82 Mo. App. 225 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
On the eighteenth of Eebruary, 1898, S. J. Eisher contracted to sell to C. M. Clark a lot on the north side of Evans avenue in this city withafrontage of 26 feet and 9 1-2 inches and a depth of 165 feet. The lot was made up of 25 feet of the eastern portion of lot 19 and 1 foot 9 1-2 inches of the western portion of lot 18 of city block 3732. Eifty dollars cash was paid on account of said purchase, and the balance of the purchase money was agreed to be paid forty dáys thereafter. There was evidence tending to show that the purchaser was allowed sixty days additional time to make this deferred payment Plaintiff under a contract with the purchaser, furnished .lumber for the erection of a building on said lot and brought this action to establish a mechanic’s lien upon said building and the land upon which it stood. The improvement consisted of a two story brick building arranged as flats, which was 26 feet wide. It stood 7 1-2 inches west of the eastern line, and 2 inches east of the western line of the lot, which Eisher agreed to convey to Clark. The evidence tended to show that the lumber, for whose price1 the. suit was begun, entered into the construction of said building, and was furnished for that purpose between from the sixth or eighth day of March to the second day of April, 1898. The lien account correctly stated the dimensions of the lot which was the subject of the contract between Eisher and Clark, but referred to it as part of lot 19 of city block 3732, when in point of fact it was composed and made up of the contiguous portions of lots 19 and 18 in the proportions specified in the contract between Eisher and Clark. After the introduction of the lien account, plaintiff moved the court to permit an amendment of the petition, so as to conform its description of the property to the description given in the lien account, which plaintiff insisted could be done by merely striking out the
The cause was submitted to the court without a jury. Plaintiff requested the court to give the following declarations of law:
1. “The court declares the law to be, that if the court believes from the evidence that defendant Clark was in possession of the land under and by virtue of a contract to purchase the same from defendant Eisher, the owner and while in possession thereof began the erection of a building thereon, then said Clark had an interest in said land as owner within the purview of the Missouri Statutes and could subject said building and his interest in the land to a mechanic’s lien.”
2. “The court further declares the law to be, that if the court believes from the evidence that plaintiff furnished material upon the building erected by said Clark on the land described in plaintiff’s lien and petition, and under a contract with said Clark, and that said material entered into and became a part of said building, and that thereafter plaintiff complied with all the statutory requirements for establishing a mechanic’s lien, then plaintiff is entitled to such a lien on said building.”
3. “The court declares the law to be, that if the court
4. “The court declares the law to be that although the court may find from the evidence that the building erected on the lot of land -in question is situated on contiguous lots owned by defendant Eisher, that plaintiff is nevertheless entitled to a mechanic’s lien on the building situated thereon, if the lien papers are otherwise good.”
The court refused all of the foregoing declarations and at the instance of defendant declared against the right of plaintiff to recover a lien, and accordingly gave judgment for defendant, from which plaintiff has appealed to this court.
Respondents insist that there are such imperfections in the description of the property in the petition and lien as to justify the ruling of the court The allegation in the petition that the beginning point in the boundary of the lot was on the south line of Evans avenue, is shown to have been a mere ■error in the use of that term when the term north was meant by a notation of the subsequent courses and distances completing the description of the lot. These showed that starting from the beginning point the course was north 165 feet 10 inches, thence east 26 feet 9 1-2 inches, south 165 feet 10 inches, thence west to the beginning. This description would take in the width of the street as the southern frontage and a portion of the lot, which would be a patent error, since the vendor could not convey a public street. As this could not
The cases cited by respondent (60 Mo. App. 106; 71 Mo. App. 200) have no application. The former merely decided that the husband, who was not shown to be the agent of his wife, could not charge with a mechanic’s lien a house which he had caused to be erected on her real estate. The latter case merely announced that a building erected on premises, under a contract not shown to have been made with the owner or proprietor, could not be made the subject of a mechanic’s lien. On the other hand in the case at bar, as has been seen, the contract for the improvement was made with an owner of the land in the statutory sense. Hence under the plain language of the section cited the materialman was entitled to a lien against both the building and the lot to the extent of Clark’s interest in the latter. If his ownership had continued to the date of the trial of this suit, appellant might have subjected his title to the land for whatever it was worth, as well as the building, to a lien for its material, but its right to subject the building alone is not conditioned in the statute upon the continuance of the title of the owner of the land at the time it contracted with him for the erection of the building, and hence appellant was not precluded from charging the building by the subsequent failure of Olark’s title to the'land.
Neither is this conclusion effected by the point actually decided in Ranson v. Sheehan, 78 Mo. 668, where it was held that a lien could not be enforced against a building where the
The declarations of law requested by appellant are in accord with the views expressed in this opinion, and should have been given by the trial judge. Eor this error in refusing them, and giving contrary instructions on defendants’ behalf the judgment herein is reversed and the cause remanded.