143 P. 966 | Mont. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiffs brought this action in the district court of Missoula county to recover from the defendants, Stewart & Welch, a balance of $51,205.85, alleged to be due for labor and materials furnished in the construction of the railway and roadbed of the defendant Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company of Montana, during the years 1907 and 1908, and to foreclose a lien upon said property. The material issues of fact were the amount and value of the work done and whether the work was done under contract between the plaintiffs and Stewart & Welch, who were contractors under Winston Brothers, whose contract in turn was with the company. The issues were .referred to Daniel J. ITeyfron, Esq., an attorney and counselor at law of Missoula, Montana, who was directed to take the proof and report the same, together with his findings of fact and conclusions of law, to the district court. The referee proceeded, and as the result of the evidence presented to him, found, in substance, that Stewart & Welch did contract with the plaintiffs for the construction of the portion of the railway in question, agreeing to pay therefor as follows: 32% cents per cubic yard for moving common earth, 90 cents per cubic yard for solid rock, 1 cent per cubic yard for overhaul, and $1.25 per square rod for grubbing; that the plaintiffs moved 90,751 cubic
This report of the referee, together with the evidence presented at the hearing before him, was submitted to the district court, upon plaintiffs’ motion for a judgment and decree accordingly, and upon defendants’ exceptions to the report, motion to reject the findings and to adopt certain other findings contrary thereto. The court overruled the motion to reject and adopted the findings, save as to an item of attorneys’ fees. On May'21, 1912, a judgment and decree was entered for the plaintiffs as of December 30,1911, in accordance with the findings as adopted. From that judgment and decree Stewart & Welch and the railway company have appealed.
Much discussion is devoted to the proposition that this court ought not to consider the voluminous record of the evidence; for certain reasons of procedure. We shall put them aside, because we prefer to dispose of the case upon the merits.
The questions then are: (1) Is the evidence sufficient to sustain (a) the finding of a contract between the plaintiffs and Stewart & Welch, and (b) the finding as to the amount of work done? (2) Is the notice of lien sufficient?
1. We shall assume without deciding, that this case — even as to Stewart & Welch — is in equity, and that the conclusions below
(b) The same conclusion must be reached touching the amount of work that was done. The real controversy was as to the amount of rock removed, and upon this there was a sharp conflict between Dean, Elrod, Sibley and Mayo on the one side, and the company’s engineers — two in number — on the other. We cannot undertake to decide between these witnesses; but upon settled principles will uphold the finding of the referee as adopted by .the court. (O’Malley v. O’Malley, 46 Mont. 549, 558, Ann. Cas. 1914B, 662,129 Pac. 501.)
2. In the notice or claim of lien as filed by the plaintiffs, it is averred that the balance claimed is “for excavating and
It is suggested, however, that in view of section 7293, Revised
The decree adjudges “that plaintiffs have a first and prior lien upon the property described in plaintiffs’ complaint and in the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law,” and authorizes the sale under foreclosure of “that certain strip of land together with the railroad and improvements thereon, two hundred (200) feet in width, extending from station sixteen hundred (1600) to sixteen hundred thirty-three (1633), being thirty-three hundred (3300) feet in length, near the town of Rivulet, in Missoula county, known as the right of way and railway of said Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company of Montana; * * * and also that certain strip of land two hundred (200) feet in width, known as the right of way and railway of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company of Montana, as it is and was surveyed at the time of the filing of said lien, throughout its extent, across the county of Missoula together with the railway located thereon,” etc. Counsel for the company omit the reference to the findings of fact and conclusions of law above quoted, and say that the description of the property authorized to be sold is different from that contained in either the notice of lien or the complaint. But the decree must be taken as a whole, and from the findings set out therein we ascertain that the strip between stations 1600 and 1633 is within “miles forty-six (46) and forty-seven (47),” and is in fact a part of the same property on which the lien is claimed and described in the notice thereof. If the plaintiffs were — as we hold — entitled to a lien upon all of miles 46 and 47, it is hard to see how the company is injured by the decree in this respect. The decree could, however, be improved by inserting the words “in miles 46 and 47” after the words “thirty-three hundred (3300) feet in length” in the last paragraph of the decree. It could also be further im
The judgment and decree appealed from should be modified as above indicated, and, when so modified, should stand affirmed. So ordered.
Modified and affirmed.