On the Merits.
SOMMERVILLE, J.The Hotel Grünewald Company, Limited, the principal defendant, is and has been for many years the owner of the property fronting in Baronne street in the square bounded by Canal, Common, and University Place, in this city, where it conducted a large hotel. Some few years since it acquired other property in the same block, in the rear of its former building, and fronting in University Place, upon which it has erected one of the largest buildings in the city, as an annex to its hotel. For this purpose it' contracted with several contractors for executing the plans chosen for the erection of this new edifice. Several of these contractors have been made defendants with the hotel company in this suit for damages by plaintiff for alleged loss and injury occasioned to plaintiff’s property, which is in the same square, resulting from the excavating, pile driving, and other works engaged in by them in executing their several contracts.
The hotel is 14 stories high, with a basement, in which is placed a swimming pool. It is built upon 2,675 piles, making a displacement equal to 260,000 cubic feet of wood. The piles are 60 feet long, and the excavation was 10 to 14 feet deep.
Plaintiff’s property is improved, and it fronts in Canal street. It is separated from the Annex by a common alley, some 12 feet in width, with an open drain on the upper side of the alley, adjoining defendant’s property. She alleges, in her petition, filed February 28, 1907, that' she and her property have been injured by defendants in the sum of $6,906, specified as follows: For temporary repair to building, $718; for rebuilding walls, $4,880; for loss of rent, $700; for architect’s fees, $608, reduced in petition May 6, 1907, to $547. In her supplemental petition she seeks to increase her claim for rebuilding walls from $4,880 to *169$5,470, to which defendants objected. June 4, 1907, and January 3, 1910, plaintiff filed other petitions in which she sought to further raise her claim for restoring her building from $4,880 to $7,500, to which defendants also objected. She also claimed increased architect’s fees. She claimed $312 as fees of architects to be used as witnesses on the trial of the cause. This last claim must await the termination of the suit. She also claimed $824.20 repaid by her to her former tenant, Mrs. M. Reynolds, October 19, 1909, under a judgment declaring that Miss Egan must return the rent' received by her, the landlady, in error from her tenant, in suit No. 81,045, Civil District' Court. Reynolds v. Egan, 123 La. 294, 48 South. 940.
In her petition plaintiff charges that these several defendants confederated and combined to trespass upon her property, and to wrongfully and tortiously injure and destroy it. She then proceeds to particularize the injuries and the methods pursued by defendants. The evidence does not sustain these allegations as to all of the defendants. It shows that the damage complained of resulted from the excavation, pile driving, and sheet piling which were done by C. Sicard, and not by the other contractors. The judgment dismissing the suit as to the latter is correct, and it will be affirmed.
Pleas of prescription of one year were filed to plaintiff’s claims by the hotel company and Mr. Sicard. These pleas were properly referred to the trial of the case on the merits.
Mr. Sicard had two contracts with the hotel company for excavating, driving piles, and sheet piling. The first of date July 1, 1905, covering those piles, indicated on a blue print prepared by H. C. Coch & Son, architects of Milwaukee, Wis., located on the plot toward the Tulane Theater, and the second contract, which was of date March 10, 1906, covering those piles to be driven in the plot toward Canal street, nearer to Miss Egan’s property. The first contract is not the basis of plaintiff’s suit. When' counsel for Mr. Sicard asked Mr. Sicard who was a witness for himself: “When your first contract was being carried out there was some damage done to the Tulane Theater was there not?” and counsel for the hotel company objected on the ground of irrelevancy, he stating:
“We are not trying any damage to any building except the building of Miss Egan, and it is shown by the petition and the documents in evidence that that damage was not alleged to have been caused until after the beginning of the second contract.”
And when Mr. Sicard attempted to refer to the first contract, his counsel said: “Well never mind — the’ second contract?”
Mr. Sicard testifies that the plan for driving piles was erroneously drawn, that it provided for two to three feet more ground space than actually existed, and that under direction of Messrs. Toledano & Wogan,. architects for the hotel company, “the sheet piling as they are driven, as they stand yet —they are still there — were driven exactly against the last brick offset” of the rear foundation of Miss Egan’s property. The excavating of earth some 10 to 14 feet and the driving of numerous 60 feet piles must have in the nature of things displaced the earth surrounding the work; the witnesses testify that such was the effect', Mr. Sicard, defendant, says:
“I was referring to the movement of the earth on the adjoining property. The property was something like 15 feet higher than the excavations, the bottom of the excavations; and, unless these walls were put in immediately so as to prevent seepage of water, and also quicksand, running through and under the bottom of the excavations, that these quicksands in running would displace the ground in the neighboring property, and in doing so would lower the ground, and cause the buildings standing on same to settle down.”
Referring to the quicksand, he testifies:
“It extended over the whole surface at the bottom of the excavation, and it came up with the water. There was water continually running in, which 'we all understand is natural, and *171this water in coming up in different parts at the bottom of the excavations would carry up quicksand, and form little hillocks. Some would be large and some small, and that would come lip all the time; and besides that, in several instances the excavations had to be put down again on account of this quicksand coming up. That was after the excavations were complete. It had to be dug out again so as to place the concrete.”
He was asked:
“Q. This condition would necessarily affect the Egan property, would it not? A. Yes, sir. Q. In your opinion? A. In my opinion; yes, sir. Q. With relation to tha Egan property, where was this quicksand? A. It extended^ all around the excavations in every way. * * * Q. Did you see any water seeping through that crack (in the newly built retaining wall next to Miss Egan’s property) ? A. There was water continually coming through. Q. From beneath the Egan property? A. Yes, sir. Q. What would the result of that be on the Egan property? A. Naturally, the water in coming from the Egan property would wash away the ground or the earth from under the foundations, and, of course, it would settle down.”
Mr. Wogan, the architect for the hotel company, corroborates Mr. Sieard’s testimony as to results flowing from deep excavations and pile driving to neighboring property. They both testify to the existence of an open drain or ditch transferred by Mr. Wogan, the hotel company’s architect, from the upper to the lower side of the common alley between the property of the plaintiff and that of defendant during the course of construction of the annex. Mr. Sieard says that the hotel company drained large amounts of water into this ditch. And Mr. Wogan testifies in part:
“Q. Did that gutter have any injurious effect on the foundations of the buildings adjoining? A. It certainly must have. It had no bottom. Q. Did the wall absorb the humidity and dampness? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did it have any effect on it, on the building? A. It must have. Q. Do I understand you to say that the water in that gutter softened the subsoil? A. I think it tends to do that. Q. And was creating, in your opinion, damage, or creating a cause of damage, did you say? A. Yes, sir. Q. And it was the water really that did it, wasn’t it? A. No, sir; I did not say that it was the water that did it. I think it is one of the contributory causes. Q. When did you notice a movement of Miss Egan’s property for the first time? A. I couldn’t tell you exactly the date. * * * Q. How far had the pile driving progressed? Á. It was finished. Q. When you first noticed it? A. Yes, sir; pile driving and sheet piling-had been finished. Q. What was the cause of the bulging or the getting out of plumb (of the newly built retaining wall)? A. Well, there was an external force shoving it. Q. On account of the pressure that came against it? A. An external pressure. Q. Where did that pressure come from? A. From the outside buildings. Q. Wasn’t it from the foundation of the Egan building? A. I couldn’t tell you sir. The pressure comes all around you know. Q. Well, it came from the side of Miss Egan’s property? A. Yes, sir; from toward Canal street. Q. Well, what effect would that have, what effect would the giving of that wall have on the foundation of the Egan property? A. It would lower that. Q. It would lower the building? A. Yes, sir; I say, also, it would have disturbed, created a motion, there, made a movement.”
These few quotations from defendants’ testimony show conclusively that the tort or wrong complained of by plaintiff as resulting in injury to her property was the work performed by the hotel company, through its contractor, Mr. Sieard, under the contract dated March 10, 1906, which was finally completed on September 7, 1906, less than one year before the filing of this suit, February 28, 1907. The pleas of prescription of one year were properly overruled.
[1] That plaintiff’s property has been damaged by acts of defendants in the manner and to the extent indicated in plaintiff’s petition is not seriously disputed. The testimony to that effect is full and complete. We so declared in Reynolds v. Egan, 123 La. 311, 48 South. 940. The quantum of damages will now be determined. The record is large, and the oral and printed arguments discuss the testimony very fully.
The law requires that full restitution must be made by him who causes damages to another. Miss Egan is entitled to have her property restored, as nearly as possible, to the condition it was in prior to the acts of defendants, of which she complains. Heine v. Merrick, 41 La. Ann. 194, 5 South. 760, 6 South. 637; C. C. arts. 667, 2315, 2316, 2317. *173Several estimates are in evidence as to the cost of work necessary for that purpose. Mr. W. W. Yan Meter testifies that he is willing to do the work now in contemplation for $4,134.. This is the lowest estimate found in the record, and it will be taken as the basis of the judgment of the court. It is the measure of damages which plaintiff has suffered through the acts and faults of defendants. ’
Plaintiff was compelled to make temporary repairs at an expense of $718, which will be allowed.
Architect’s fees, $547, will not be allowed, as Mr. Yan Meter’s estimate appears to cover this .charge.
The claim for loss of rent is well founded. In Reynolds v. Egan, 123 La. 314, 48 South. 947, “we say she (the lessee) had the right to cancel the lease, for the reason that the situation was not one calling for repairs to the building,” but for a “reconstruction” of the same, and we therein decreed that “the right of plaintiff (the lessee) to recover rents paid since judicial demand from her lessor be reserved.” But in the settlement or compromise between plaintiff and her tenant, which was offered in evidence, it does not appear clearly how much was for rent returned by Miss Egan. There is ho other testimony as to the amount of rent lost or returned. This claim cannot therefore be allowed. A judgment of nonsuit will be entered as to this item.
The claim for $641.80, made in a rule to tax costs, for expert testimony by plaintiff, should have been made absolute in part. We said in Stern v. Lanng, 106 La. Ann. 738, 31 South. 303, Act 19 of 1884 provides for compensation, to be fixed by the court, where the testimony requires special study and experience, and the amount of compensation is in great part left to the judge.
[4] Plaintiff notified defendants by supplemental petition that she would introduce experts as witnesses on the trial of the cause. The case required witnesses who had by special study and experience fitted themselves to give testimony concerning the matters involved; and it is right that they should be compensated. Some of the experts who testified did not appear on the trial of the rule to tax costs and submit themselves to an examination by defendants. The rule should have been made absolute for $351.35.
[2] The hotel company and Mr. Sicard were joint tort-feasors, and they are bound in so-lido to Bliss Egan for the damages resulting from their wrongful acts,
[3] As the hotel company furnished- the plans and specifications by which Blr. Sicard executed his contract to excavate, drive piles, and sheet pilings, and as it exercised control over him through its representatives or architects, and as it bound itself to indemnify and hold him harmless for damages arising from the execution of the contract in the terms following:
“The party of the first part (Blr. Sicard) shall not be responsible for any damages resulting from the execution of this contract, except that caused by the direct fault or negligence of himself or of his employes or workmen, and except that caused by, and directly attributable to, his doing the work in a manner different from that prescribed by the contract or directed by the architects.
“And the party of the second part (The Hotel Co.) hereby agrees and binds itself to indemnify and hold harmless the party of the first part against any loss or damages which may be sustained by him and through his undertaking, and not assumed by him hereinabove”
—there will be judgment in favor of C. Sicard and against the hotel company for the amount rendered against him in favor of Bliss Egan. The claim of the hotel company against the American Bonding Company, the surety for C. Sicard, was properly dismissed.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment appealed from be reversed in part and amended so as to make the judgment in favor of plaintiff against the hotel company and C. Sicard in solido for $4,852.21, with $351.35 additional for experts’ fees, to be taxed as costs. '
*175It is further ordered that Charles Sieard have judgment against the Hotel Grünewald Company, Limited, for $4,852.21 and costs, or so much of said amount as said Sieard may he called upon to pay under this judgment.
It is further ordered that there be judgment of nonsuit in favor of plaintiff on her claim for loss of rent against the Grünewald Hotel Company and Charles Sieard.
In all other respects let the -judgment appealed from be affirmed.