State ex rel. Henry v. 8-Mile Post Plumbing Supplies, Inc.

63 So. 2d 749, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 562
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 23, 1953
DocketNo. 19964
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 63 So. 2d 749 (State ex rel. Henry v. 8-Mile Post Plumbing Supplies, 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
State ex rel. Henry v. 8-Mile Post Plumbing Supplies, Inc., 63 So. 2d 749, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 562 (La. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

JANVIER; Judge.

The relator, Mrs. Carrie Davis Henry,' is the owner of certain improved real estate in the Parish of Orleans, described as follows: A certain lot or portion of ground, together with all the buildings and improvements thereon, and all of the rights, waj^s, privilege, servitudes, and advantages thereunto belonging or in anywise appertaining, situated in the Fourth District of this city, in Square No. 438, bounded by Fourth, S. Pricur, S. Johnson Streets, and Washington Avenue, which said lot or portion of ground forms part of the original Lots designated by the Letters “S” and “T”, on a plan or sketch of C. Uncas Lewis, Deputy City Surveyor, dated September 20, 1915, and which said lot, according to a plan of Gilbert and Kelly, Surveyors, dated February 15th, 1940, is designated as Lot No. 24, and measures 28' 10" 6"' front on S. Johnson Street, the same in the rear, by a depth of 61' 8 6' , between equal and parallel lines. The improvements bear the Municipal No. 2708-10 S. Johnson Street.

The respondent, 8-Mile Post Plumbing Supplies, Inc., is a corporation engaged in the contracting business in this area.

On March 30, 1951, the relator, Mrs. Carrie Davis Henry, and the respondent corporation entered into a written contract under which, for a stipulated price of $1,-923.30, the contractor undertook to do certain remodeling for the relator and to procure a licensed master plumber to perform all labor in connection with certain plumbing to be installed in the premises. The contract, though reduced to writing and signed by the parties, has never been recorded in the office of the Recorder of Mortgages for the Parish of Orleans.

On May 3, 1951, the contracting corporation, through its president, executed an affidavit under which it claimed a lien and privilege in the sum of $1,923.30 on the property of relator described above, and caused this affidavit to be recorded in the office of the Recorder of Mortgages for the Parish of Orleans in Book 1783, folio 487.

Relator brought this mandamus proceeding against the Recorder of Mortgages for the Parish of Orleans and against the said 8-Mile Post Plumbing Supplies, Inc., seeking the cancellation of the inscription of the purported lien on the ground that the respondent corporation, being a general contractor, might obtain a lien only by recording the contract itself and could not obtain a lien by recording an affidavit such as that executed and recorded by the contracting corporation.

Respondent corporation filed exceptions of no right or cause of action, contending that mandamus is not available for the purpose of effecting the cancellation of such an inscription. Though the record does not show whether these exceptions were passed upon in the district court, it is obvious that they were overruled, for when the matter came up for trial on the merits the prayer of the relator was granted and the erasure of the inscription was [751]*751ordered. From this judgment respondent, 8-Mile Post Plumbing Supplies, Inc., has appealed.

Counsel for respondent argues that there is available to relator “relief by the ordinary means” and that consequently a writ of mandamus should not issue. Counsel points to Article 830 of our Code of Practice which provides that the writ of mandamus “should * * * be issued in all cases where the law has assigned no relief by the ordinary means, * * Counsel, however, overlooks Article 831 of the Code of Practice which provides that the writ of mandamus “may be issued at the discretion of the judge, even when a party has other means of relief, if the slowness of ordinary legal forms is likely to produce such a delay that * * * the administration of justice will suffer from it.”

Since the illegal or improper recordation of a lien will hamper the property owner in efforts to encumber or dispose of his property on which the lien is claimed, it follows that the administration of justice would suffer if the owner of property should be required in all such cases to await the outcome of litigation “by the ordinary means.” The Supreme Court recognized this in State ex rel. Code v. Code, 215 La. 485, 41 So.2d 62, 64, saying:

“Article 831 of the Code of Practice provides, in substance, that the judge may, in his discretion, issue a writ of mandamus, even when the complainant has other means of relief, ‘if the slowness of ordinary legal procedure would be likely to cause such delay as to hamper the administration of justice.’ :jc ‡ % »

In that case the Supreme Court cited with approval State ex rel. Macheca v. Dunn, 148 La. 460, 87 So. 236, in which .appears the following:

“It is well settled that mandamus is the proper remedy for compelling the recorder to cancel an illegal or unauthorized inscription purporting to operate as a mortgage. Savage v. Holmes, 15 La.Ann. 334; State ex rel. Deblieux v. Recorder, 25 La.Ann. 61; Lanaux v. Recorder of Mortgages, 36 La.Ann. 974; State ex rel. Busha’s Heirs v. Register, 113 La. (93), 98, 36 So. 900.”

We have no doubt at all that mandamus affords the proper remedy in such a situation, and that accordingly the exceptions based on the theory that mandamus is not available in such cases should be overruled.

The real issue is presented by the contention that the respondent is a general contractor and that, as such, it could obtain a lien only by the recordation of the contract itself and could not obtain such lien by the recordation of a so-called lien affidavit.

It is quite true that, as has several times been said by our Supreme Court, when our lien law, Act 298 of 1926, section 4801 et seq., LSA-R.S. 9, are read section by section, “there would appear to be an hiatus therein, leading, in our opinion, to absurd consequences.” Glassell, Taylor & Robinson v. John W. Harris Associates, 209 La. 957, 26 So.2d 1, 5. However, as the Court pointed out in the Glassell case, when the act is read as a whole and all of the sections are correlated, “the act is more comprehensive and is capable of a construction clearly within the intendment of the lawmakers that leads to no absurd consequences, without violence being done to the rule of interpretation that acts in derogation. of common rights must be strictly construed.”

As the Supreme Court pointed out in the Glassell case, if section 4801 of Title 9 of our LSA-Revised Statutes is read without reference to the other sections, it might seem that the contractor, the subcontractor, the architect, the laborer, the furnisher of material and all others who assist in any way in the carrying out of the contract are placed in the same category, and each is permitted in any instance to preserve his lien by the mere recordation of a lien affidavit in the office' of the Recorder of Mortgages. But it must be noted that under this section it is required that the lien, whether it be claimed by the contractor or the subcontractor, or a laborer, or a furnisher of supplies, or by anyone [752]*752else, must be evidenced “as herein provided”. It must be further noted that the provisions which must be complied with, if a lien is to be, retained, are not set forth in that section. It therefore follows necessarily, as has already been said, that the other sections must be resorted to to determine what is meant by the words, “as herein provided”.

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Bluebook (online)
63 So. 2d 749, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-henry-v-8-mile-post-plumbing-supplies-inc-lactapp-1953.