold Strausman and Abie Werth, were long-time friends of Ritman and the previous work was done without formal written contracts.
Strausman and Werth called on Ritman who explained he wanted to remove the existing suspended acoustical tile ceiling in the main dining room and replace it with an inexpensive, glued-on tile ceiling. In describing what he wanted defendant pointed to the ceiling of the small dining and bar areas and said he wanted a ceiling "like that". The ceiling in these areas was inexpensive, glued-on acoustical tile squares with perforations. The work was to be done during the week of August 3-10, at which time the restaurant would be closed while Ritman was on vacation. During the conversation Strausman and Werth gained the impression that Ritman's main objective was to replace the discolored, dirty, existing suspended ceiling with a nicer looking, easily cleanable and maintainable tile ceiling. The cost of the job was never mentioned and there was no discussion whatsoever about noise or the acoustical quality of the ceiling to be installed.
Strausman and Werth decided to install 12×12 tile squares manufactured by the Celotex Corporation of a designer type. This tile was selected because of its economical price, its very nice appearance, its easily washable characteristic, and its tongue and groove construction which allowed it to level itself when glued onto the sheetrock ceiling. Being designer type tile, the product was not represented as having any special acoustical qualities and had never been tested for such qualities. The evidence shows that Celotex Corporation also manufactured an acoustical tile of similar material but with perforations which had been tested and was represented to have a noise reduction coefficient of 45-55%. This acoustical tile was only slightly more expensive than the designer tile and was of the same type previously installed in the small dining area and bar. The existing suspended ceiling in the main dining area had a noise reduction coefficient of approximately 90%. Although the designer tile actually installed by plaintiff had never been tested, it was Strausman's opinion and the opinion of an employee of Celotex Corporation, based on their experience with the acoustical qualities of various materials, that the designer tile would *420 have a noise reduction coefficient of approximately 20%.
The ceiling was installed by plaintiff during the week the restaurant was closed and the other remodeling work done. When the restaurant reopened the following week, it was observed that the noise level had increased considerably and Ritman contacted Strausman and Werth to see what could be done about the noise. After considerable discussion plaintiff offered to take out the newly installed ceiling and put in a glued-on acoustical tile ceiling at no additional cost to Ritman. Ritman insisted that the new ceiling be glued onto the designer tile ceiling, his reason being that the time involved in removing the designer tile ceiling would substantially interfere with his business operations. Plaintiff insisted on removing the designer tile ceiling for the reason that it had a sale for that tile and also because adding the acoustical tile to the designer tile might put too much weight on the original glue which would increase the possibility of the ceiling coming loose. The manufacturer advised plaintiff that it would not stand behind the product if installed in this manner.
At this point, negotiations and communications between plaintiff and defendant completely broke down. Defendant refused to pay plaintiff's charges of $775 for the work done and this lawsuit ensued. Defendant went ahead and contracted with others for the installation of an acoustical tile ceiling which was installed over the designer tile ceiling previously installed by plaintiff. The installation of the acoustical tile ceiling, which was a more expensive product of a greater thickness than either the designer or acoustical tile manufactured by Celotex, cost defendant $1,071.15. The evidence is that after the installation of the acoustical tile ceiling which had a noise reduction coefficient of 60-70%, over the designer tile ceiling the noise level was reduced considerably to about what it was before the suspended tile ceiling was removed.
Our impression is that the parties involved were each in complete good faith and that their testimony during the trial was honest and direct. We are presented with the difficult question of determining who owes who what, if anything, arising out of the facts as outlined above.
Plaintiff held itself out as a specialist in acoustical ceilings, emphasizing acoustics in its advertising and in its motto "our business is quiet". The ceilings previously installed by plaintiff in the bar and in the small dining area of defendant's restaurant were all of acoustical types. The ceilings pointed to by defendant in describing what he wanted were of the perforated, acoustical type.
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272 So. 2d 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-acoustics-inc-v-ritman-lactapp-1973.