Tri-State Insurance Co. v. Elmore Labiche Plumbing Co.

212 So. 2d 255, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4758
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 10, 1968
DocketNo. 3105
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 212 So. 2d 255 (Tri-State Insurance Co. v. Elmore Labiche Plumbing Co.) 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
Tri-State Insurance Co. v. Elmore Labiche Plumbing Co., 212 So. 2d 255, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4758 (La. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

REGAN, Judge.

The plaintiff, Tri-State Insurance Company, filed this suit against the defendants, Elmore Labiche Plumbing Company, Inc., Elmore Labiche, and James J. Culotta, endeavoring to recover the sum of $7,164.04, representing an amount which the plaintiff asserts is due as the result of its having to pay certain delinquent accounts on behalf of Elmore Labiche Plumbing Company, Inc., and other expenses incurred in connection therewith. The plaintiff also asserts that Elmore Labiche and James J. Culotta are solidarily indebted to it by virtue of a lost indemnity agreement1 which they signed guaranteeing the performance by Labiche’s plumbing company to the plaintiff, who had executed a performance bond on its behalf.

In their respective answers, Elmore La-biche Plumbing Company, Inc., admitted liability to the plaintiff as prayed for in its petition. However, Elmore Labiche individually and James J. Culotta denied ever having executed any indemnity agreement for the benefit of the plaintiff.

The lower court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff against Elmore Labiche Plumbing Company, Inc., and against James J. Culotta solidarily, but dismissed the plaintiff’s suit against Labiche individually. From that judgment, Culotta has prosecuted this devolutive appeal.

The record discloses that Elmore Labiche Plumbing Company, Inc., was a subcontractor on a building contract which existed between the Jefferson Parish School Board, as principal, and Manson, Smith, McMaster, Inc., as general contractor, involving the erection of two school buildings. The Labiche company was required to furnish the labor and materials for the mechanical, plumbing, heating, and ventilation of these buildings. The plaintiff wrote a performance bond for the Labiche company, which was executed through its agent, Mon-taldo Insurance Agency. However, before the subcontract was completed, the plumbing company found itself in financial difficulties and was consequently unable to obtain the necessary materials from the suppliers thereof for the completion of its subcontract. In order to alleviate this situation, the plaintiff obtained an assignment of the funds to be paid in the future to the plumbing subcontractor by the general contractor, and in consideration thereof, agreed to pay the delinquent accounts owed to the material men and laborers and further guaranteed'the payment of future deliveries of material and to pay for any additional labor which may be required.

A total of $22,129.12 was ultimately paid by the plaintiff for labor and materials in order to enable the plumbing subcontractor to complete its agreement, and a total of $14,969.08 was received by the plaintiff from the general contractor, leaving a loss sustained by it of $7,164.04. The plaintiff has sued for this sum together with attorneys’ and investigators’ fees in the amount of $2,825.22 so that the total amount sought to be recovered is $9,989.86.

When the subcontract was completed and accepted by the general contractor and owner, the plaintiff made demand upon the three defendants for payment of the bal-[257]*257anee due. The defendants made no effort to liquidate the loss incurred by the plaintiff, hence preparation of this suit was begun. In the course thereof, it was discovered that the indemnity agreement upon which the plaintiff relied had been lost. The loss was advertised in the New Orleans Times-Picayune and in two newspapers in Tulsa, Oklahoma, the home office of the plaintiff. In addition thereto, a diligent search was made of the records of the plaintiff, the plaintiff’s attorney, and the Mon-taldo Agency, all of which failed to reveal the document in question. Consequently, when the plaintiff filed this suit, it was compelled to attach a carbon copy of the alleged indemnity agreement to its petition in order to disclose the nature of the contents thereof.

The defendant contends that since the contract of indemnity must be strictly construed, the failure of the plaintiffs to produce the original of the document is fatal to its case against him. The law applicable to the facts hereof emanates from Article 2279 of the Louisiana Civil Code, which reads:

“When an instrument in writing, containing obligations which the party wishes to enforce, .has been lost or destroyed, by accident or force, evidence may be given of its contents, provided the party show the loss, either by direct testimony, or by such circumstances, supported by the oath of the party, as render the loss probable; and in this case, the judge may, if required, order reasonable security to be given to indemnify the party against the appearance of the instrument, in case circumstances render it necessary.”

Pursuant to the rationale of this article, Louisiana courts have reasoned on innumerable occasions that when an instrument is lost or destroyed, its contents may be proved by secondary evidence.2 The codal pronouncement and the consequent jurisprudential rules emanating therefrom make no exception for any particular type of instrument or contract, and do not except from the terms of the codal article a contract of indemnity or suretyship. In this connection, it is significant to point out that even a written instrument establishing title to property has been permitted to be proved by parol evidence once its loss has been actually established.3

Of course, the law imposes upon the plaintiff the burden of proving the existence of the indemnity agreement and the fact that it has actually been lost. Initially, in order to establish the existence of the indemnity agreement, the plaintiffs, as we said, produced a carbon copy thereof. The testimony of Mrs. Frances Pflueger, who was an employee of the Montaldo Insurance Agency at the time of the issuance of the performance bond, was'-offered in connection therewith. She testified that she typed the indemnity agreement on a form regularly used by the plaintiffs. She identified the carbon copy of the agreement and asserted that it was signed by Labiche on behalf of his plumbing corporation, and by James J. Culotta. This copy of the agreement was also identified by O. W. Inhofe, vice-president of Tri-State Insurance Company, who established that the copy offered for the court’s consideration was taken from the files of his company. Labiche also admitted in his pleadings that he had executed an indemnity agreement on behalf of his company and Culotta admitted in his deposition that he had executed such an agreement about the time that the performance bond was written for the Labiche corporation. However, in the course of the trial hereof, he laboriously denied this pertinent fact.

In addition, other evidence in the nature of letters from the plaintiff to the Montaldo Insurance Agency were introduced, the im[258]*258port of which was to the effect that the plaintiff instructed Montaldo to have the signature of Labiche individually and that of his wife affixed to the indemnity agreement. One letter specifically refers to the signatures of the company and Culotta, but admitted the absence of the signatures of Labiche and Mrs. Labiche individually.

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Bluebook (online)
212 So. 2d 255, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tri-state-insurance-co-v-elmore-labiche-plumbing-co-lactapp-1968.