2 Colo. App. 298 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1892
delivered the opinion of the court.
This suit is about two coats and the right of a tailor to assert a lien for the contract price of making them. Ever since the representatives of the craft assembled in Tooley street, the deliberations of the trade have attracted world-wide attention, and the solution of their disputes have required the application and settlement of the gravest and most complicated doctrines. The present is no exception to the gen
Some time in the year 1891 Louis Harrison, the appellee, was a merchant'tailor doing buisness in the city of Denver. At that time the appellant Hillsburg was a tailor working at his trade in the city and in the employ of the merchant Harrison. For a time which it is unimportant to state, Hills-burg worked in the shop belonging to his employer, but when the present trouble arose he was working at his home on materials which were cut and furnished him to turn into complete garments. Whether there was a distinct arrangement that the tailor should do the particular work over which the dispute arose at his house it is unnecessary to determine. It is sufficient to say that the record discloses the fact that the tailor took the work home with the knowledge and permission of the employer. He took two coats; one an overcoat and the other a cutaway, for the making of which he was to receive $26.00, being $12.00 for the one, and $14.00 for the other. It was not shown that there was anything said as to the time within which the coats should be finished, nor was there any proof offered as to the length of time the tailor kept the goods, and whether it was a reasonable or an unreasonable period for him to occupy in making them.
It is impossible on this record to determine whether the merchant is entitled to recover, or the tailor to hold the goods until the contract price is paid. The most that can be done is to hold that on his proofs the merchant was not entitled to judgment. Some of the questions discussed by counsel are unimportant to decide in the view which the court takes of the law. The tailor was a mechanic and entitled to hold possession of the garments until the price of the labor which he had put on them for their betterment was paid by the employer if he fulfilled his contract. This was true at the common law and is true under the statute. With respect to this class of artisans the statute is but declaratory of the common law save as to the machinery which it pro
The employer wholly failed to bring himself within the scope of any one of the three rules above laid down. He neither paid the bill, made any tender, nor showed any failure to perform according to the terms of any contract which he had with the employee. He could not then be entitled to a judgment giving him possession.
The employee is somewhat similarly circumstanced, and he is not entitled to an affirmative judgment, declaring that he had a lien which he might maintain as against the employer. This comes because he failed to show that he had performed his contract, or that the time within which the contract might be performed had not yet elapsed. Undoubtedly under the evidence judgment should have gone against the plaintiff and left the tailor in possession, since his original holding was rightful, and the employer failed to make the proof essential to sustain the right of possession in him.
It has been quite strongly urged in the briefs that the court erred in admitting proof of the custom prevalent among merchant tailors and their employees, to require workmen to return garments for inspection before they receive compensation for their labor. It is insisted that that custom destroys the common law and statutory right of lien which mechanics have who do work on personal property which is rightfully in their possession. The force of the
Doubtless upon the succeeding trial the facts which are essential to a complete determination of this controversy will be brought before the court which will be able to render the proper judgment in the light of the principles herein laid down.
For the error committed in the entry of the judgment this case will be reversed and remanded for a new trial in conformity with this opinion.
jReversed.