St. Mary Iron Works v. Community Mfg. Enterprise, Inc.

119 So. 564, 9 La. App. 743, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 58
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 9, 1929
DocketNo. 16,729
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 119 So. 564 (St. Mary Iron Works v. Community Mfg. Enterprise, Inc.) 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
St. Mary Iron Works v. Community Mfg. Enterprise, Inc., 119 So. 564, 9 La. App. 743, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 58 (La. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, J.

C. J. LeBlanc, doing business in the name and style of St. Mary Iron Works, claims $500.0.0, of the Community Manufacturing Enterprise, Inc., with interest and attorney’s fees thereon.

He alleges that the defendant operates a sugar factory and that he built for, sold and delivered to it a smokestack, furnishing certain material, and that the defendant agreed to pay him $1046.00 and to also furnish certain material in addition. That plaintiff constructed the smokestack and defendant paid $546.00 on the purchase price, leaving -$500.00 evidenced by the note sued on as the balance due. That he has on said account a vendor’s lien and privilege on the smokestack.

The defendant admits the alleged indebtedness, but denies that a vendor’s privilege exists on the smokestack on account of same.

The question, whether a vendor’s privilege exists on the smokestack in favor of the plaintiff under his contract, and as a result of the construction of the stack, is the only matter in dispute.

The contract on which the indebtedness is founded is in the form of a written proposal from the plaintiff to the defendant which reads, so far as pertinent:

“We will increase the diameter of your 48" stack, which is 46' long, to 5' and add 79 feet of 5' stack to it. The pieces increasing the diameter of your present stack to be 3/16 steel; 40' of the addition to be No. 8 steel and the balance to be of No. 10 steel; stack to have band top and bottom and band for eye bolts. Stack to be shipped in two sections and put together at your plant, where increasing of your present stack will also be done, etc.”

The defendant accepted plaintiff’s proposition in the same terms in which it was made. It says:

“We accept your proposition of increasing our 48" stack, which is 46' long, to 5' and add 79 feet of 5' stack to it,” etc.

The proposal, acceptance and evidence of the plaintiff on the sbject shows that plaintiff did not sell defendant the smokestack, nor any material for the purpose [745]*745of constructing one; neither did he buy defendant’s material. He enlarged and lengthened an old stack, belonging to defendant. In performing the work, he took 46 feet of defendant’s old stack apart and inserted in it a strip 36 inches wide, its length of 46 feet. The plaintiff furnished the material for this extra 36 inches in width. This additional width gave the 46 feet a diameter of 5 feet. He then added to this 46 feet, a length of 79 feet of stack, 5 feet in diameter, made of new material, which he furnished for the purpose, thus making the stack 5 feet in diameter and 125 feet long. The work was done at defendant’s sugar house and on its premises. The smokestack was then erected by the defendant and attached to its sugar house for its service.

The construction was an undertaking by the job. C. C. Art. 2757;

“A person who undertakes to make a work, may agree either to furnish his work and industry alone, or to furnish also the materials necessary for such work.”

In this instance the thing constructed Was, from the beginning, the property of the party for whom it was being made. The thing was in defendant’s possession during the work of construction and when it was completed. There was no sale to the defendant. It therefore results that no vendor’s privilege exists on the smokestack in favor of the plaintiff. Plaintiff however contends, that under the ¡contract, although he did not furnish all of the materials, yet having furnished the greater part, he became the owner of the completed stack, as a result of the law on the subject of the right of accession in relation to movables; citing C. C. Arts. 498, 594, 520, 527, etc.

The law cited is not controlling in this case, because this smokestack was constructed as the result of an undertaking by the job and by virtue of an agreement, under which it was constructed for and belonged to the defendant. Defendant erected and attached it permanently to his sugar house, making it part thereof and immovable by destination. The law provides that “all such movables as the owner has attached permanently to the tenement or to the building, are likewise immovable by destination.” C. C. Art. 468.

The law on the subject of accession has reference to. cases where the materials used, belonged to different owners. Here the materials furnished by the plaintiff were for the defendant and became defendant’s upon being incorporated in the stack, equally as much as did the materials which were part of the old stack.

We are not aware of any case in which, simply because the obligor has failed in ■the matter of payment, a contractor by the job has claimed the ownership of the thing constructed, in which a part of the material used in the structure was furnished by the party for whom it was made and the balance by the party doing the work of construction, when the agreement contemplated only the ownership of the thing by the party for whom it was made. But there is considerable jurisprudence, the result of cases where a party has furnished materials and furnished machinery and has claimed for his work and material furnished, a vendor’s privilege on the materials that he furnished and endeavored to enforce the privilege by having the material taken from machinery in which it was placed. Such a case is Carlin, Administrator, vs. Gordy, Sheriff, 32 La. Ann. 1285. In that case a Mrs. Berg sold and delivered a sugar mill to Carlin, who erected it on his plantation, thereby making it part of the immovable by. destination. The sugar [746]*746mill was not paid for and Mrs. Berg seized it and offered it for sale and claimed a vendor’s privilege on tlie machinery in question. The court held that the vendor’s privilege existed, but at the same time went on to say:

“The privilege resting upon movables is, in some cases affected by the changes which may take place in the nature or destination of the thing. But such changes must be so radical as to create a new species of thing and destroy that species which originally existed. As, to use the illustration of Cujas, when a pine or cypress log is converted into a ship, or when wool is converted into a garment, or when marble is made into a statue.”

. The case was decided in favor of the vendor of the machinery on the ground that the machinery was still in the same condition in which it was at the time it was placed on the immovable, and could, in its complete form, be removed from the immovable without changing its species or form.

The reasoning in this case has never been departed from and has been followed in many subsequent eases. In every casé the question has been, whether, as a matter of fact, the species of the thing has been changed or altered by manufacture or construction into something else. The case was followed in Swoop vs. St. Martin, 110 La. 237, 34 So. 426. In that case the plaintiff had placed new shells on defendant’s sugar mill rollers, furnished two housings for same, four cast iron quarter boxes, two top journal boxes, four king bolts, etc. The incorporation of materials was not in effect dissimilar from the facts in the case now before the court. The court said in that case:

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Bluebook (online)
119 So. 564, 9 La. App. 743, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-mary-iron-works-v-community-mfg-enterprise-inc-lactapp-1929.