62 Mo. App. 677 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1895
Plaintiffs allege that Charles Pardesky contracted with the St. Joseph Lead Company for the construction of a railroad belonging to the defendant; that, in the making of said contract, said St. Joseph Lead Company acted as agent or trustee of defendant;
The answer averred that the St. Joseph Lead Company, and not the defendant, was the owner of said railroad, wherefore there was a defect of parties in this action; that said St. Joseph Lead Company had paid the original contractor, Pardesky, for all the work mentioned in plaintiffs petition, and he in turn had paid the plaintiffs in full therefor; and that such payments were made in accordance with the estimates and classification of the work made by the chief engineer of said St. Joseph Lead Company, as had been agreed in their contract with Pardesky as well as in the contract between Pardesky and the plaintiff. The reply denied all the averments of the answer, and alleged that defendant was the owner of said railroad. The evidence tended to show that plaintiffs did work on two separate portions of a railroad constructed in 1889 by
In the application of this payment they credited the Crimmen contract with full payment, so as to make the deficit fall upon the contract made with Pardesky. All of the work done by plaintiffs was completed on the fifteenth of April, 1889. it is conceded that all the contracts for construction of the railroad were let by the St. Joseph Lead Company, a mining corporation, which then had, and now has, the title to the entire roadbed and rolling stock and appurtenances, and which, in November, 1889, leased the same for ten years to the defendant. It is also conceded that the St. Joseph Lead Company paid Pardesky the full sum due him for all the work, and that he paid the plaintiffs all that was due them according to the estimates of the
Under the conceded facts in this case the St. Joseph Lead Company, the owner of the record title to the entire railroad described in plaintiffs’ petition, was an indispensable party. The proceeding herein was not aimed at the interest of the defendant as lessee, but .sought to charge the title of the property described with a lien. The judgment in terms directs a sale of the property. The work for which the lien is claimed was performed prior to the acquisition by defendant as lessee of any interest in the property. Hence, it was necessary, to validate this proceeding, that the owner
The next assignment of error is that, in the absence of any charge of fraud in the petition, the estimates of the engineer in charge of the work done by plaintiffs were conclusive. That plaintiffs were paid in full for all the work done by them according to the estimates furnished by the engineer in charge of the work, is shown by all the evidence. Their contract for doing the work expressly provides that the pay therefor shall be made upon such estimates. As there is no evidence that such estimates were infected with fraud, gross errors or mistake, they are to be held conclusive. Williams v. Railroad, 112 Mo. 463; Chapman v. Railroad, 114 Mo. 542; Howard County v. Baker, 119 Mo. 397. This conclusion necessitates a reversal of this case.
The same result would be reached from a consideration of the failure of plaintiffs to distinguish in their proof between the work done on sections 640 to 687, for which alone they could claim alien, and that done on the additional one hundred feet outside of these sections, for which no lien could exist. It has been repeatedly held by the appellate courts of this state that the inseparable blending of lien able and nonlienable claims is fatal to the enforcement of an account embracing such demands as a mechanic’s lien. O’Connor v. The Current River Railway Co., 111 Mo. loc. cit. 194; Gauss v. Hussman, 22 Mo. App. 115; Schulenberg & Boeckler Lumber Co. v. Strimple, 33 Mo. App. 154.
These conclusions involve the reversal of the present ¡judgment. It is so ordered.