50 Mo. App. 70 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1892
— Defendant, being a carpenter and builder, was the owner of two contiguous lots and determined to erect a separate house on each lot. He built them himself, though he contracted and purchased the material of others. He purchased of this plaintiff, under one general contract, the lumber for both the houses. Failing to pay therefor, plaintiff duly filed a mechanic’s lien in proper form, and, within the time limited, brought this action to enforce the same. At the close of the
There are but two questions necessary to notice: First. The account is said to be insufficient in that there are two parts of it which are duly itemized, except ‘that the price or charge is not carried out for each item, but, instead, there is a lumping charge at the foot of each group of these items. The case presents the same question which arose in the supreme court in the case of Grace v. Nesbitt, 109 Mo. 9, where such an account was held sufficient, and we refer to that case for the reasons upon which our ruling in favor of this account is based.
The second question relates to the construction of section 6729, Revised Statutes, 1889, adopted in 1887 as an amendment to the mechanic’s lien law. The second word “upon” used in the section should read “consists of.’’ But this will not affect the substance of the statute. It reads as follows: "When the improvement consists of two or more buildings united together and situated upon the same lot or contiguous lots, or upon separate buildings upon contiguous lots, and erected under one general contract, it shall not.be necessary to file a separate lien upon each building for the work done or materials furnished in the erection of such improvements.”
It applies as well to a case where the owner erects his own houses, as where he may let the contract to another. The statute was designed to remedy the inconvenience disclosed in Fitzgerald v. Thomas, 61 Mo. 499; Miller v. Hoffman, 26 Mo. App. 199. It was intended to permit that to be done which was declared in the Fitzgerald case could not be done. Thomas, in that case, was the owner and erected (not by one contract) four houses on contiguous lots. He contracted with Fitzgerald for the plastering, including material, of all the houses. The court, held, under the statute, as it was at that time, that one lien on all the houses could
The words, “erected under one general contract,” are not to be confined to a case where the owner may contract for the completion of the buildings in one-general contract. In such case the contractor could, of' course, have one lien against all the buildings. So,, too, could anyone, furnishing material to such contractor for all the buildings, have his lien against all, notwithstanding the material so furnished may only partly contribute to the erection of the buildings. And so, too, those words will include a case like the one at bar, where the entire building is not let to a contractor, but where the lienor furnishes to the owner, for all the buildings, material which goes into such erection, notwithstanding such material may compose only a part of such erections.
The objection to ¡the sufficiency of plaintiff’s petition arid other objections striking at the right of plaintiff to maintain his lien, which defendants have urged in affirmance of the judgment, are not considered sound. The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.