Tidwell v. Meyer Bros.

107 So. 571, 160 La. 778, 1926 La. LEXIS 1961
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 1, 1926
DocketNo. 25717.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 107 So. 571 (Tidwell v. Meyer Bros.) 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
Tidwell v. Meyer Bros., 107 So. 571, 160 La. 778, 1926 La. LEXIS 1961 (La. 1926).

Opinion

OYERTON, J.

Plaintiffs are the members composing the Central Tire & Service Company, a commercial partnership doing business in the city of Monroe. The firm of which they are members is engaged in the storing and repairing of automobiles; the selling of gasoline, lubricating oil, and all automobile accessories. For the purpose of conducting the business of their firm, plaintiffs leased from defendant a brick building, in Monroe, for a period of 5 years and 18 days, known as the Meyer Bros. Warehouse, and also certain ground contiguous to said warehouse. In leasing the premises, plaintiffs intended *781 to tear down the front wall of the warehouse, erect a new front to the building, and make such repairs and additions as in their judgment were necessary to make the warehouse suitable for the purposes of the business of their firm. Defendants knew of those intentions, and a provision was inserted in the lease authorizing plaintiffs to make repairs and additions to the building.

On the day that the lease was signed, plaintiffs let a contract, with the end in view of making such changes in the building as would adapt it to the business of their firm. A permit was obtained from the city to remodel the building, the remodeling to cost $3,500. The front wall was torn down, and, before the work of remodeling had gone much further, the city condemned the building as unsafe, and ordered defendant to remove it. Defendant complied with this order. Hence plaintiffs were deprived of the building which they had leased to conduct the business of their firm. They therefore made demand on defendant to reconstruct the building and thereby comply with its contract to furnish them with a building during the term of the lease, but defendant refused to comply with this request. Plaintiffs therefore leased a building in another location, in the city, in which to conduct the business of their firm. After leasing another building, they instituted the present suit to dissolve the lease, entered into with defendant, and to recover judgment against defendant for damages in the sum of $16,344.70.

The damages sued for consist of the following items, to Wit, the expenses incurred by plaintiffs in attempting to remodel the building so as to make it adaptable to the purposes of the lease; attorneys’ fees for preparing the lease, and the costs of recording it; attorneys’ fees for bringing this suit; compensation for anxiety, worry, and loss of time; the expense that plaintiffs will be put to in repairing the building selected by them, when defendant refused to rebuild; and additional profits which plaintiffs, as the members composing their firm, would have made between the date of the lease and the institution of this suit, and also between the latter date and the termination of the lease, by reason of the favorable location of the property rented, had defendant complied with its contract.

Plaintiffs’ cause of action is based primarily upon allegations showing that, when defendant entered into said contract of lease, it did so, knowing that the walls of the building it was leasing were in a weakened and defective condition, and that they (plaintiffs) were ignoraht of that condition, and let the contract for the remodeling of the building in utter ignorance of its defective condition, and upon the ground that defendant should have, rebuilt the building for their use, under the lease, after it was condemned and ordered demolished.

■ Defendant first filed a motion to strike from plaintiffs’ petition the demand for damages for lost profits, amounting to $12,180, on the ground that the profits sued for are purely prospective and speculative and not susceptible of proof. The court sustained the motion, and ordered that item stricken from the demand. Defendant also moved to strike from plaintiffs’ petition the demand for damages, consisting of the attorneys’ fees for the preparation of the lease, and the cost of recording the same; the attorneys’ fees for bringing this suit; the amount claimed for anxiety, trouble, and loss of time; and the expense, amounting to $2,000, that plaintiffs alleged they will be put to in repairing the building they leased, when defendant refused to rebuild. The ground alleged for striking these items from the petition is that they are not recoverable. As appears from the opinion of the court, these items were ordered stricken from the petition.

After these preliminary motions had been filed and heard, defendant answered. In its answer, it admits the execution of the lease *783 and the subsequent demolition of the building under municipal orders, but denies that the condemnation of the structure was due to any defects in it at the time it was leased, or that it, defendant, was then aware that the walls of the building were in a weak or defective condition. It then avers that the weakened condition of the building, which provoked its condemnation, was brought about solely by the improper method adopted by plaintiffs’ contractor, in this, that said contractor, in taking down the front wall oi the building, failed to use the proper precaution's, and, as a result, the side walls thereof warped in such a manner as to force the condemnation of the building.

Defendant also reconvened for damages, but the reconvention al demand is not discussed in its brief, possesses no merit, and need not be mentioned further.’

The case was tried on its merits. The trial resulted in a judgment for plaintiffs dissolving the lease and allowing plaintiffs, as damages, the following expenses paid by them, in attempting to repair the building that was later condemned, to wit: $175.65 for labor; $12.50 for hauling; $6.50 for hauling tools; $500 to the contractor; $5 for building permit; and $35 for plumbing, making a total of $734.65. The court rejected an item of $9.30, sued for, consisting of nails, oil, and lights purchased, and another item amounting to $300, consisting of eye beams purchased, for the reason that these items were used elsewhere, and their purchase, therefore, caused no loss to plaintiffs. The court rejected as not proven the following items, to wit: Hauling" dirt and gravel, $105.25; loss on cement, brick, and lime, $75; and hauling t.rash, $16. The remaining items of damages sued for, as stated above, were ordered stricken from the petition.

Defendant has appealed from the judgment rendered, and plaintiffs have filed an answer to the appeal prajdng that they be allowed all of the damages for which they sued.

Defendant does not’ state specifically in its answer wherein the contractor, 'employed by plaintiffs, was negligent in removing the front wall of the building, but it developed during the examination of witnesses that this alleged negligence consists in not properly bracing the side walls of the building, thereby causing those walls to lean over and warp, and necessitating the condemnation of the building.

We have examined the evidence carefully to ascertain whether or not the contractor properly braced the side walls of the building before removing the front wall. The evidence is conflicting in this respect, but our examination of it satisfies us, as it did the trial judge, that the contractor was not negligent in this respect. It was not a lack of proper bracing that, in reality, caused the condemnation of the building, but the condition in which the building was when the lease was made and before the contractor undertook his work. The building was an old one.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 So. 571, 160 La. 778, 1926 La. LEXIS 1961, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tidwell-v-meyer-bros-la-1926.