41 Neb. 525 | Neb. | 1894
November 3, 1890, Theodore L. Von Dorn owned certain real estate in the city of Omaha and on that date a contract in writing was entered into between him and Frederick Mengedoht and Adam Feichtmayer, copartners, by the terms of which they, in consideration of $18,540 to be paid them, agreed to furnish all material and labor *528
and construct for Von Dorn a building on his real estate, the same to be completed by April 1, 1891. This contract, amongst other things, provided that all material and labor used in the construction of such building should be firstclass in every respect; that the building should be constructed according to certain plans and specifications made part of the contract; that "the contractor shall and will well and sufficiently perform and finish, under the direction and to the satisfaction of James McDonnell, architect, acting as agent of said owner, all the works, * * * agreeably to the drawings and specifications made by the said architect;" that the architect, or his representative, should superintend the work; that should the contractors at any time refuse or neglect to supply a sufficiency of properly skilled workmen or of material of the proper quality, or fail in any respect to prosecute the work with promptness and diligence, then, if the architect should certify that such refusal, failure, or neglect of the contractors was a sufficient reason therefor, that the owner should be at liberty to terminate the employment of the contractors and enter upon the premises, take possession of and complete the work. The contractors at once entered upon the performance of said contract and furnished a large amount of labor and material towards the construction of the building they had agreed to erect. Before April 1, 1891, Von Dorn discharged McDonnell as architect and superintendent and appointed one Field in his place; and having obtained a certificate from him to the effect that the material being used by the contractors in the erection of the building was not of the character or quality called for by the contract, and that the building was not being erected according to the plans and specifications, Von Dorn terminated the employment of said contractors, took possession of and finished the building himself. One Specht brought this suit in the district court of Douglas county to have established and foreclosed against Von Dorn's property a *529
mechanic's lien which he claimed for certain labor and materials furnished by him to the contractors, and used by them in the partial construction of Von Dorn's building. Von Dorn and wife, the contractors, McDonnell, and a large number of material-men were made defendants. The controversy here, however, concerns only Von Dorn, Mengedoht, and McDonnell. Mengedoht, having succeeded by assignment to all the rights of Mengedoht Feichtmayer, copartners, filed an answer in the nature of a cross-bill, claiming judgment against Von Dorn and a lien upon his real estate for the value of the labor and materials furnished by Mengedoht
We will first dispose of Von Dorn's petition in error.
1. The first alleged error is assigned in the following language: "That in the hearing of said cause below divers and sundry errors occurred in the introduction of evidence notwithstanding the objections of the plaintiff in error, which evidence was immaterial, irrelevant, incompetent, and prejudicial to the plaintiffs in error, and excepted to by plaintiff in error at the time; all which fully appears in the bill of exceptions on file in this court." This assignment of error is too indefinite for review. We cannot look through a record for the purpose of ascertaining if it contains error. If a litigant is of opinion that a ruling of the district court was erroneous and prejudicial to him, he must set out in his petition in error the precise action of the district court which he claims was erroneous.
2. The second error is like unto the first, and assigned in substantially the same language, and what has already been said disposes of that assignment.
3. The third and fourth assignments of error are, in substance, that the findings of the referees are unsupported by sufficient evidence. The evidence as to the character of the material used and the labor performed by the contractors in their partial construction of Von Dorn's buildings, and the evidence as to the manner in which the work was done, — that is, as to whether it corresponded to the plans and specifications, — was conflicting. Two of the referees who passed upon this evidence were skilled builders, and the other referee was an able lawyer who had filled the office *531 of judge of the district court for a number of years. It is not claimed that either of these men were incompetent or partial. They heard and saw the witnesses testify. They examined the work that had been done by the contractors; and two of these referees at least were, by training and profession, possessed of qualifications for passing a more correct judgment upon the character of the work and the materials used therein than we are. These referees were far more competent to weigh the evidence before them and to say what conclusions such evidence warranted than we are; and a careful reading of the testimony in the case satisfies us that the findings of fact, and each of them, made by the referees are abundantly supported by the evidence.
4. The fifth assignment of error is that the judgment of the district court is contrary to the law of the case. We shall first examine this assignment with reference to the judgment in favor of Mengedoht. The argument, in effect, is that the referees in the district court adopted and applied an erroneous measure of damages in the controversy between Von Dorn and Mengedoht. The referees found that while Mengedoht
Is the judgment in favor of McDonnell contrary to law? The referees found that by the contract between Von Dorn and McDonnell the latter was employed as an architect to prepare the plans, drawings, and specifications for the building and to superintend the construction of the same; that Von Dorn wrongfully discharged him, and that in pursuance of his contract he performed labor and services towards the erection of said building as were of the just and reasonable value of $574.39, and that he was entitled, under the mechanics' lien law of the state, to a lien upon the real estate and the building of Von Dorn to secure its payment. This finding of the referees was approved by the court and McDonnell was given a judgment for the amount found due him by the referees and a mechanic's lien upon Von Dorn's property. The argument now is that this judgment of McDonnell's is contrary to law, because services performed by an architect in making plans, drawings, and specifications for an improvement on real estate and in superintending the construction of such improvement are not labor, within the meaning of section 1, chapter 54, Compiled Statutes, 1893, the mechanics' lien law. That section is as follows: "Any person who shall perform any labor * * * for the erection * * * of any *534
house * * * or building * * * by virtue of a contract * * * with the owner thereof * * * shall have a lien to secure the payment of the same upon such house, * * * building, * * * and the lot of land upon which the same shall stand," upon complying with the other requirements of the statute. There is some conflict in the reported decisions as to whether the services of an architect in drawing plans and specifications for an improvement on real estate and superintending the construction of such improvement are labor within the meaning of such a statute as this. It has always been the rule of this court to give this statute a liberal construction, and we see no good reason why we should depart from that rule in the present instance. The statute makes no distinction between skilled and unskilled labor, and its policy is to insure to both classes remuneration for whatever they may do towards increasing the value of an owner's real estate by the erection of improvements thereon. To make drawings, plans, and specifications for an improvement upon real estate and to superintend its erection in accordance with such plans and specifications are labor, within the ordinary meaning of that term, as much so as the painting, decorating, or polishing the floors of a building would be. We think, therefore, that an architect who furnishes drawings and plans for an improvement on real estate and superintends the erection of such improvement, in accordance with such plans, in pursuance of a contract with the owner, is entitled to a lien upon such improvement and the real estate upon which it is situate upon compliance with the mechanics' lien law of the state. (Knight v. Norris,
But it is contended that the judgment of the district court giving McDonnell a liÉn upon the property of Von Dorn is contrary to law for another reason, viz., that the oath made by McDonnell to "the account of items of labor" was administered by a person not authorized by *535 the laws of the state to administer oaths, and that, therefore, even if the services he performed entitled him to a lien, he never acquired one. It is said by counsel that this oath was administered to McDonnell by a notary public and that she was a female, and that the governor was not authorized to appoint and commission a female as notary public. There are several things to be said of this argument. In the first place, neither "the account of items," the mechanic's lien, nor the oath which it is said McDonnell took, nor the jurat of the notary public, nor the name of such notary are in the record. McDonnell in his cross-petition alleges that he made an account of the items of labor he furnished and that he made oath thereto. Von Dorn, in his answer to this cross-petition, does not deny these averments, and, of course, they stand admitted. There is nothing then before us by which we are enabled to review the error assigned. By section 1, chapter 61, Compiled Statutes, 1893, the governor is authorized to appoint and commission such number of persons to the office of notary public in each of the counties in this state as he shall deem necessary. The word "persons" in this statute is broad enough to include women, and we know of no constitutional provision or law that prohibits a woman in this state from holding the office of notary public; but whatever may be the correct interpretation of the statute, this woman was appointed and commissioned a notary public by the governor. She is then a public officer, and performing her duties as such, and we will not try her title to the office she holds in this proceeding. The right of a woman to hold the office of notary public under the laws of this state, when she has been appointed and commissioned as such officer by the governor, can only be inquired into in a suit or proceeding brought against her for that purpose. The judgments in favor of Mengedoht and McDonnell are neither of them contrary to law.
5. Finally, it is said the court erred in overruling the *536
motion of Von Dorn for a new trial made on the grounds of newly discovered evidence. The evidence which it is alleged was newly discovered is, in substance, that Mengedoht Feichtmayer consented to and ratified Von Dorn's removal of McDonnell as architect and the appointment of Field in his place. In Brandt v. Fitzgerald,
We next direct our attention to Von Dorn's appeal from the order of the district court confirming the sale made in pursuance of the decree rendered in this action. To reverse this order eight reasons are assigned:
1. The first, fourth, sixth, and seventh of which are, in substance, that an order for the sale of the property described in the decree was issued by the clerk of the district court while Von Dorn's motion for a new trial was pending and undecided. The record does not show that the order for the sale of the property was issued while the motion for a new trial was pending. The decree, in the record signed by the judge of the district court, recites that Von Dorn's exceptions to the report of the referees and his motion for a new trial were overruled on the 6th day of February, 1893, the date of the rendition of the decree; but the pendency of a motion for a new trial does not supersede a decree or judgment rendered or stay the execution thereof.
2. The substance of the second, third, and fifth reasons assigned for reversing this order are, in substance, that the sale was made after a bond had been filed by Von Dorn to supersede the execution of the decree. The decree was rendered on the 6th day of February, 1893. It was journalized or formally entered of record in the office of the clerk of the district court on the 23d day of February, 1893. The supersedeas bond of Von Dorn was filed on the 15th day of April, 1893, or more than twenty days after the rendition of the decree and its entry of record. If Von Dorn's object in filing this supersedeas bond was to appeal from the decree rendered, then the bond did not operate as a supersedeas, because not filed within twenty days after the rendition of the decree, as provided by section 677 of the Code of Civil Procedure. If his object in filing the supersedeas bond was to review the decree on error in this court, then the bond filed did not supersede the decree rendered until after the filing of his petition in *538 error here, in accordance with section 590 of the Code of Civil Procedure; and the petition in error was not filed in this court until the 23d of June, 1893, and the sale was made on the 25th of April, 1893.
3. The final reason alleged for reversing the order confirming the sale is, that the first publication of the notice of sale was made on the 24th of March and the last publication on April 21. There is no merit in this contention. As already stated, the sale occurred on the 25th of April, and, as the first publication of the notice was made on the 21st of March, more than thirty days intervened between the date of the first publication and the date of the sale. This was sufficient. (Carlow v. Aultman,
The order of the district court confirming the sale is affirmed. There is no merit whatever in this appeal and it appears to have been prosecuted solely for the purposes of delay. The decree rendered by the district court is in all things
AFFIRMED.
IRVINE, C., not sitting.
*33