75 Mo. App. 622 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
The instructions given at the request of the defendants and those which were asked by the plaintiff and refused by the court indicate fully and clearly the the respective theories of the parties as to the main question in the case. The defendant’s instructions are as follows:
*625 “2. If the items named in the account sued on were used by the said Waples in the construction or erection in the streets of the city of Rolla of an electric wire line for the purpose of conducting electricity from a power-house building in said city to the residences of the inhabitants thereof, such items did not become a part of such building, and plaintiff can not maintain a lien on said building or ground whereon situated for such items.”
Instructions. “3. In cities and towns the lien given by law to mechanics and others for labor or materials is confined to the lot upon which the building is erected, and the building and improvements situated thereon; and m order to maintain a lien on such lot or building, it must be shown that the items were used in the construction of a building or improvement upon such lot.”
“4. The fact that a wire may. be attached to machinery in such building for the purpose of conducting electricity from the said building to wires strung on poles throughout the streets of such city, will not make such wire and poles a part of said building or an appurtenance of said lot.”
The instructions asked by plaintiff are as follows:
“1. The court sitting as a jury, declares the law to be that if it believes and finds from the evidence that plaintiff furnished the material and work and labor mentioned in the petition, for an electric light plant, situated on a lot of ground as set out and described in the petition, under a contract with defendant Walter L. Waples, and that the plaintiff has not been fully paid therefor, then the court will find for plaintiff against defendant Waples, and assess its damages as the balance due it, based upon a reasonable value of said material, work and labor, with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from the date*626 of this suit. And if the court further finds that said material, labor and work described in the petition was furnished on, to, or for the property described in the petition under said contract, and that the same, notwithstanding the fact that the wire mentioned in plaintiff’s account extended from a point within the powerhouse plant out, into, along and across certain streets in the city of Rolla, was a necessary part and parcel of the equipment and improvement known as the electric light plant, and was and became an integral part of said electric light plant, improvement and equipment, and that said wire was furnished under said contract with defendant Waples; and that said wire and material was embraced in the contract of defendant Waples with the owner or owners of the property; and that plaintiff, within four months after it completed said work, filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Phelps county a just and true account of the demand due it, after all just credits had been given, with the names of the owners and contractor, and a true description of said property, or so near as to identify the same, all verified by the affidavit of an officer or agent of said company, and that more than ten days before the filing of said lien plaintiff gave notice, in writing, to the owner or owners of said property, of its demand, the amount thereof, and from whom due, then the court will also find that plaintiff is entitled to a mechanic’s lien on the premises and improvements for such sum as may now be due to it from defendant Waples.”
“2. The court sitting as a jury, declares the law to be that the fact that the wire mentioned in plaintiff’s petition extended from a point within the power-house of the building mentioned, out, along and across certain streets in the city of Rolla, does not preclude plaintiff from, its right to a mechanic’s lien on the*627 building, premises and improvements mentioned in the petition, provided plaintiff has filed its lien, served its notices, and filed its suit within the time limited by law; and provided further, that its notice and lien papers are in form and in substance accurate and sufficient to sustain a lien claim, as mentioned in first instruction.”
It is argued by counsel for respondent that the construction of the mechanic’s lien statute which the circuit court adopted is supported by the decisions of the supreme court in the eases of Henry v. Plitt, 84 Mo. 237; McDermott v. Claas, 104 Mo. 14, and Dugan Cut Stone Co. v. Gray, 114 Mo. 497. These were cases in which the plaintiffs sought to, enforce mechanics’ liens against lots for the construction of sidewalks, in
There about nine tenths of the sidewalk was built upon the land belonging to the city, yet the court without hesitation sustained the lien. This ruling resulted from a liberal construction of the mechanics’ lien statute, which is in harmony with the modern doctrine (which was first adopted in this- state in Dewitt v. Smith, 63 Mo. 263) that such a statute is highly remedial and should receive a liberal construction, in order to attain its beneficent objects.
There are other questions suggested in the briefs which we have considered, but do not deem it necessary to discuss. Eor the errors pointed out in the instructions, the -judgment of the circuit court will be reversed and the cause remanded.