Wolfley v. Hughes

71 P. 951 | Ariz. | 1903

DOAN, J.

This is an action to enforce a mechanic’s lien. The plaintiff in the court below, Moses Hughes, who is the sole proprietor of the foundry known as the Standard Iron Works in Phoenix, Arizona, furnished to the defendants Lockwood & Philes certain castings for the repair of a Huntington mill located on the Sacramento mill-site in Maricopa County. The first casting furnished was ordered on the 14th of January, 1901, at a price of fifteen dollars. This casting proved unsatisfactory, and was broken up and returned to the foundry by the defendants, who were credited with $11.91 as its value for scrap-iron, and upon the order of the defendant Philes the other castings, consisting of a false bottom and three yokes, of the value of $110.22, were then made at the foundry under his supervision, and were delivered to the defendants on February 26, 1901, and used by them in repairing the mill upon the mill-site aforesaid. The castings, except the credit *206of $11.91, were not paid for. On May 9, 1901, the plaintiff filed his claim for a mechanic’s lien upon the aforesaid mill and mill-site, his verified account embracing all the above items at the price of $125.22, and showing the credit thereon of $11.91, stating the balance due to be $113.31, and on July 31, 1901, brought this action for the foreclosure of the mechanic’s lien. On March 18, 1901, one C. F. Chapman brought suit against the defendants Lockwood & Philes, attached the property herein mentioned, and recovered judgment therein against said defendants, and thereafter, on July 5, 1901, the property was sold by the sheriff of Maricopa County under the said judgment, and was purchased at the sheriff’s sale by Lewis Wolfley.

On the trial of this case Wolfley filed a separate demurrer and answer to the complaint of Hughes, and contested the case in the lower court. The trial court overruled the demurrer to the complaint, and, after hearing the evidence, found that between the fourteenth day of January, 1901, and the twenty-sixth day of February, 1901, the plaintiff, Hughes, at the request of the defendants Lockwood & Philes, furnished and delivered to them certain castings for use upon and in the repair of the Huntington mill situated on the Sacramento mill-site; that the said eastings were actually used in the repair of the said mill; that the defendants Lockwood & Philes agreed with the plaintiff to pay therefor on demand; that the castings furnished on the 14th of January were of the value of fifteen dollars, and those furnished on the 26th of February were of the value of $110.22; that the plaintiff duly filed his claim for lien on account of furnishing the said materials on the ninth day of May, 1901, for the purpose of perfecting his mechanic’s lien upon the mill and mill-site; that since the furnishing of said materials the defendant Lewis Wolfley has purchased the property in question, and is now the owner thereof; that the said Wolfley had actual as well as constructive notice of the lien of the plaintiff upon the said mill and mill-site prior to the time he purchased the ' same; that the plaintiff, on account of furnishing the materials on the aforesaid twenty-sixth day of February, is entitled to a lien upon the said mill and mill-site from and since the twenty-sixth day of February, 1901, for the said sum of $110.22; that the defendant Wolfley is a'subsequent pur*207chaser of the said property with a knowledge of plaintiff’s lien, and his claims and rights in and to the said property are subordinate in time and in right to those of the plaintiff. Whereupon the court gave judgment for the plaintiff for $110.22, and ordered the foreclosure of the lien upon the property for that amount. Prom this judgment and the order denying a new trial Wolfley appeals, and assigns as error, among others: (1) That the court erred in not sustaining the demurrer of the defendant Wolfley; (2) that the court erred in denying defendant Wolfley’s motion to dismiss after plaintiff rested his case; (3) that the court erred in considering any evidence outside of that supplied by the lien in order to segregate the lienable from the non-lienable items therein contained; (4) that the court erred in permitting the introduction of or considering the lien as filed by the plaintiff.

In support of the first error assigned it is urged that the variance between the allegations of the complaint and the statements contained in the verified account, which was filed in compliance with the statute for the purpose of fixing and securing the lien, was fatal to the sufficiency of the complaint. The instances of variance cited, however, seem to us technical rather than material, and depend largely upon the construction given by the appellant to certain language used by the plaintiff. A careful examination of the complaint, and the copy of the notice of lien attached thereto and made a part thereof, satisfies us that there was no material variance between the allegations of the complaint and the statements contained in the verified account filed as claim and notice of lien, and that the complaint stated a good cause of action. The demurrer was .therefore properly overruled.

Upon the close of the plaintiff’s case the defendant Wolfley moved to dismiss the case on the ground of variance between the complaint and the evidence adduced in support thereof, and has assigned as error the court’s denial of such motion. It is urged in support of this assignment of error, first, that the complaint and the notice of lien alleged a verbal contract, whereas the testimony showed that the defendants had simply ordered the material without agreeing upon any specified price, and the plaintiff had charged the reasonable value thereof after completion; and, second, that the notice and verified account filed for record, on which the complaint was *208based, called for $125.22 in the aggregate, and was composed of $15 for the first item and of $110.22 for the last, with the credit of $11.91 given on the first item, and that on the hearing of the ease the court 'excluded- the first item of $15, and the credit thereon of $11.91, and gave judgment for the value of the last repairs, costing $110.22, thus deciding that the plaintiff was not entitled to a lien for the first item, and that the blending of the item of $15, for which the lien was refused, with the items costing $110.22, for which the lien was allowed, destroyed the lien in toto.

An examination of the complaint and the verified account, and their comparison with the evidence introduced in the case, satisfies us that the former were substantially supported by the latter. The complaint alleges that the said castings were “furnished at the verbal request of said defendants, and consisted of a false bottom, a bottom, and three yokes for said mill, and were of the value of $125.22; that said castings were so furnished to be used, and were actually used, in the repairing of said mill, and said defendants verbally agreed with the plaintiff to pay therefor on demand the said sum of $125.22.” The notice states that the “said work and labor consisted of the furnishing for said mill of certain castings, to wit, a false bottom, a bottom, and three yokes, for the benefit of said Lockwood and Philes; . . . that the said Hughes furnished the said material at the specified price of $125.22 at the special instance and request of Lockwood and Philes, .and the said materials were worth the sum of $125.22.”

The testimony of Hughes in his own behalf, corroborated by that of Philes, one of the defendants, sworn as a- witness for the plaintiff, established that in January and February Philes bought from Moses Hughes a false bottom for the Huntington mill, and on February 26th a bottom and three yokes, amounting in all to $Í25.22; that Philes ordered the repairs, and Hughes furnished them under the superintendence of Philes, who took them out and put them in the mill. The evidence of the plaintiff tended to establish the further fact that the first bottom was ordered on the 14th of January, and furnished at the price of fifteen dollars, and on its proving unsatisfactory it was returned, broken up, with some other iron, for which Hughes credited the defendants with $11.91, *209part payment, and received from them the order for the second repairs, which latter were furnished on the 26th of February at the price of $110.22. This evidence was supplemented by the defendant, who introduced in evidence the bill rendered by Hughes to the defendants Lockwood & Philes, and the items taken from the order-book of Hughes referring to the ordering and furnishing of these repairs. The bill rendered and the entries in the order-book corroborated the above testimony of Hughes and Philes.

The. contention is here made that the decision of the court that the plaintiff was not entitled to a lien for the first item, by reason of its having been furnished more than ninety days prior to the filing of the verified account and claim for a lien, vitiates the lien entirely. An examination of the numerous authorities cited in support of that contention leads us to believe that the lower court was justified in its ruling on this point. The first item was an item for which a lien would lie. The statement of the transaction was substantially correct. The articles were furnished as alleged. The only sense in which the first item could be designated as not a lienable item was in that the court considered that the two orders were separate, and not in the nature of continuous orders on one contract or account. The court held that notice of lien having been filed more than ninety days after the delivery of the first item, and less than ninety days after the delivery of the others, was not sufficient to fasten a lien upon the property in favor of the said first item, but was sufficient to fasten a lien for the others. The weight of authority in this class of cases sustains the decision in the case of Gordon H. Co. v. San Francisco and S. R. R. Co., 86 Cal. 620, 25 Pac. 125, wherein it is stated that, when the claim of lien is made in part for items not protected by the lien, the court should permit the plaintiff by proof to segregate such items, and should declare a lien for the balance; the rule being that unless there is something to show a willful attempt to claim a lien for non-lienable articles the lien is not lost, and should be sustained for all those items in favor of- which the evidence shows the lien to have been properly secured. There is in this case no evidence of fraud or bad faith on the part of the plaintiff. He was justified in believing himself entitled to a lien for the first item included *210in his account, and, although the court decided against him in that particular, there was nothing in such decision or in his verified account or the complaint based upon it that would vitiate the lien in favor of the last item in the account, which embraced very nearly the entire amount in controversy.

The next error assigned is that the court erred in considering any evidence outside of that supplied by the lien in order to segregate the lienable from the non-lienable items therein contained. This objection is based upon the rule invoked in cases where a lumping charge has been made in support of an account composed of different items, some of which are of a character not entitled to be secured by a lien on the property, while others are entitled to the protection of a lien if properly secured, and the account or claim of lien fails to designate the items or amount for which the property is liable. It is held in such cases that when it is impossible from the complaint and account to determine what part of the account charged is secured by the lien, and what part is non-lienable or unsecured, the court will not permit parol evidence to be introduced to cure the defect, and therefore the entire lien is lost. Williams v. Toledo Coal Co., 25 Or. 496, 36 Pac. 161, 42 Am. St. Rep. 799; Hughes v. Lansing, 34 Or. 118, 55 Pac. 97, 75 Am. St. Rep. 574. But in such cases as the one at bar, where all the items furnished were of such a character that the property would be liable therefor if a lien on behalf thereof had been filed within the proper time, but the dates given in the account show that, while the notice was filed in time to secure the lien on behalf of some, the others were excluded from the benefit of the lien by the limitation of time, the weight of authority favors the rule as given in the case of Gordon H. Co., cited above.

The objection that the court erred in considering the lien in evidence, by which it is presumed the appellant meant the verified account filed for the purpose of securing the lien, is based upon the alleged fatal variance between the verified account and the complaint. The ruling hereinabove given upon this feature of the ease disposes of that objection.

The record disclosing no reversible error on the part of the lower court, the judgment is affirmed.

Sloan, J., and Davis, J., concur.

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