184 Mo. App. 42 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
This is an action to enforce a mechanic’s lien for work and labor done and materials furnished for and upon thirteen two-story brick buildings, and the lots of ground upon which they are situated, located in the city of St. Louis. The lien statement was filed on June 16, 1906, and states that the work and labor done and materials furnished, as shown by the account therein set forth, were furnished by the said lienor under contract with defendant Louis C. Schulte. The account itself runs against “Louis C. Schulte (M. P. Hynson, agent),” and is for certain furnaces and pipes and other accessories pertaining thereto, and for certain work and labor done in and about installing all of the same.
On September 13, 1906, plaintiff instituted this action to enforce the lien. In his petition filed at said time plaintiff named as defendants Louis O. Schulte, Montrose P. Hynson, W. M. McDade, F. W. Lovett, Chas. O. Nichols, trustee, and Frank C. Burdett. The original petition does not appear in the record. Subsequent to the institution of the suit, Hynson was adjudged a bankrupt, and on February 19, 1909, plaintiff filed what is designated as a“ statement of parties in interest,” and asked leave to make certain other persons defendants. The court granted this request, and on March 17, 19091, plaintiff filed an amended petition naming, in addition to the original defendants, the other parties as defendants in the cause, viz.: Wm, R. Orthwein, trustee in bankruptcy of M. P. Hynson, and certain other persons who were described in the amended petition as persons to whom' portions of the property had been conveyed, or who held deeds of trust thereon. The amended petition avers that, at the dates of furnishing the materials and labor in question, defendant Schulte held title to the property, but held it in fact in trust for Hynson, to whom it in reality belonged.
On behalf of all the parties who were made defendants on March 17, 1909, excepting défendaní Florence M. D'ale, demurrers were filed, upon the ground that they were not made parties within ninety days after the filing of the lien, and also, as to a part of them, that they were neither necessary nor proper parties defendant, having purchased after the filing of the lien. These demurrers were overruled. Florence M. Dale, who was made a party defendant by the amendment, filed a motion to dismiss as to her,
The cause was referred to Benj. J. Klene, of the St. Louis bar, to try all of the issues. The referee duly heard the testimony and filed his report in the cause, wherein he made a very complete finding of facts, and recommended a judgment sustaining the lien. The court overruled the exceptions filed to the referee’s report, and the case is here upon defendants’ appeal.
In the view which we take of the case, it is unnecessary for us to set out the rather lengthy findings of the referee; but we shall confine ourselves to such of the facts as are essential to the determination of the case as we view it.
On October 12, 1904, Schulte, who then held the title to the property, conveyed the various lots, described in plaintiff’s petition, by separate deeds of trust, to Ohas. C. Nichols, as trustee for Fred W. Lovett, to secure certain promissory notes. Thereafter the said buildings were erected on the various lots, and on June 2, 1905, defendant Schulte conveyed to Florence M. Dale one of these lots, with the house and other improvements thereon, subject to one of the aforesaid deeds of trust. At the time that defendant Florence M. Dale acquired this house, no furnace had been installed therein, and it appears that Hynson, for whom Schulte held the title, and who really owned the property, agreed with Mrs. Dale that a furnace would be provided and installed in it. Later this was done, at or about the time when the furnaces
It is perfectly clear that the suit was not begun as to Florence M. Dale within ninety days after the filing of the lien as required by section 8228, Revised Statutes 1909. The action was instituted within the prescribed ninety days, to-wit, on September 13, 1906; but Florence M. Dale was not made a party thereto until March 17, 1909, about two and one-half years thereafter. And it is well settled that, where parties are thus brought in by an amendment, the suit as to them is begun at the time of such amendment making them parties. The amended petition as to them is the filing of a new suit. And, as an action to enforce a mechanic’s lien must be brought within ninety days after the filing of the lien, after the lapse of that time new parties cannot be brought in by amendment and be thus affected by'the proceeding. [See Lumber Co. v. Staley, 141 Mo. App. 295, 125 S. W. 779; Rumsey v. Pieffer, 108 Mo. App. 486, 83 S. W. 1027; Bombeck v. Devorss, 19 Mo. App. 38; Fury v. Boeckler, 6 Mo. App. 24; 27 Cyc. 344; Watson v. Gardner, 119 Ill. 312, 10 N. E. 192. See, also, Riverside Lumber Co. v. Schafer, 251 Mo. 539, 158 S. W. 340; Smith v. Barrett, 41 Mo. App. 460; Forrey v. Holmes, 65 Mo. App. 114; St. Joseph v. Baker, 86 Mo. App. 310; Jaicks v. Sullivan, 128 Mo. 177, 30 S. W. 890.]
In Fury v. Boeckler, supra, this court said:
“The proceeding is special, and the person who claims under it must bring himself within its special provisions. The ninety days after which no lien is to continue to exist, unless the conditions of the law are complied with, are not provided as a period of repose to bar actions; on the contrary, they are a limit to the existence of the lien.”
And as to the same effect is Lumber Co. v. Staley, supra, where the immediately foregoing excerpt is quoted approvingly. And such is likewise the
Though it is well established that the filing of the petition is the commencement of an action, and that the general rule is that subsequent amendments properly made to the petition relate back to the institution of the suit, nevertheless this is applicable only to the defendants originally sued, and not to new parties brought in by any such amendment. [See Jaicks v. Sullivan, supra, 128 Mo. 186, 30 S. W. 890.]
In the instant case it is beyond dispute that defendant Florence M. Dale, the owner of one of the thirteen lots, with the improvements thereon, described in plaintiff’s petition, and against which the lien is sought to be enforced, acquired her title thereto prior to the time when the lien, if any, attached to the same. She was not made a party to the suit within the prescribed time, and therefore is not affected by the proceeding; and, as to her property, the lien must fail. As she was the owner of this house and lot at the time of the furnishing of the materials and the doing of the work in question, it would seem the only theory upon which a lien could be established against such property is that, by virtue of Hynson’s agreement with her to install a furnace therein, the latter was her agent in making the contract with respect to the furnishing of the material and labor to and for her building. Be this as it may, she was not made a party to the proceeding during the period for which the lien, as to her property, continued in existence, and she is not bound by the judgment. [See authorities supra; also McLundie v. Mount, 145 Mo. App. 660, 123 S. W. 966; Nold v. Ozenberger, 152 Mo. App. 439, 133 S. W. 349.]
Learned counsel for respondent has cited us to Matthews v. Stephenson, 172 Mo. App. 220, 157 S. W.
It must follow that, under the circumstances of this case, plaintiff’s lien must fail in toto. This for the reason that the lien sought to be enforced is a blanket lien against all of the property mentioned in plaintiff’s petition, of which that of Florence M. Dale forms a part. All of the materials furnished and all of the work and labor done for and upon all of the houses in question is included in one general lien account, consisting of a great many different items, and with no attempt made to separate the various items of labor and materials furnished for and upon the different houses. Liens • have , frequently been upheld against one or more of several houses where materials were furnished to all under one contract, where it was possible to identify the particular materials which went into the building or buildings against which the lien was sought to be enforced. [See Lumber Co. v. Realty Co., 150 Mo. App. loc. cit. 69, 130 S. W. 822, and cases cited.]. There was here no attempt to identify the particular material or labor
There are various other questions involved in the appeal, and whether the judgment could be sustained against all other attacks made thereupon is a matter not free from- doubt; but, in the view which we take of the case, it becomes unnecessary to discuss the other assignments of error, since we think it perfectly clear that the lien must fail for the reasons stated above.
Hynson, who, it is said,' as the real owner, contracted with plaintiff for the furnishing of the materials and labor in question, died during the pendency of the suit. It appears that an application for letters of administration' upon his estate was denied, and an order of no administration thereon made by the probate court; and hence there was no revival of the cause against his executor or administrator. "With regard to this, the referee found that, since it was impossible to find any one against whom a personal judgment might be rendered, plaintiff was entitled to enforce the lien, without regard to a personal judgment against the contracting owner, or his legal representative. As to this we express no opinion, but merely mention the state of the record in this regard to indicate why no such personal judgment may be rendered herein.