35 Mo. App. 337 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action to enforce a mechanic’s Hen for work done and material furnished in the reconstruction or repairing of a certain building situated on lots 14 and 15, in block 544, Carr’s addition to the city of St. Louis, held by defendant Braun under a lease from one Bernard Luethemeyer. The plaintiff filed his account and statement for a mechanic’s lien, as an original contractor, with the clerk of the circuit court on the
The defendant Braun filed an answer in the nature of a general denial, but the defendant Frasier made default, and judgment was taken against him accordingly. The issues between plaintiff and defendant Braun, as made by the respective pleadings, were tried by the court, without the intervention of a jury, which resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for the sum of eight hundred and fifty-six and forty-five hundredths dollars, the amount of plaintiff’s account with six per cent, interest thereon from the date of the filing of the lien, and this judgment was by the court declared to be a special lien on said property. No instructions were asked or given. The defendant Braun filed his motion for a new trial and after alleging the usual and familiar grounds, h e asked the court to set aside the verdict and judgment, and grant him anew trial, because the plaintiff had no mechanic’s lien for a part of his claim (if for any), and that the items of the account were so mixed and com mingled, that it was impossible for the court to determine for what part a lien was given. A motion in arrest of judgment was also filed and defendant urged as a special reason why this motion should prevail, that the lien was not filed by plaintiffs in the office of the circuit clerk within the time prescribed by law.
Both motions were overruled, and the defendant Braun duly excepted, and has brought the case to this court by appeal, and urges the following reasons why the judgment is wrong and should be reversed. First, Because the evidence fails to show that the lien was filed within the statutory period of six months. Second, That the work was done under three different and distinct contracts and the work under each contract as
It would be better to dispose of the second objection made by defendant Braun, as the conclusion reached in that matter will more readily enable us to dispose of the first objection upon satisfactory grounds.
The defendant contends that the lien account as filed embraces work done and materials furnished in the repair of the building under three distinct and separate contracts, and that the items are so commingled and mixed that it is impossible to separate and distinguish the one from the other, and that for this reason, the whole lien account is void and incapable of enforcement. This court decided in the case of James Kearny et al. v. Wurdeman, 33 Mo. App. 447, “that where work was done on a building or other improvement by the same party, but under different and distinct contracts, the entire work might be embraced or carried into one account and lien paper. But in order to give a lien for the entire amount of work done, it should appear that the last item under each contract was within the time prescribed by the statute for filing the lien.” It is therefore apparent that when work done and materials furnished, under two or more contracts, are included in one lien paper, it is absolutely necessary that the items, under each contract, should be separately stated, in order for the court to determine whether the lien of the mechanic or material man, exists as to all, or only a portion of the work done. In
The Kansas City court of appeals in case of Page v. Bettes, 17 Mo. App. 375, says: “ When work, distinct in its nature is performed at different times, the law supposes it to have been performed under distinct engagements, as when the work at one time is for building, and at another time for repairing. So, when two distinct contracts are in fact made, as for different parts of the work, the work done under each contract must be considered as entire of itself. But when work, or material, is done, or furnished, all going to the same general purpose, as the building of a house or any of its parts, though such work be done or ordered at different times, yet if the several parts form an entire whole, or are so connected together, as to show that the parties had it in contemplation that the whole should form but one and not distinct matters of settlement, the whole account must be considered as a unit, or as being but a single contract.” This is probably as succinct and correct a statement of the law as could be made. To formulate a rule of easy and general application is quite difficult to do. If a contractor should agree with the owner to furnish all the materials and do the necessary work in the construction of a building, and after the work had progressed, the owner should conclude to make changes in his original plan, or use some materials different from that originally contemplated, and should agree with the contractor as to the additional cost of construction (if any), or they should agree to leave that for adjustment on a settlement, we don’t think that it could be properly held that this additional work was doné under a separate and distinct contract; although the work was ordered or agreed on at a different time.
But if a contractor makes a contract, by which he agrees for a stipulated price to do the carpenter’s work in the construction of a building, and, also by a separate and distinct agreement, contracts to do the necessary stone work of the sam e building, the case would be different.
In the case under consideration, the original purpose and intention was to have the second story removed from the building and the building reconstructed for use as a theatre. To this end defendants employed plaintiff to do the work and furnish all the materials, for a stipulated price. The manner in which the work was to be done, and the materials to be used, were agreed on. While the work was in progress, the city authorities interfered and compelled de fendants to change some of the materials contemplated by the original contract, and also compelled a change in the original plans and specifications. This increased the cost of construction, and the defendants, according to plaintiff’s testimony, agreed to pay him the additional cost, and he thereupon proceeded to, and did, complete the improvements, according to contract and the requirements of the city authorities.
The counsel for the appellant urges that, for this additional work and materials, there was a separate and distinct contract. We cannot yield our assent to this, but must hold that the whole account “ must be considered as a unit or as being but a single contract.”
Treating the plaintiff’s claim as a continuous running account, defendant’s first assignment of error, to the effect that there was no substantial evidence to support the finding of the court, “that plaintiff’sstatement for a lien was filed within six months after the completion of the work,” is without foundation, and must be
Defendant also claims, “that as the last date to any item of the account was September 10, that the presumption is, that the subsequent items in the account were of the same date, and that the lien account on its face showed that the lien had not been filed within the time; that the lien holder must stand or fall by his account as rendered, and the dates as specified cannot be changed by matters in pais.” Coe v. Ritter, 86 Mo. 277. The reason of this rule is that when a party seeks to fasten a lien or incumbrance on real property, the precise nature of the lien or incumbrance should be stated and made a matter of record, so that the owner or other parties interested might be definitely advised of the true facts touching the title to the property. This objection by defendant in the case under consideration cannot be sustained, because the statement or affidavit of plaintiff attached to the lien papers, states that the account accrued on the eighteenth day of September, which was within six months prior to the filing of the lien. Besides it appears from the lien account filed, that the item, under date of September 10, was for lumber used in the building, and that a subsequent item in the account was for carpenter’s work which bore no date. The fair inference from this would be, that at least a portion of the charge for carpenter’s
Nor can we agree with counsel for defendant that plaintiff’s lien account is open to the objection that it
The judgment in this case was for the right party and we can find no good reason in the record for its reversal.
the judgment will be affirmed,