96 P. 788 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1908
Three suits to foreclose mechanics' liens were brought against T. E. Pope, George M. Seaton and Mary Shinn Seaton, and the two corporations above named, which suits were by order of the court consolidated. Plaintiffs obtained judgment, which provided, among other things, that the amounts found due constituted liens upon the premises described in the complaint. From this judgment the two defendant corporations have appealed.
Briefly, the facts are as follows: The improvements consisted of a large three-story building, comprising about seventeen rooms, a barn and a tank-house. The court found that *268 the lots upon which the barn and tank-house were situated were separate from that upon which the principal building stood, and that the labor done and materials furnished for said barn and tank-house had been paid for in full. No lien is claimed on either of these improvements. In March, 1901, the property involved in this action belonged to Bertha Thorndike and Starr M. Bruce, who, about that time, agreed to sell it to the defendants Seaton. There were defects in the title, which the vendors agreed to correct, but it was agreed that the Seatons might, in the meantime, occupy the premises, and, if they desired, make alterations in the building. The defects in the title were corrected, and the property was conveyed to Mary Shinn Seaton, February 25, 1902. In March or April, 1901, Mary Shinn Seaton took possession of the premises and began making alterations in the buildings, and continued to make the same until June 30, 1903, when, according to the findings of the court, all work ceased. An architect was employed to superintend the work, and he made plans and specifications as the work progressed. There was no general contract for the whole work, but the labor was employed by the owners and the materials were furnished to them. The appellants claim under a deed of trust executed and recorded while these alterations were in actual progress, and before the owners had gone into occupation of the improvements as a residence. The lower court held the liens of the plaintiffs valid and prior to the claim of the California Home Building Loan Company. It is from this decision that the defendant corporations appeal. The appeal is from the judgment and from the order denying the motion for a new trial.
1. It took nearly two years to make these alterations; and while we believe with appellants that the work was done in a somewhat fragmentary fashion, yet we do not think that it was done in separate and distinct sections, or that the materials were furnished on separate orders so as to constitute each a separate contract. On the contrary, we are of the view that the trial court was right in holding as it did, that the matter of making the alterations was one entire undertaking, and that the time for filing liens commenced to run when they all were actually or constructively completed. *269
2. Were the liens filed in time? In discussing these liens we will take Farnham's for illustration, although it is subject to attacks from which the others are exempt. All the liens were filed August 17, 1903.
Thomas E. Pope and the Seatons entered into the occupation of the improvements in August, 1902; and appellants contend that under the terms of section 1187 of the Code of Civil Procedure the building should be deemed completed as of that date. To support this contention they cite Giant Powder Co. v.San Diego Flume Co.,
3. But appellants assert that even if the occupation be held not to determine the time of completion of the work, the lien was nevertheless filed too late. Farnham's work ceased on the building March 21, 1903, and no notice of cessation of work, as provided for by section 1187 of the Code of Civil Procedure was ever filed by the owners. Appellants claim in this behalf that Farnham's time to file a lien commenced to run when he ceased work; and that, allowing him, under the authority of Buell v. Brown,
This point applies to all the building lienholders.
4. Appellants contend that Farnham's lien was not prior to their claims, and that the court erred in giving it such priority. In support of this contention they again argue that the work was done in separate sections, and that as all the work done prior to the recording of the deed has been paid for, the deed of trust is prior to this lien.
The work of reconstruction was commenced and the materials therefor were furnished about a year before the deed of trust was executed or recorded. Section 1186 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: "The liens provided for in this chapter are preferred to any lien, mortgage, or other encumbrance which may have attached subsequent to the time when the building, improvement, or structure was commenced, work done, or materials were commenced to be furnished. . . ." Under the terms of this section it is clear that this lien is prior to the deed of trust.
In McClain v. Hutton,
In Pacific M. L. I. Co. v. Fisher,
The argument of appellants that Farnham had been paid for all work done before the recording of the deed of trust, and therefore that his lien was subject to it, applies to the lien of Vockel. As to the liens of the materialmen, no claim is made that the amount of money received by them, or either of them, was sufficient to pay for the materials furnished up to the time when the deed of trust was recorded, and the accounts of the Humboldt Lumber Company, and the California Mill and Manufacturing Company, show that only a small portion of the amount due for the materials so furnished has been paid.
5. Appellants assert that Farnham's contract necessarily exceeded in amount $1,000, and that as it was not reduced to writing, it is void under the terms of section 1183 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Farnham agreed to act as a foreman carpenter for all the carpenter work necessary in the alterations, additions and repairs in the Seaton three-story frame dwelling-house. He was to receive $3.50 a day for his own services, and was to employ two men to work under him, who were to get $3.50 and $2 per day, respectively. The work was to be done according to plans and specifications to be made by the architect. Farnham had earned under the *272
contract $1,869, of which $1,218 had been paid. Appellants' contention in this respect is untenable. Farnham did not undertake the employment as a contractor, but merely as a carpenter at a fixed rate per day. Moreover, his employment was neither for a definite period nor for a definite amount of work, and it could not have been ascertained at the time of his employment whether the aggregate of his wages would exceed the sum of $1,000. The case of Smith v. Bradbury,
Farnham's lien is the only one subject to the objection just discussed.
6. Appellants claim that the judgment is erroneous, in that it allows interest on all the claims from the date of the beginning of the suits. They argue that all the claims were disputed, and unliquidated, and that there was no way short of litigation by which appellants, who were strangers to the arrangements between the owners and the lien claimants, could ascertain what the proper amounts were. Its right to recover on all the claims was vested in the lienholders at or before the suits were commenced. Farnham's and Vockel's claims were for services at a fixed rate of compensation per day; the claims of the California Mill and Manufacturing Company, of the Humboldt Lumber Company and of W. L. *273
Taylor were for materials sold at the market prices. McCarl's claim was not allowed. The claim of Weeks was upon aquantum meruit. All the claims except the last one were capable of being made certain either by computation or reference to market rates, and consequently respondents were entitled to recover interest thereon. (Macomber v. Bigelow,
In the case of Macomber v. Bigelow,
In the present case the services were rendered and the materials furnished directly to the owner, and he promised to pay for them. The claimants here are entitled to a personal judgment against the owner, as well as a judgment foreclosing the liens. In that case (Macomber v. Bigelow), in regard to interest, the court further said: "Tuttle and Dupuy were, however, employed by Madigan at fixed rates of compensation, which they were entitled to receive from him upon the completion of their work, and the court properly allowed them interest thereon (citing authorities), and made the amount of their judgments liens upon the property of Bigelow."
7. The present case was decided prior to the decision of the supreme court declaring the provision in section 1195 of the Code of Civil Procedure concerning attorneys' fees in mechanic's lien cases unconstitutional. Three hundred and seventy-five dollars were allowed as counsel fees in the case at bar, and to that extent the judgment is erroneous. (Builders' Supply Depot v. O'Connor,
8. Appellants also complain of the court's action in permitting witness Farnham to answer a certain question, and that the claims of lien are not true for a number of specified reasons. We have carefully examined these matters, and find no error in respect to any of them.
The judgment is ordered modified by striking therefrom $375 allowed as counsel fees, and $18.45, being the amount of interest allowed on the claim of Weeks from the date of the filing of the complaint to the date of the entry of the judgment; and as thus modified the judgment and order will stand affirmed.
Hall, J., and Cooper, P. J., concurred. *275