Williamson v. Chapman

121 So. 624, 10 La. App. 544, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 103
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 13, 1929
DocketNo. 431
StatusPublished

This text of 121 So. 624 (Williamson v. Chapman) 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
Williamson v. Chapman, 121 So. 624, 10 La. App. 544, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 103 (La. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

LECHE, J.

Plaintiff entered into a contract with Dewey E. Chapman, whereby he bound himself to build a two-story residence on her lot of ground situated in the Parish of East Baton Rouge. The price agreed upon in the written contract is stated to be $8709. Chapman furnished bond in accordance with the agreement and in conformity to the statutes of this State in regard to building contracts, with the Columbia Casualty of New York as- surety.

This proceeding was filed as a concursus but in reality involves mainly differences that have arisen between plaintiff, owner, and defendant, contractor. Two oppositions were filed by furnishers of material, but these claims have been admitted as correct and as justly due, and the contest is narrowed down to the claims and counter claims, advanced respectively by the owner and by the contractor.

Among these claims and counter claims it is admitted that plaintiff owes in addition to the contract price $617.95 for extra work, changes and additional material.

Plaintiff in her petition, charges numerous short-comings on the part of the contractor, she alleges defective work, substitution of inferior material for that specified in the contract and she finally prays for liquidated damages in accordance with the penalty fixed in the contract, for delayed completion and delivery of the residence. She alleges the tender of the sum of $1187.32 deposited by her in the registry of the Court, as a balance due by her under the contract, for the benefit of all persons entitled to share therein, including her own claims.

Chapman and his surety, the Columbia Casualty Company, filed answers practically identical, denying the alleged imperfections and defects in the construction of the building, claiminr ad tional compensation for extra ' material, and also claiming a ^e on the contract price, whicl , together are said to amount to $4T, ,(. Defendants further allege that the delay in furnishing and delivering the building was caused by the interference of plaintiff, in urging and insisting on numerous changes in the [546]*546specifications, and by weather conditions, all of these delays being excepted under the terms of the contract.

After a protracted trial, lasting several days, in which a mass of testimony was taken, the District Court rendered judgment recognizing the claims admitted by the two parties, fixing the fees of the attorneys for provoking the concursus at $300, recognizing the claim of the contractor as amounting to $2,287.74 and dismissing the contested claims of1 both plaintiff and defendant.

Prom this judgment both parties have appealed.

One provision in the contract in regard to its performance is that “the work shall commence on the 27th day of April, 1927, and shall be finished and completed by the 1st day of August, 1927,” the work to be done under the personal supervision and to the satisfaction of the owner and the owner’s architect, Lewis W. Grosz. W. P. Williamson, the husband of plaintiff, acting in her behalf and as her agent testifies that when Chapman undertook the performance of the contract, he was on the job every day to see what was going on during the construction of the building, and that he was assisted by architect Grosz who also acted on behalf of plaintiff as superintendent of construction.

Among the defects, flaws, blemishes and other imperfections charged by plaintiff to have resulted by the fault of defendant in the construction of the building, are defective plastering in the kitchen, bath rooms and toilet rooms, window lights not conforming to the specifications, second hand iron railing on front porch instead of new, unpainted surfaces in the boiler room, defective concrete topping of the cement walks and drives in the yard, missing door keys, unbraced screen door, one square of shingles marred by discoloration and metal laths of a size smaller than called for in the specifications. Plaintiff also claims several deductions for expenses incident to the construction of the building, which she claims to have paid and which should have been borne by defendant.

Lewis Grosz, an architect, and therefore an expert in the construction of buildings, selected and appointed by plaintiff to superintend the work performed by defendant under the contract, testified at length as to all the complaints of plaintiff in regard to' the execution of the contract. He seemed to corroborate plaintiff in many o.f her objections to the acceptance of the work, but he finally sums’ up his opinion by saying that most of these objections are trivial and unimportant and that the real defects are four in number, viz:

1. The use of a second-hand iron railing.

2. Defective plastering.

3. Defective topping on concrete walks.

4. Window lights below specifications.

1.

The use qf a second-hand iron railing is admitted by defendant, and for this variance from the specifications plaintiff should be allowed a deduction of $32.

2.

The plastering, from a preponderance of the testimony, appears to us to have been finished substantially in accordance with the specifications. While the plasterer was doing the work, changes and substitutions were made at the request of plaintiff and when the surfaces had been finished and smoothed down, it is said [547]*547that hollows and depressions could be seen, as shown by shadows, with a light held at an acute angle from the plane of the wall. We believe that it may reasonably be asserted that it is impossible for human ingenuity to finish the surface of a iplane with such perfection that no unevenness could be detected under these conditions. Every automobile driver knows how the ridges and hollows on a public road, invisible in day-time, are exaggerated as they appear in front of strong head-lights at night. It is not shown that the walls are in the least disfigured in their appearance, nor is it shown, even if it be admitted that unusual depressions appear in the finished surfaces, what deductions, if any, plaintiff would be entitled to claim. Expert witnesses testified that the plastering complained of by plaintiff, was up to the highest possible standard. We therefore dismiss this complaint as not well founded.

3.

The defects in the topping on the concrete walks, as we read the testimony, were caused not by faulty construction but by abrasions which resulted from premature use of these walks by permitting steel rims of wheel barrows and wagons to pass over them. The specifications as we understand them, do not require a separate topping on the concrete walks and driveways, but it is not denied that the walks and driveways should denied that the walks and driveway should be finished smooth by the trowel. It is-impossible to say what vehicles were run over the concrete, but it is undeniable that plaintiff did through her employees use the concrete walks for that purpose. We do not believe that the objection is sufficient to justify non-acceptance of the work.

4.

This complaint is to the effect that the lights to be used ■ in the sashes should have been double strength, but were in reality only single strength. A great deal of testimony was taken upon this subject. It seems to be conceded by the witnesses that it is extremely difficult to defferentiate double strength from single strength glass. Three pieces of glass were examined by them.

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Bluebook (online)
121 So. 624, 10 La. App. 544, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williamson-v-chapman-lactapp-1929.