75 Mo. App. 346 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
Plaintiffs furnished the materials and did the work sued for under three separate contracts) all of which were made subsequent to the execution of the nine deeds of trust on these houses, executed on the twenty-seventh day of June, 1895.. The first of these .three separate contracts was dated July 16, 1895, and isas follows:
“St. Louis, July 16th, 1895.
9 houses on Lindell
For building 6 houses on Delmar
“W. H. Miltenburg
“We agree to furnish for Mr. Olin D. Whittier the following mantels, grates and tiling, all set complete, in first class manner, for four thousand, three hundred dollars.
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The second contract was for tiling for the bath and toilet rooms, and was made September 8,1895, between Miltenberger on the one part and plaintiffs on the other.
The third contract was also between plaintiffs and Miltenberger, and was for two extra mantels, which were placed in house number 4103. Plaintiffs furnished the materials and did the work in controversy between the last day of July, and the nineteenth day of November, 1895.
It alleged that the materials set out in the account were all furnished by plaintiffs to W. H. Miltenberger and Olin D. Whittier under a joint contract, and the value of the materials and labor was the sum of $3,593.50, and that Miltenberger and Whittier had made payments on account, from time to time, amounting to $2,300, leaving a balance of $1,293.50, for which it alleged they were jointly and severally liable to plaintiffs.
It alleged that the nine houses were all erected on contiguous lots under one general contract, and it prayed for a personal judgment against W. H. Miltenberger and Olin D. Whittier, or either of them, and a blanket lien on the nine houses and lots described in the petition.
Neither the executors of the estate of Marc Eidlitz of New York, nor Olin D. Whittier, nor Robert or Mathilda Eidlitz were made parties to the original petition. Some time after the petitiqn was filed, certain of the defendants filed their motion to make Olin D. Whittier a party defendant, for the reason that he and said Miltenberger were joint contractors with plaintiffs for the materials and labor which entered into said buildings. This motion was sustained. Thereupon plaintiffs by leave of court, amended their petition, making said Whittier party defendant.
On December 18, 1896, plaintiff by leave of court amended their petition and made Robert J. Eidlitz and Mathilda Eidlitz parties defendant. They appeared and filed a joint demurrer to the amended petition, for the reason that suit had not been brought against them within ninety days fx’om the time the lien account was filed in the clerk’s office. This
On the ninth day of February, 1897, plaintiffs amended their petition by making John F. Oreen and Bernard F. Hufft parties defendant, alleging that John F. Oreen had acquired house number 4103, Lindell boulevard, by purchase at a trustee’s sale thereof, and that Hufft had, on the twenty-seventh day of January, 1897, acquired houses number 4125 and 4133 by purchase under the foreclosure of the deeds of trust thereon.
Olin D. Whittier filed answer denying that he was jointly liable with Miltenberger for the materials entering into the construction of the Lindell boulevard houses. All the other defendants, except Robert J. and Mathilda Eidlitz, answered denying each and every allegation of the petition. Plaintiff dismissed as to Bernard M. Verdin, who died after the institution of the suit.
The cause was referred to Judge Daniel Dillon to try all the issues therein. At the hearing before the referee, the attorneys for Robert J. and Mathilda Eidlitz objected to any evidence under the petition, as against these two defendants, on the ground that the court had already sustained their demurrer to the petition, which objection the referee overruled, and said defendants saved their exceptions.
Plaintiff was permitted by the referee to testify that, of the materials furnished for fifteen houses under the written contract of July 16,1895, he charged those which went into the six houses on Delmar boulevard on his boobs to Olin D. Whittier alone, and that he charged those going into the nine houses on Lindell boulevard against W. H. Miltenberger alone; that he rendered his bills for the mantels in the Delmar avenue houses to Olin D. Whittier, and bills for the
Defendants, except Olin D. Whittier, objected to the introduction of this evidence on the ground that the written contract of July 16, 1895, was on its face clear and unambiguous and could not be explained, varied or modified by parol testimony. The referee overruled defendant’s objections to this testimony and they saved their exceptions.
At the conclusion of the testimony, defendants filed a motion asking that, if the referee should find that the contract of July 16, 1895, was not a joint contract, but the separate contract of Miltenberger for the mantels in the nine houses, in that event the plaintiff be compelled to elect upon which of three separate causes of action, improperly combined in the petition, they would stand, which motion the referee overruled, to which ruling the defendants excepted.