Phelan v. Cheyenne Brick Co.

188 P. 354 | Wyo. | 1920

Lead Opinion

Burgess, District Judge.

These are three cases brought here by proceedings in error from the District Court in and for Laramie County, Wyoming, by Walter Q. Phelan and Helen C. Phelan, defendants below, -to review three judgments fixing and adjudging liens upon certain premises owned by them and providing for the sale thereof for the satisfaction of the liens. By reason of the rise of these cases out of the same general transaction, the identity of some questions and the similarity of others, in all three, they were, by stipulation of counsel, though separate suits, consolidated for trial in the court below. Separate judgments, however, were rendered and separate motions for new trial filed and overruled. Thereupon, one bill of exceptions was prepared, presented and filed, embodying the evidence and preserving the exceptions in all three cases.

This consolidation has been carried into this court, one brief covering all the cases and all the cases being submitted together for consideration and decision.

On August 5, 1915, Walter Q. Phelan and Helen C. Phelan, plaintiffs’ in error here, defendants below, were husband and wife and were the owners of certain unimproved premises situate in the City of Cheyenne, Laramie County, Wyoming, on which day a contract in writing was entered into between Walter Q. Phelan, as the owner,' and D.ugan & Cochran, as the contractors, by the terms of which *501the latter were to furnish all the materials and labor required for the construction of a brick and frame residence on said premises according to the plans, specifications and drawings made by William Dubois, architect, and to complete the same on or before November 5, 1915. The contract was not signed -by Helen C. Phelan, nor was she in any way referred to therein.

The contractors proceeded to the construction of the residence in accordance with the terms of the contract, but failed to completa it in time, and, in fact, never did complete it, but finally abandoned it altogether. The Cheyenne Brick Company, The Grier Dumber Company, and Frank Roedel were all lien claimants who, by virtue of contracts with Dugan & Cochran, had furnished building material and performed labor for them in connection with the construction of said dwelling between August 5, 1915, and the time of the final abandonment of the contract -by Dugan & Cochran. These lien claimants, not having been paid, served each a notice in writing upon Walter Q. Phelan and Helen C. Phelan of intention of filing a lien, and thereafter filed a claim of lien in the office of the County Clerk of Laramie County, Wyoming. Actions were then brought by them to foreclose the liens and judgments were entered adjudging their claims to constitute liens, concurrent with each other, upon the property of Walter Q. Phelan and Helen C. Phelan, and ordering the sale thereof to satisfy said liens.

So many are the points referred to in the brief of counsel for the plaintiffs in error, of which some are meritorious and others not, that we desire to call attention to Section 4599 of the Wyoming 1910 Compiled Statutes, providing that “No exception shall be regarded unless it is material and prejudicial to the substantial rights of the party excepting,” and to state that if, in the course of this opinion, we do not refer to all the matters raised in the briefs, it will be due to the fact that, in our judgment, those omitted come obviously within the inhibition of the statute, and not to any failure on our part seriously to consider them.

*502We shall proceed first to the consideration of the questions common to all the cases, and then take up those peculiar to each of them.

It is insisted by the plaintiffs in error that the interest of Helen C. -Phelan in the premises is not subject to the liens sought to be fastened thereon, because she did not sign the contract between her husband and Dugan & 'Cochran, and was not a party thereto. It is contended by the lien claimants, on the other hand, that her husband in entering into the contract and causing the erection of a dwelling upon the lot owned by them jointly was acting not only for himself but as the agent of his wife, and that her interest was, therefore, as much subject to the liens asserted as his.

Upon this question Section 3817, Wyoming 1910 Compiled Statutes, has a direct bearing. It provides:

“Sec. 3817. ‘Owner’ and ‘proprietor’ defined — Infants and married women. Every person for whose immediate use, enjoyment or benefit, any building, erection or improvement shall be made, shall be included by the word ‘owner’ or ‘proprietor’ thereof, under this chapter, not excepting such as may be minors over the age of eighteen years, and married women; and in case the husband of any married woman shall enter into any contract for the performance of any work, or the furnishing of any material, for which a lien is provided by this chapter for the benefit of the wife’s property, the husband so contracting shall be deemed prima facie to be the agent of his wife owning such property.”

It appearing that the material furnished and work performed by the three lien claimants were for the benefit of the jont property of the husband and wife, a prima facie case was made that Phelan was acting as his wife’s agent in entering into the contract in question, and that she was bound thereby. It then became incumbent upon her, by virtue of this statute, to overcome, if she could, by proper and sufficient evidence, this prima facie case of agency. This she failed to do, and, we may add, did not even attempt to do. Mrs. Phelan was not a witness in any of the cases and there is no testimony whatever that Phelan was not her *503agent in this matter. Phelan testified, but he never said he was not her agent, or that he had no authority frqpi her in causing the construction of the house. He went no further than to say that she was not a party to the written contract with Dugan & Cochran, by which he probably meant that she did not sign the contract and was not referred to therein in any way, which was true. But this is not necessarily inconsistent with the view that he was acting for her as well as himself in making the contract and had authority from her so to do. Phelan’s testimony clearly shows to us, as it must have shown to the trial court, that in the construction of the dwelling he was acting, not only for himself, but for his wife as well, and with her authority. He testified in substance that he and his wife together decided to build a house upon the lot in question; that the house so built was to be home for them; that she selected the plans and specifications for the construction of the dwelling; went with him to the architect to have the plans drawn; signed with him a mortgage upon the premises for the express purpose of obtaining a part, at least, of the money for the construction of the house; and that she was often upon the premises as the work progressed. This conduct of the wife is reconcilable only with the fact that she had either authorized or ratified the act of her husband in causing the construction of the house. It can not, therefore, be maintained that the trial court was not justified in holding that Phelan was his wife’s agent, acting with authority from her in making the contract in question, and that her interest in the property was as much subject to the liens asserted as was his.

In this connection complaint is made by counsel for plaintiffs in error about the action of the trial court, at the close of all the evidence, in allowing amendments to the petitions to the effect that Phelan, in making the contract with Dugan & Cochran, was acting not' only for himsélf but as agent for his wife. These amendments simply conformed to the facts proven, and there was no abuse of discretion on the part of the court in allowing them.

*504Nor was there any fatal variance, because the contract proven was a contract which on its face purported to be a contract between Dugan & Cochran and Phelan, while the lien statements were filed as though both of the Phelans were parties to the contract, for in legal effect Mrs. Phelan was a party to the contract, her relation being that of an undisclosed principal.

Objection is made to the form and substance of the judgments rendered, in' that there is no finding “that any one is indebted to the respective plaintiffs, or that said plaintiffs should each have and recover a sum certain, and that the findings and judgments entered do not conform to the requirements of Sections 3808, 3809 and 3810 of the Wyoming 1910 Compiled Statutes.”

Dugan & Cochran were made .parties defendant to the actions in the court below, but no personal service of process within the State of Wyoming was had upon them or either of them; nor did they appear in any of the actions. Service of process was, however,'had upon them in the State of Colorado. The' District Court, therefore, had no jurisdiction to render a personal judgment against Dugan & Cochran in favor of the lien claimants, nor were the cases proper cases for the rendition of a personal judgment against any one, nor did the court do so. Sections 3808 and 3810 have no application to the situation presented by these cases. Section 3809 provides in substance that where constructive service only is had upon the debtor, the judgment, if .for the plaintiff, shall be that he recover the amount of the in•debtedness found to be due and the cost of suit, to be levied out of the. property charged with the lien therefor. An examination of the judgments convinces us that they conform in substance to the requirements of this section.

Complaint is also made that the plaintiffs continued their suits as to the contractors, Dugan & Cochran, because there was no service upon them of the amended petitions. If the failure to serve the amended petitions upon Dugan & Cochran operated as a discontinuance of the suits against them and created a defect of parties defendant (which we do not *505decide) the plaintiffs in error can not avail themselves of it here, because such defect was not raised by demurrer or answer in the court below, and was- therefore waived (Becker, et al. v. Hopper, et al., 22 Wyo. 237, 138 Pac. 179, 23 Wyo. 209, 147 Pac. 1085).

CHEYENNE BRICK COMPANY CASE.

In this case plaintiffs in error contend:

First: That there was no proof of notice of intention to file a lien required by Section 3815, Wyoming 1910 Compiled Statutes.

It was, however, stipulated in open court at the time of trial, to avoid a continuance, that C. F. Rugg, a witness then absent, would testify, if present, “that on the 30th day of November, 1915, a notice of a claim for material furnished to defendant contractors as set forth in the petition, and that a lien would be filed upon the property described' in the petition, was served upon the defendants, Walter Q. Phelan and Helen C. Phelan, of which notice a copy is attached to the petition and marked ‘B’.”

The point of the contention, as we take it, is that there was no formal offer in evidence of the notice thus referred to. If the notice had been set out in full in the stipulation, or if the witness had been present and in testifying stated that he had served a notice, a'copy of which was as follows, and then had read the notice, would it be said that the notice so set out or so read was not in evidence ? How, then, does this differ in principle from the situation here? The notice was set forth as. an exhibit to the petition, and as such constituted a part of the record. The stipulation identified it and by specific reference brought it into the case as a part of the evidence.

Second: That there is a variance between the petition and the lien statement, in that the former alleges an agreed price for which the bricks were sold, while the lien statement merely alleges the reasonable value of the bricks sold.

The amended petition alleges that the plaintiff furnished the brick “at the agreed price and which were of the reason*506able value of $154.00”. In the lien statement it is said that the materials furnished were of the fair and reasonable value of $154.00. The evidence was that the brick were of the value of $154.00. We do not conceive this to be a material or fatal variance. (See E. D. Metcalf Co. v. Gilbert, 19 Wyo. 331, 116 Pac. 1017.)

Third: That the lien statement was not filed within time.

In the liexx statement filed is an allegation that the brick company furnished the brick between August 19, 1915, and September n, 1915, but attached to and made a part of the lien statement is an itemized account of the bricks so furnished, from which it appears that the last item of brick delivered was September 13, 1915. If September 13th is taken as the correct date of the last item, then the statement was filed in time; while if September nth is taken, it was not. The petition alleges and the proof shows that the last brick furnished was on September 13th. The plaintiffs In error do not claim that they were in any way misled by this descrepancy, and the date, September 11th, must be regarded as a mere mistake or inaccuracy. Says Cyc., Vol. 27, p. 20X, “A mistake or inaccuracy in the statement as to a date is not necessarily fatal if no one is misled thereby to his prejudice; nor would such mistake preclude the claimant, when necessary to sustain his lien, from showing the true date.” (See also Chapter 68, Wyoming 1911 Session Taws.)

Fourth: That in mentioning the names of the contractors they appear in the contract with Phelan as Dugan and Cochran ; in the lien statement as Henry Dugan and J. M. Cochran; and in the petition as Henry S. Dugan and James M. Cochran.

In all three instances, however, they are described and identified as the contractors who had the contract for the construction of the Phelan residence, and no question is raised that they are not the same parties; nor do the plaintiffs in error claim that they have been misled in any way by reason of the discrepancies. (See Steinmann v. Strimple, et al., 29 Mo. App. 478.)

*507Fifth: That the lien statement is insufficient in that it fails to show that the material described therein was furnished to Dugan & Cochran and used on the premises of the defendants Phelan under any contract between Dugan and Cochran and the defendants Phelan.

An examination of the lien statement, however, discloses that this contention cannot be sustained.

ROEDEL CASE.

In this rcase plaintiffs in error contend:

First: That the amended petition failed to state a cause of action because:

(a) It failed to allege the filing'of a verified statement of lien claim in the office of the County 'Clerk of Laramie County.

(b) It failed to allege a promise on the part of the contractor to pay, and non-payment.

(c) It failed to allege performance of the contract by Roedel with the original contractor.

The amended petition, however, did allege the filing in the proper office of a lien statement and the only defect, if any, relating thereto was the failure to state that it had been sworn to. The court below properly allowed an amendment curing this alleged defect.

As to the grounds (b) and (c), an examination of the amended petition convinces us that they are not tenable.

Second: No cause of action was proved in that:

(a) There is no evidence that Roedel sold the material to, or furnished the labor for, the firm of Dugan & Cochran.

(b) The plaintiff failed to show that he had any knowledge of the contract between Phelan and Dugan & Cochran, and failed to show that the labor performed and materials furnished were in substantial compliance with the principal contract.

As to (a), counsel’s attention is directed to pages 28 and 2g of the bill of exceptions, and specifically to the cross-examination by Mr. Lee of Mr. Roedel, from which we believe it will be' apparent the contention is without merit.

*508As to (b), we fail to see or appreciate, under the facts in this case, the significance of knowledge or lack of knowledge on the part of Roedel of the contract between Phelan and' the contractors. However, it appears that, through information imparted to him 'by Mr. Cochran, he had knowledge of the existence of such a contract, though he had never seen it. This much was developed on cross-examination by counsel for plaintiffs in error.

The materials furnished by Roedel were used in the construction of the house, the labor performed waS upon the house, or upon materials that went into the house during construction. They were accepted and became a part of the house. The materials were such as are, not infrequently, used in the construction of houses. There is no evidence that these materials and labor were not such as were called for or contemplated by the plans and specifications forming a part of the contract between Phelan and the contractors, nor can it be assumed that they were not. The presumption is that they met the requirements of the plans and specifications, for they were ordered by the contractors, used in the building, and the owners have asserted no claim that they were not such as were contemplated by the contract.

Counsel for plaintiffs in error, in their reply brief, urge a point not raised in their original brief, namely: That Roedel failed to introduce in evidence any contract between Dugan & Cochran and Walter Q. Phelan.

Phelan testified 'in the Roedel case to a written agreement signed by him and Dugan & Cochran for the construction of a dwelling house upon the property owned by him and his wife, and identified it as Exhibit “D”, which had already been offered and received in the Cheyenne Brick Company case (P. 30, B‘. of E.) In view of this testimony, and in view of the recital in the bill of exceptions that “the three cases were consolidated for the purpose of trial and one record was made the record of all three cases”, we fail to see wherein the failure to re-offer in this case the written contract would constitute error. See Benington v. State, 2 O. St. 160, where it is said:

*509“Where an instrument in writing is produced by a party on a trial as evidence, and witnesses examined in relation to it without objection to its admissibility from the other side, it is not error for the court to regard it as in evidence, although not formally offered and read by the party producing it.”

GRIER LUMBER COMPANY CASE.

It is contended in this case that the contractors, Dugan & Cochran, abandoned work on the house on November 12, 1915, and' that the items furnished thereafter and up to November 19th, inclusive, were improperly included in the lien statement. In answer to this, however, it is sufficient to say that as to just when the work was abandoned by the contractors there is a conflict in the evidence. There is evidence in the record to the effect that from November 12th to November 19th, 1915, inclusive, Dugan & Cochran had an employee or employees upon the job, and that the materials furnished during that time were used in the building. There is substantial evidence, therefore, to support the finding of the lower court sustaining the lien statement, and it should not be disturbed. See 27 Cyc., p. 100, where it is said:

“It is well established as a general rule that the failure of the principal contractor to complete his contract does not, of itself, defeat the right of the subcontractor, workman or material man to a lien.”

Nor is there any merit in the contention that, inasmuch as Dugan & Cochran failed to complete the building by November 5, 1915, the date by which, under the contract, it was to be completed, the items furnished thereafter by the lumber company and used in the building were non-lienable items. The undisputed evidence shows a waiver by Phelan of the time for the completion of the contract. Dugan & Cochran continued their work under the contract until 'at least November 19, 1915, with the knowledge and consent of Phelan. Phelan never declared a forfeiture of their contract on November 5, 1915, or sought in any way to terminate it on that date or any subsequent date prior to *510November 19, 1915, because of their failure to complete the work within the time specified. But he permitted them to proceed under it, and they did proceed under it, the same as though no breach had been committed. This is not a case where the principal contract terminated on November 5, 1915, and where all connection with or authority over the work on the part of the contractors ceased at that time, but is a case where the contract was 'Still in force during the time the materials for which a lien is claimed were furnished. See 6 Cyc., p. 65, note 15. Also see Hydraulic Press Brick Co. v. Green, 164 S. W. 250 (Mo.), where it is said:

“A material man who, under contract with the contractor erecting a building under contract with the owner, furnishes materials for use in the building .which are so used is entitled to a lien on the premises for the reasonable value of such materials, and to enforce such lien, regardless of the defaults and delinquencies of the contractor in the performance of his contract with the owner.”

It is further contended that “The court erred in admitting statements of Mr. Cochran which were made to Mr. Grier, and which were hearsay and incompetent.”

The first statement complained of relates to the dealings between the Grier Lumber Company and the contractors, and was certainly competent to show what the arrangement or contract was between the lumber company and the contractors in the furnishing of the materials that went into the house.

As regards the other two statements complained of, we can find nowhere in the motion for new trial where they were specified as error. In this motion there are only two specifications of error relating to the introduction of evidence, one and seven. Specification one certainly does not embrace these statements, nor does specification seven, because the latter relates only to the overruling of objections to the introduction of evidence, while the errors alleged here consist of the failure of the trial court to sustain motions to strike statements to which no objection had been interposed. Furthermore, specification seven is too general *511and indefinite. (See Holdsworth v. Blythe Fargo Co., 23 Wyo., p. 63). The judgments in all three cases will be affirmed. Judgments affirmed.

PotteR, J., concurs. Beard, C..J., and Blydenburgh, J., being unable to sit in said causes, District Judges. James H. Burgess and Charles E. Winter were called in to sit in their stead. Judge Winter, having resigned his office prior to the decision, did not participate therein.





Rehearing

on petition eor rehearing.

Beard, Chiee Justice.

The opinion in these cases was handed down March 29, 1920, and appears in 188 Pac. 354. A petition for a rehearing has been filed by counsel for plaintiffs in error. The onty ground for a rehearing stated in the petition is, “that said cases have not been heard by this court; that the opinion filed herein on March 29, 1920, should be disregarded and said cases set down for hearing before this court, for the reason that the number of justices of this court required to transact the business of the court were not present and did not take part in the hearing or determination of said cases.” No objection was made, at- the time, to submitting the cases to the court as then constituted. The facts are, as stated in a note at the end of the opinion, that “Beard, C. J., and Blydenburgh, J., being unable to sit in said cases, District Judges James H. Burgess and Charles E. Winter were called in to sit in their stead. Judge Winter, having resigned his office prior to the'decision, did not participate therein.”

The journal of the court further shows that Justice Potter and Judge Burgess were both present and sitting as members of the court at the time the opinion was handed down, it being written by Judge Burgess and concurred in by Justice Potter; and that the other Justices 'of the court were then present but not participating in the decision: Counsel cites in his brief in support of his petition for a rehearing, Sec. 4, Art. V, of the Constitution, “The Supreme Court of the State *512shall consist of three justices, who shall be elected by the qualified electors of the state at a general state election at the times and places at which state officers are elected,” etc. Also Sec. 5> id.: “A majority of the Justices of the Supreme court shall be necessary to constitute a quorum for the transaction of business.” Also Sec. 879, Comp. Stat. 1910: “A majority of the Justices of the Supreme Court shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. In the absence of a quorum on the first day of an adjourned or regular term, the court shall stand adjourned from day to day until a quorum shall be present; and the court may, there being a quorum present, adjourn from tiriie to time to any subsequent date.” He also quotes from 15 C. J. 964, “in the absence of a quorum or number required by law to hold court, a judgment rendered by the remaining Judges will be regarded as a nullity, as in such a case there is no authority conferred to render a judgment.” And cites the text of that work and cases in note 58; and Long v. State, Ann. Cas. 1912, A. 1244 and notes at 1251 et seq.

Counsel makes no claim, nor can any valid claim be made, that there was not a constitutional quorum of the court present both at the hearing and decision of the cases, or that the decision-was not by the necessary number of judges, if the District Judges called in were members of the court for the purposes of the cases and are to be counted in con-' stituting a quorum of the court. But his contention is, that they were not members of the court, and cannot be so regarded. He seems to have entirely overlooked Sec. 6, Art. V. of the Constitution. As originally adopted, it read, “In case a Judge of the Supreme Court shall be in any way interested in a cause brought before such court, the remaining Judges of said court shall call one of the District Judges to sit with them on the' hearing of said cause.” Under that provision, Judges of the District Court' were frequently called and were always regarded as members of the court for the purpose of the case. That section of the constitution was amended in 1917, and now reads, “In case a Justice *513of the Supreme Court shall for any reason be unable to sit in any cause in said court, the presiding Justice of said court shall call one of the District Judges to sit as a member of said court on the hearing of said cause.” Thus increasing the causes for which a District Judge should be called, and expressly providing that he should be, when so called, a member of the court. The language of said section of the constitution is too plain to admit of but one construction, which is, that the judge so called is as much a member of the court for all purposes of the cause in which he is so called, as a regularly elected Justice of the Supreme Court. The members of the constitutional convention evidently foresaw that in the absence of such a provision a condition might arise in which the business o'f the court would be long delayed. Indeed, but for that provision, the condition might be such that a quorum of the court could not be secured for the hearing and decision of a certain case for nearly six years. If a District Judge who is thus called to sit in any cause is not a member of the court for all purposes of the cause, we are unable to explain for what purpose he is so called.

With the exceptions that it requires a quorum of the court to transact business, and that the decision must be by a majority of such quorum, the authorities cited by counsel in his brief do not sustain his contention, but are against it.

For the Territory of Utah the Act of Congress provided: “The Supreme Court consists of a Chief Justice and three Associate Justices, any three of whom shall constitute a quorum; but no Justice shall act as a member of the Supreme Court in any action or proceeding brought to such court by writ of error, bill of exceptions, or appeal from a decision, judgment, or decree rendered by him as a Judge of the District Court.” In Nephi Irrigation Co. v. Jenkins, 8 Utah 452, it was held that under that act any three of the Justices constitute a quorum for the transaction of business, and a Justice who tried the case below might sit for the purpose of making a quorum, but could not act or participate in such proceeding. In Pennsylvania, but not under a constitutional *514provision like ours, the Supreme Court of that state in Commonwealth v. Mathews, 210 Pa. St. 372, held that where one or more of the Judges of a court decline to sit in a case by reason of personal interest in the result, the powers of the eourt necessarily devolve on the remaining Judges, even if only a minority of the court. In the present case, a quorum of the court was present at the hearing and decision of the cases and the decision was by a majority of the Judges who; sat and heard the cause, and is valid. A rehearing is denied.

Rehearing denied.

Potter and Blydenburgh, JJ., concur.