24 Mo. App. 82 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1887
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action is brought by the plaintiffs as sub-contractors to recover a judgment against the principal contractor for work and labor done and materials furnished in painting a building known as the grand stand, situated on the land of the St. Louis Agricultural and Mechanical Association, known as the fair grounds, im the city of St. Louis, and to enforce a mechanic’s lien against the building and lands. The claim of lien describes the entire tract known as the fair grounds, by metes and bounds, and seeks to establish a mechanic’s lien thereon. There was a trial before a jury and a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, and against the defendant McCarty, for the sum of $1,733.95, and establishing a mechanic’s lien against the following described property of the St. Louis Agricultural and Mechanical Association, in the city of St. Louis, Missouri, to-wit: “ The grand stand at the race track in the fair grounds tract of the said defendant association, and the land which the said grand stand now covers,, the said parcel of land which the said grand stand now covers being part a.nd parcel of another tract of ground belonging to the said defendant association and described as follows (describing the fair grounds tract by metes and bounds). From this judgment the St. Louis Agricultural and Mechanical Association prosecutes this appeal.
At the trial the contested issue was, so far as it remains for consideration upon this appeal, whether the tract of ground known as the St. Louis fair grounds, against which the plaintiffs had filed their claim of lien,
I. The bill of exceptions recites that “the defendant also offered to prove by its president, that upon the total area described in the lien and petition, there are situated over one hundred different buildings, some of which are not the property of this defendant; also by said president that the ground where the building in •controversy is located is subdivided and platted into lots and blocks. The court, on the plaintiffs’ objection, ■refused to permit the same to be shown in -evidence ; to which exclusion of evidence the defendant at the time excepted.”
This ruling raises one of the questions which is urged upon this appeal. We are unable to say that the court committed error in this ruling, in the- form in
II. Proceeding then upon this assumption, we find
Upon this verdict the court entered judgment, de
Although it is strenuously urged that these rulings were subversive of all certainty, and of that good order and regularity which should prevail in all judicial proceedings, especially those which affect title to real property, — yet, after giving the matter serious consideration, we confess ourselves unable to see any substantial objection to them which the appellant is entitled to raise. Surely the appellant does not ask us to listen to the complaint that the court committed error against it in refusing to subject it to the liability of the enormous forfeiture of one hundred and fifty acres of land within the limits of the city of St. Louis upon a demand of little more than seventeen hundred dollars. Appellate courts sit for the purpose of listening to the complaints of errors which have wrought substantial prejudice to the rights of parties appealing; and we are unable to see in what respect this ruling of the court has wrought any prejudice to the defendant in reducing the subject of the plaintiffs’ lien to the smallest practicable minimum — to the very limits of the building itself and the ground on which it stands — unless some prejudice has accrued in view of another principle which will now be stated.
III. The statute (Rev. Stat., sect. 3172), in describing the subject of a mechanic’s lien in a town, city, or village, uses the words, ‘ ‘ such building, erection, or improvements,” “and the whole of the land upon which the same are situated.” Section 3176, which prescribes the substance of the claim' of lien which is to be filed with the clerk of the circuit court, provides that it contain ‘ ‘ a true description of the property, or so near as to identify the same* upon which the lien.is intended to apply.” We do not understand that it is contended, and there is no room for such a contention, that the claim of lien as filed did not contain a sufficient description of the property upon which the lien was intended
In De Witt v. Smith (supra), the claim of lien misdescribed the city block in which the buildings were located, but it was, nevertheless,.held that this did not avoid the lien, since enough was stated from which the lien could be made certain, and especially since the rights of third parties were not concerned, and since the
It would seem, then, that the one acre limit named in the Revised Statutes, section 3172, has no application to the subject in this controversy, but that if the entire tract of land is within one enclosure, and is used for one purpose, it is a “lot of land” within the meaning oi this section of the statute, and that the plaintiffs’ lien was rightfully filed against the whole tract. It furthei seems that if the defendant, the Agricultural and Mechanical Association of St. Louis, had made a tender oi
The judgment of the circuit court ivill be affirmed. It is so ordered.