161 Ky. 295 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1914
Opinion of the Court by
— Affirming as to Dana Lumber Company, reversing as to E. A. Simmons.
Tbe Dana Lumber Company, a corporation, with its principal office at Nada, in Powell county, Kentucky, began tbe construction of a railroad from tbe Lexington & Eastern Railway to the North Pork of Red River. In doing this work it was necessary to buildi a tunnel. The work of constructing the tunnel was let to Swift & Weaver, afterwards Swift & Lacy, who sub-let a portion of the work to Fletcher & Snodgrass. Swift & Lacy became insolvent and left the State. Thereafter plaintiffs, Fletcher & Snodgrass, completed the work which they had engaged to do, and brought this action to enforce their claim for work done after the abandonment of the contract by Swift & Lacy. On final hearing they were given a personal judgment against the Dana Lumber Company and its general manager, E. A. Simmons, and also a lien on the property of the Dana Lumber Company. E. A. Simmons and the Dana Lumber Company appeal.
It is first insisted that the trial court erred in rendering a personal judgment against Simmons and the Dana Lumber Company. The petition charges that the work was done at the instance and request of E. A. Simmons personally and as agent of the Dana Lumber Company, and also as trustee for Swift & Lacy. Defendants contend that Simmons was acting merely as trustee for the creditors of Swift & Lacy, and not for himself and the company, in completing the work after Swift & Lacy abandoned their contract. The evidence shows that Flynn, the president, and Simmons, the general manager, of the Dana Lumber Company, had made a sale of
The point is also made that no lien should have been adjudged. This position is predicated on the theory that the railroad being constructed was not the kind of a, railroad to which Sections 2492 and 2494, Kentucky Statutes,, apply. In this connection it is insisted that these sections do not apply to a private railroad constructed by a company for its own benefit, hut only to an incorporated, railroad intended to serve the general public. The lien statement and petition both allege that it was a railroad. It does not appear that an issue was made below as to the character of the railroad. In the absence of a showing on the question, we think the lien statement and petition, charging that the work was done on a railroad owned by the Dana Lumber Company, was sufficient compliance with the statute to make out a prima facie case and support the judgment awarding plaintiffs a lien,
Other errors are relied on, but we deem it unnecessary to discuss them further than to say that we have carefully considered them, and, in o.ur opinion, none of them afford any just grounds for reversing either the personal judgment or the judgment awarding a lien against the Dana Lumber Company.
On the appeal of the Dana Lumber Company the-judgment is affirmed. On the appeal of E. A. Simmons,, individually, the judgment is reversed and cause remanded with directions to set aside that part of the judgment awarding personal judgment against him.