88 Iowa 225 | Iowa | 1893
In a second count, the plaintiffs claim a lien for
The defendant, the Davenport, Iowa & Dakota Railroad Company, claims it is not, and never has foeen, indebted to the plaintiffs, and that the plaintiffs have no claim for a lien upon its property. The defendants, the Davenport, Iowa & Dakota Railroad Company and the Burlington, Cedar Rapids & Northern Railway Company, say that Fulton and D. R. W-Williams never made, or assumed to make, a contract for the Davenport, Iowa & Dakota Railroad. Company
The Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company filed a separate answer, setting out many of the matters heretofore referred to, and also denied generally the avermentsof the .petition. They also say that on May 28, 1888, the railroad company executed to them, as trustees, a mortgage securing the sum of four hundred and ninety-six thousand dollars in bonds, which were issued; that said mortgage was a first lien upon the road; that these bonds were delivered to Williams & Flynn. It pleads that the plaintiffs are estopped from claiming a lien; also that they did not file their lien within thirty days after the work was completed, and at the.time the-same was in fact filed the railroad company had paid the original contractors in full. The -defendants Williams & Flynn made default, and the case was tried asió the other parties.
It does appear that at first the railroad company undertook to build two miles of the road, long prior to the time they entered into the contract with Williams & Flynn. At that time they had permitted Fulton to act quite generally for them. At that time, also, the company, for its use in dealing with those who furnished it with supplies, had printed some blank vouchers. These blanks were not all used at the time the plaintiffs’ work waSi going on; and as Williams & Flynn had furnished no blank vouchers to Fulton, to use in the transaction of their business, he used some of these old blanks, which, in form, purported to bind the railroad company, in making statements of the condition of the plaintiffs’ account with Williams & Flynn. These statements he also signed as “secretary.” The railroad company had no knowedge that he was using these blanks until after the plaintiffs filed their lien. There never was any settlement or accounting between the plaintiffs and the railroad company, unless the filing of these blanks and
III. The plaintiffs’ first contention is that they are principal contractors; that their contract was made directly with the railroad company. In view of the facts above found, and others which might be stated, it is clear that there is no foundation for such a claim. The plaintiffs made this first contract with Williams & Flynn. They had all their negotiations with them. It was they who fixed the price. The plaintiffs knew, or were bound to know, that Williams & Flynn had for a long time prior thereto had a written contract with the railroad company to construct the entire line of road, including the work they, the plaintiffs, undertook to do. They had actual knowledge that Williams & Flynn were then engaged upon the work, and it was their business to acquaint themselves with the facts touching the relationship existing between the railroad company and Williams & Flynn. They can not blame others for results which proper inquiry would have protected them against. There is no pretense that the railroad company, or any one else, ever informed the plaintiffs that Williams & Flynn were agents for the company, and that they contracted with them as such. It affirmatively appears that the plaintiffs took no steps whatever, to acquaint themselves with the real situation. They never asked with whom they were contracting. Had they used any care, they would have knowm that they were not dealing with any one having a shadow of authority to bind the railroad company.
But there is another and all-sufficient reason why it ban not be held that the plaintiffs thought they were contracting with the railroad company, or in fact did so. It is an undisputed fact that the plaintiffs entered into a written contract with Williams & Flynn, as con
IY. Recovery is sought under the second count of the petition on the theory that Williams & Flynn had a contract with the railroad company to construct the road, and that these contractors solicited the plaintiffs to do work upon the road under them as sub-contractors, and that the plaintiffs refused so to do, when it was agreed between the railroad company, Williams & Flynn, and the plaintiffs, that the latter should do certain work, and the company would pay them therefor, and deduct the amount so paid from the sum that would be due to Williams & Flynn on their contract.
That Williams & Flynn had a contract for the construction of the road is conceded, but we do not find that the parties entered into the agreement claimed. The last contract was made early in October, 1888, and the negotiations which led up to it were carried on principally with Flynn; but nothing was said by him, or any one else, which can be said to have carried the idea to the plaintiffs that, in making this contract, Flynn, or Williams & Flynn, were acting in behalf of the railroad company. The plaintiffs entered into this second contract, having knowledge that the former contract was made with Williams & Flynn. The plaintiffs said nothing to anyone as to whom they were making this second contract with, and so far there is nothing to show that the railroad company had anything to do with it. It is of no avail to say that the plaintiffs did not know that Williams & Flynn were principal con
It matters not what the plaintiffs believed or supposed. The facts established are that Williams & Flynn were not agents for the railroad company in making this contract; that they had no authority from it to act for it; that they did not even assume to act as such agents, nor had the company held them out as such to the plaintiffs or others. The plaintiffs had no right to indulge in suppositions, which were not supported, as a basis for their claim that they were dealing with the company in making this contract. The right to a lien arises only when a contract has been made with the owner. While it is true that under certain circumstances a contract will be implied, as where the owner agrees to pay for material furnished, yet no facts appear in this case which would warrant us in saying that a contract might be implied. A contract can not, in such a case, be established by the belief of the plaintiffs; but it must be shown that an actual contract existed with the railroad company, or the facts must be established from which it can fairly be said that a contract may be implied therefrom. The plaintiffs’ recovery is sought on the ground that they are principal contractors, and they must recover as such, or not at all. To be principal contractors, their contract must have been made with the railroad company. Templin v. Chicago, B. & P. Railway Co., 73 Iowa, 548.
The plaintiffs’ claim that they are principal con
Now, the company had not, during the plaintiffs’' connection with the work, held Fulton out as having any such authority. It did not even know that he had used these blanks. So that the only way that they can be chargeable with his act, if at all, is that h© possessed such power by virtue of his office. We are satisfied that Fulton, in filling the voucher, acted for Williams & Flynn; that he never intended to issue a paper which should bind the railroad company. But, whatever his intention may have been, it is clear he could not, under the circumstances disclosed in this-case, bind them. We do not think that the secretary of a railroad company, by virtue of his office simply, is clothed with authority to bind his company by signing and attesting a- paper which may on its face evidence a liability on the part of the company to a third person.
We need not review the many cases cited. Many of them are not applicable to the facts, as they exist in the ease at bar. Thus the case of St. Louis, I. M. &
Y. The conclusion we have reached renders it unnecessary for us to consider specially the claim of Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company, or the motions submitted with the case.
The judgment and decree of the district court are Affirmed.