300 S.W. 850 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1927
It appears that defendant, Anna Brown Home for the Aged, was prior to the destruction of the old house, and now is, the owner of a note in the sum of $4500, secured by a deed of trust upon the 120 acres of land, executed by the defendant Snyder to defendant Polling on July 19, 1924; that on said date Snyder executed a second deed of trust on the land to defendant Polling in the sum of $725. Both of these deeds of trust were duly recorded on December 23, 1924. At the time these deeds were executed the frame house that was afterwards destroyed by fire was upon the property. On November *1229 26, 1926, after this suit was brought and service was had upon Polling, he purchased the 120 acres in question under foreclosure of the second deed of trust and is now the owner of the property. Neither Polling nor the Anna Brown Home for the Aged were parties to the contract under which plaintiffs furnished the lumber and building materials for the erection of the new house. The court rendered judgment establishing a first or prior lien in favor of plaintiffs upon the new building alone in the sum of $479.13 and defendants Polling and the Anna Brown Home for the Aged have appealed. The petition alleges — "That said materials were furnished and used in the construction of a new frame dwelling house situated on premises in Sullivan county, Missouri, and described as follows: one acre near south center of the southeast fourth of the southeast quarter of section thirty-six (36) Township sixty-three (63) Range eighteen (18)."
It further alleges that the property upon which the house was located was at the time mentioned therein owned by the defendant Snyder, and also contains a description of the $4500 deed of trust upon the property and the name of the trustee and beneficiary and where it was recorded. This was the only description appearing in the petition of the property against which a lien for the lumber and materials furnished by plaintiffs as aforesaid was sought to be established.
The only point raised by defendants in this appeal involves the question as to whether or not the court erred in adjudging that the lien of plaintiffs upon the house for lumber and materials furnished, was superior to that of the two deeds of trust.
It is insisted that the petition fails to state any cause of action entitling plaintiffs to the judgment rendered, for the reason that the description of the land contained in the petition is insufficient. There is no merit in this contention. We think enough appears in the description to enable a party familiar with the locality to identify the building against which the lien was established although the description is very general. [Rall Bros. v. McCrary et al.,
It is claimed that although the original frame building was destroyed by fire the concrete foundation upon which the new frame building was erected was not injured and that under the case of Schulenburg v. Hayden,
"The test of precedence is whether the work and material were done and furnished, in the completion of the building, or in making repairs on one already finished when the incumbrance was taken. In the former contingency the lien will have preference as to the building, over the incumbrance, because to do so will not impair the security on which the incumbrancer relied; whereas in the latter contingency, the incumbrance will have the preference, because, otherwise, the incumbrancer might be deprived in favor of lienors, of part of the security he counted on, by repairs made without his consent." *1231
This doctrine, laid down in the case last cited, is recognized in the case of Schulenburg v. Hayden, supra. The Schulenburg case is to be distinguished from the case at bar. In that case the mortgage covered lots and a house thereon, the house being worth about $6000. The house was damaged by fire to the extent of $4000. The owner of the property repaired and enlarged the house so that the house was then worth $10,000. It was said by the court in that case, l.c. 594, 595 —
". . . the mortgage covers the land and the house, and the house is partially destroyed by fire, and the contractor reconstructs it under a contract with the owner of the equity of redemption, section 6706, does not authorize the mechanic's lien to take priority over the mortgage or the sale of the reconstructed house and its removal. It may be that the reconstruction of the house would increase the security of the mortgagee, but he is not bound to rebuild the house — he may be content with his security of the land and the ruins of the house — which may be worth, as in this case, two-fifths of his mortgage. . . . nothing short of a sale of the whole and a division of the proceeds could possibly divide the interests of the mortgagee and of the lienor under the mechanic's lien law." (Italics ours.)
In the case at bar it appears that after the fire there was built an entirely new frame house upon the old concrete foundation. Although the incumbrances were upon the old house as well as upon the land, after the house burned the holders of the incumbrances had for their security only the land and the foundation. The agreed statement of facts recites that the "frame part of the building was entirely destroyed." Under such circumstances to give plaintiffs a prior lien over the incumbrances will not impair the security which the holders had before the new dwelling was constructed as the latter can be removed from the foundation and the premises left in the same situation as they were before it was erected. The judgment of the court merely declares a prior lien in favor of plaintiffs upon the new building erected upon the concrete foundation left after the old building was destroyed. Under the circumstances we think the judgment of the court was correct and it is accordingly affirmed. Arnold, J., concurs; Trimble, P.J., absent.