In this action to establish a mechanic’s lien, plaintiff, Hertel Electric Company, Inc., as a subcontractor, sought a personal judgment for $482.28 and interest against defendant Fred Gabriel, “as original and general contractor,” and prayed ■ “a mechanic’s lien against the buildings, appurtenances, improvements and land” described in plaintiff’s petition and owned by defendant R. L. Butterworth. The jury verdict found the issues for plaintiff and against defendant Gabriel in the sum of $585.58 and thát plaintiff was “entitled to a mechanic’s lien against the real estate” of defendant Butterworth situate in Pulaski County, Missouri, and described in the verdict. The judgment was that plaintiff “have and récover of and from the defendants the sum of $585.58 as debt and damages áforesaid assessed by thé jury.”- No lien was decreed. (All emphasis herein is ours.) ;
*98
The'first complaint of.-, the sole appealing defendant, R. L. Butterworth, that a
personal
judgment should not have been entered against her obviously is well-founded. Plaintiff did hot seek, the evidence did not justify, and the jury verdict did not permit, any .such judgment. As in other classes of actions. [McIlvain v. Kavorinos,
Plaintiffs claim is for “electrical labor, materials, and 1 supplies” furnished for and used at the Tulane Trailer Camp near Fort Leonard Wood in Pulaski County, Missouri. Early in 1951, the tract of 6.19 acres, on which the trailer camp subsequently -was.located (hereinafter referred to . as the tract), was-purchased by Harry-A. Wachter-of Webster Groves, Missouri,, who, however, caused the record title to be conveyed to .his-daughter, defendant. But-, terworth. According to Wachter,. he pur-., chased the tract after a discussion;with de-, fendant Gabriel .in which .Gabriel said. “he thought lap had a good proposition ;to start, a trailer-camp down at .Fort Leonard Wood, and, if T. (Wachter) would buy the ground- and furnish the. money to build it, he would do the construction of it and. take half of the rent for his pay.” The precise nature of the relationship between- Gabriel and Wachter -is not determinable with assurance on the record before us, but Wachter agreed upon trial that he had purchased,the tract and was “supposed to pay the.,bills”. incident ,to establishment .of the., trailer camp. About the'first'of April, 1951,-Ga-briel talked with Fred Hertel, president.. of plaintiff corporation,, about “some electrical work” to be done, at the trailer camp. On April 26, 1951, Hertel sent to the camp four electricians, in a pickup “loaded down with enough-equipment to do the job”; and, on June 27, 1951,. defendant -Gabriel purchased additional material from plaintiff which was used at the trailer camp.
Pointing oút that a mechanic’s liert may be sustained only as an incident to a personal-judgment against the one with whom the contract’ for the labor or material was made) who himself either is the owner dr his authorized agent or stknds in a contractual relationship with the owner- dr sdme contractor under him [Macklind Inv. Co. v. Ferry,
Defendant Butter.worth’s-next complaint is directed to the description of the land to be impressed -with a ■ lien. Recognizing that, since the buildings, improvements and land on which plaintiff sought a lien were outside “any town, city or village,” plaintiff could obtain a lien on the land only “to the, extent of- on.e acre” [Section 429.010], plaintiff, throughout the instant proceeding,- i., e., in its preliminary notice of lien filed with the recorder [Section 429.110], in its lien claim filed with the circuit clerk [Section 429.080], in its petition instituting suit [Section 429.170], and -in its principal verdict-directing instruction to the jury, referred to the land on which the improvements were .made as “one acre of land being part of a larger tract of land being described as follows, to-wit,” , following which, in each instance, the “larger tract” of 6.19 acres was described by metes and bounds. In the jury verdict, At was found that plaintiff was entitled to a mechanic’s lien on “one acre of land situated in Pulaski County, Missouri, and being a part of a larger tract of land, said one acre being more particularly described as follows,” but the description then following was not of “one acre” but was the same 4e» -scription (as had been .used .throughout the proceeding), of the “larger tract” of 6.19 acres. The judgment simply referred to the jury finding “.that, plaintiff , have mechanic’s lien against the lands described in petition,” although, as we have noted, the judgment did not purport to impress, a lien upon- any. land. The record ¡ reflects no effort to fix or define the boundaries of the one acre upon which a lien is sought.
The lien claim is'-not itself a pleading and, broadly stated, “(a) 11 that is required therein is a substantial compliance with the statute [Settion-429.080] declaring what that claim Shall contain.” Mitchell Planing-Mill Co. v. Allison,
However, such . indulgent pronouncements with respect to inaccurate, loose. or general descriptions of property. obviously have been limited,: in intent and application, to descriptions
prior to verdict and judgment.
So, it has been said that.“(i)f the claim comes into court, it is then time
*100
enough to require all the particulars that may be necessary to maintain or defend the action” [Mitchell Planing-Mill Co. v. Allison, supra, 40 S.W. loc.cit. 121; Powers & Boyd Cornice & Roofing Co. v. Muir,
We are unable to accept plaintiff’s suggestion, for which no authority is cited by counsel or found by us, that, by order entered upon an
after-judgment
motion for a survey, the presently undefined boundaries of the acre (on which plaintiff seeks a lien) in the “larger tract” of 6.19 acres might be definitely delineated. Both defendants in the instant case having appeared and answered, under Section 429.-240 “the judgment, if for the plaintiff, shall be against [the] debtor as in ordinary cases, with the addition that if no sufficient property of the debtor can be found to satisfy such judgment and costs of suit, then the residue thereof be levied as provided in section 429.230.” The latter statute provides for levy on “the property charged with the lien therefor,
which said property shall he correctly described in said judgment.”
The judgment should conform substantially to the statutory requirements [Farley Bros. v. Cammann,
Finally, defendant Butterworth asserts that no lien could be impressed on her realty anyway; because of plaintiff’s failure to establish that it had given the “ten days’ *101 notice before the filing of the lien” which is required of all subcontractors. Section 429.100. On October IS, 1951, twelve days before its lien claim was filed, plaintiff had filed written notice of lien in the office of the recorder of deeds of Pulaski County, Missouri, thus Seeking to avail itself of the provisions’ of Section 429.110 permitting notice so to be given when “the owner of the property * * * sought to be charged shall not be a resident of this state, or shall have no agent in the county in which said property is situate, or when such owner shall be a resident of the state, but conceals himself, or has absconded, or absents himself from his usual place of abode, so that the notice required by section 429.100 cannot be served upon him.” The only evidence on the subject was that defendant Butterworth, the daughter of Harry A. Wachter, lived in his home in Webster Groves, Missouri. Appended to the notice of lien were an affidavit by one of plaintiff’s attorneys that on' October 13, 1951, defendant Butterworth “could not be located” in Pulaski County, Missouri, “after a due and diligent search,” and another affidavit by one David Gross (unidentified in the record) that, on the same date, defendant Butterworth “could not’ be found” upon “due and diligent search” in the City of St. Louis and St. Louis County, Missouri. But, upon trial plaintiff made no effort to show, and the jury was not required to. find, any of the alternative statutory prerequisites to the validity of constructive service of notice under Section 429.110.
We are in hearty accord with the salutary principle that the provisions of our mechanic’s lien statutes, being remedial in nature, should be construed liberally to carry out their just and beneficent objects. Fuhler v. Gohman & Levine Const. Co.,
Although our courts have employed different language at various times
3
in stating the purposes to be served
*102
by a preliminary notice of lien, it is clear that service of such notice is a-condition precedent to the right of a subcontractor to sue for enforcement of . a lien. Williams & Pearson v. Dittenhoefer,
Although there is, in the record before us, no competent evidence which would have permitted submission to the, jury of the issue as to whether or not facts prerequisite to giving pf notice to the. owner under Section 429.110 existed ■ when the notice was filed on October 15, 1951 [contrast Goodfellow Lumber Co. v. Blanke, Mo.App.,
However, Section 512.160(3) directs that “no new trial shall be ordered as, to issues -in which no error appears.” Although the reasonable worth of the labor done and of the material furnished by plaintiff was sharply disputed by defendant Butterworth, , there vyas substantial evidence to. support the
amount
of the jury verdict and judgment, and defendant But-terworth, the sole .appealing .defendant, here makes no complaint as to such
.amount
and assigns nó error which could have had any effect on the issue as to the
amount
due plaintiff. TJpder these circumstances, a retrial of the entire case, even as to defendant Butterworth, is neither necessary nor justified, . Consult Stith v. St. Louis Public Service Co.,
*103 Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is sét aside in its entirety and the cause is remanded (a) for further proceedings (not inconsistent herewith) and retrial solely on the issue as to whether a lien should be impressed upon a definitely-fixed and. properly-described, portion (not in excess of one;acre) of defendant Butter-worth’s tract, (b) with directions that, if upon retrial such issue be determined in favor of plaintiff, judgment for $585.58 shall be entered in accordance with Section 429.240 which shall be a personal judgment against defendant Gabriel and a lien against such definitely-fixed and properly-described portion of defendant Butter-worth’s tract, and (c) with directions that, if upon retrial such issue be determined in favor of defendant. Buttervyorth,-. judgment be entered in her favor but for $585.58 against defendant Gabriel in personam.
Notes
. Nevertheless, in a- number of eases, property descriptions in lj.cn claims have, been held fatally defective. See Williams v. Porter,
. Note also the comments about inaccurate descriptions being sufficient “as a basis for amendment” and “to be cured by amendment” in Chance v. Franke,
. As stated in some of the earlier cases, “(t)he only object of the notice (of lien) is to secure the owner at least ten days’ time to investigate the merits of the claim before he decides whether he will pay it, or permit his property to be subjected to a lien” [Miller v. Hoffman,
