Acme Lumber Co. v. Wessling

126 P. 167, 19 Cal. App. 406, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 16
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 10, 1912
DocketCiv. No. 997.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 126 P. 167 (Acme Lumber Co. v. Wessling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Acme Lumber Co. v. Wessling, 126 P. 167, 19 Cal. App. 406, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 16 (Cal. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from an order denying a new trial in an action to foreclose a mechanic’s lien.

The claim of lien was made and filed by Hubbs & Lear as original contractors and then assigned to the plaintiff. The contract upon which the claim of lien is founded is stated in the claim of lien to be, in substance, as follows:

Hubbs & Lear agreed with the defendant Faris to alter and repair a certain building or buildings on certain premises reputed to be owned by the defendant Wessling. By the terms of the contract, as stated in the claim of lien, “said Hobbs & Lear were to alter, reconstruct and repair said building or buildings as directed by said Joseph Faris, furnish all the labor and materials necessary therefor, and were to be paid the reasonable value thereof. No time of payment was agreed upon between the said Hubbs & Lear and the said Joseph Faris, and no time was agreed upon when said work should be completed.”

It was alleged in the plaintiff’s complaint and in the claim of lien that the reasonable value of the labor and material furnished and supplied in the performance of the contract was the sum of $1,915.81, of which the sum of $562.25, and no more, had been paid. The complaint and claim of lien are silent as to whether or not the contract stated therein was in writing and recorded.

The evidence adduced at the trial in support of the claim of lien was to the effect that in the month of June, 1906, the defendant Faris entered into an oral contract with the lien claimants, Hubbs & Lear, whereby they agreed to construct a shed for the stated price of $232, upon a lot of land used and occupied by Faris as a tenant of the defendant Wessling. *409 This was the only contract entered into at this time by Hubbs & Lear with the defendant Paris. Work upon the shed was commenced and completed pursuant to this contract. Prior to and at the time of tke execution of the contract and the commencement of the work thereunder, Paris, as a tenant of the defendant Wessling, was occupying a stable building situated upon the same lot of land upon which the shed was erected. A week or more after the execution of the contract for the construction of the shed, and while work thereunder was progressing, Hubbs & Lear entered into a second separate and distinct verbal contract with the defendant Paris to tear out the old stalls in the adjacent stable and replace them with new stalls. No other or additional work in or about the stable was agreed upon or mentioned at this time. The price agreed upon for this particular piece of work was the reasonable market value of the labor and material. Thereafter, from time to time, and as a result of several separate and distinct agreements, further alterations of the stable were made by Hubbs & Lear, the reasonable market value thereof being agreed upon as the price of each piece of work in every instance. The work performed upon the stable was not done in accordance with any preconceived plans and specifications, but was performed from time to time as ordered and directed by the defendant Paris, and in its entirety consisted of remodeling the attic, reconstructing the stalls, floors and mangers of the stable, and installing of harness and robe rooms and an office, and the remodeling of the entire front of the stable. The employment to install the harness-room and office was made a month after the first employment to tear out the old stalls.

Finally, when the shed originally contracted for and the reconstruction of the stable were both completed, the defendant Paris directed the removal of a partition wall which was standing between the shed and the stable, and when this was done, both structures, for all practical purposes, constituted one building.

The reasonable market value of the labor performed and material supplied in the erection of the shed and the reconstruction of the stable was shown to be the amount stated in the claim of lien, $1,915.81.

*410 It was further shown in evidence that the .defendant Wessling “was present on the premises and saw all the work going on,” and it was not pleaded or pretended in her behalf that she had posted the notice of nonresponsibility permitted by section 1192 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which, under the provisions of section 1185 of the same code, if the contract had been reduced to writing and recorded, would have relieved the land from the burden of the lien for the improvements made thereon at the direction of her tenant Paris.

Although duly served with process, the defendant Paris did not appear in the case, and accordingly default was entered against him.

Plaintiff was nonsuited upon motion of the defendant Wessling upon the grounds, (1) “that the contract as set out in plaintiff’s complaint, in the notice of lien and as sought to be proven, is void for want of recordation, and that by reason thereof no cause of action lies against the defendant Wessling; (2) that the proof adduced with respect to said alleged contract demonstrated that there were at least two, if not more, separable contracts, and that by reason thereof there was a fatal variance between said proof and the notice of lien and contract as set out in the complaint.”

But one point is presented and discussed in support of the appeal, and that involves the question as to whether or not the lower court was justified in granting a nonsuit upon either or both of the grounds stated.

We are of the opinion that the evidence adduced at the trial in support of the claim or lien did not warrant a non-suit upon either ground.

Counsel on both sides have devoted several pages of their respective briefs to a discussion of the question as to whether or not the contract stated in the claim of lien was void and incapable of sustaining the lien because not expressed in writing and recorded.

Upon this phase of the case it is one of plaintiff’s contentions that all of the work performed by Iiubbs & Lear was done under the first contract to construct the shed, and that the several items of labor and material supplied in the subsequent alteration of the stable were but incidents of the initial contract which must be considered as extra work, and that inasmuch as the original contract was for the sum of $232, *411 it cannot be held to be invalid because it was not expressed in writing and recorded, notwithstanding that the aggregate amount of the cost of the extras was far in excess of $1,000.

We are not prepared to say whether or not such a contract would ordinarily fall within the purview of section 1183 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which requires that a building contract must be expressed in writing and recorded when the amount to be paid thereunder exceeds the sum of $1,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 P. 167, 19 Cal. App. 406, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/acme-lumber-co-v-wessling-calctapp-1912.