Albuquerque Lumber Co. v. Tomei Et Ux.

1926 NMSC 033, 250 P. 21, 32 N.M. 5
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 19, 1926
DocketNo. 2936.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1926 NMSC 033 (Albuquerque Lumber Co. v. Tomei Et Ux.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albuquerque Lumber Co. v. Tomei Et Ux., 1926 NMSC 033, 250 P. 21, 32 N.M. 5 (N.M. 1926).

Opinions

OPINION OP THE COURT

WATSON, J.

In this cause there are an appeal and a cross-appeal from a judgment foreclosing a material-man’s lien. As appears by the findings of the trial court, the facts are as follows: The Albuquerque Lumber Company furnished materials between July 14 and July 23, 1921, to William Kruegel, who, during said time, was in possession of the premises in question under a duly recorded executory contract for the purchase thereof from Frank Tomei and wife, which contract was on said July 23, in full force and effect, and upon which there had been paid the sum of $1,680.. The materials were ordered by said Kruegel and used by him in constructing a dance hall upon the property. The vendors, Tomei and wife, had no knowledge that Gruegel was engaged in the construction of the building until July 23, 1921, and within a few hours, after obtaining such knowledge posted nonliability notices on the property. The complaint sought judgment against Kruegel and against Tomei and wife, foreclosure of the materialman’s lien, and sale of the property improved. The trial court, having found the facts aforesaid, rendered judgment establishing a lien upon the equitable interest of Kruegel, foreclosing the same, and ordering the same sold, subject to the legal title and to all the contract rights of Tomei and wife. From such judgment, the Albuquerque Lumber Company, plaintiff below, has appealed, and Tomei and wife, defendants below, have taken a cross-appeal.

While appellant assigns 43 errors and discusses them under nine heads, we think its contentions may be deduced to two main propositions: (1) Appellant should have been given a lien upon the Tomei interest in the property; (2) if not entitled to a lien upon the-Tomei interest, appellant was entitled to a lien upon an undivided interest in the premises in the proportion which the payments actually made by the vendee bore tb the whole agreed purchase price.

Before1 proceeding to determine the questions raised, we pause to note that both parties, as. well as the trial court seem to have treated the vendors’ interest in the property as a vendor’s lien. In this we think they are in error. The contract reserved the legal title in the vendors until payment of the agreed price. Had the actual interest been a vendor’s lien, the situation would have been quite different. Stearns-Roger Mfg. Co. v. Aztec Co., 14 N. M. 300, 93 P. 706. This matter seems, however, to have little practical bearing on the case. Such as it has will be hereinafter referred to. While the court, by finding 12, held that ‘ ‘ the defendants * * * have a prior and superior lien under the said land contract * # * to the material-man’s lien” and in the decree adjudged the same, il was also provided in the decree that—

“Nothing in this decree contained shall affect the rights and remedies of the defendant Frank Tomei by reason of his legal ownership of the property * s ® under and by the terms of the real estate contract.”

Thus, despite the technical inaccuracy, the ease was disposed of on the correct theory.

In contending that appellant should have been given a lien upon the vendors’ interest, it is first urged that it appears from the evidence that the vendors had knowledge of the improvement in question. This was a question of fact upon which the evidence was conflicting. The trial court found to the contrary. As we consider that finding supported by substantial evidence, it cannot be disturbed.

On this question of knowledge, it is urged that .the court erred in excluding certain news items appearing in, Albuquerque papers, which prominently mentioned the improvement being made, and to which newspapers the vendors admitted being subscribers. This evidence, when offered, was admitted “subject to objection.” The cause, having been submitted, was taken under advisement Tor several days, and the court then announced his disposition of the case and his findings substantially as thereafter filed. In this announcement the court sustained the objections to the news items. Appellant made no- objection and took no exception to the ruling, and must be deemed to have acquiesced in it.

There ivas evidence to the effect that about July 23, the day the nonliability notices Were posted •by the vendors, Kruegel, the vendee, absconded and abandoned the premises, and that appellees thereupon took possession of them and still retained it at the date of the trial. The court refused, appellant’s request to find these facts, and to conclude therefrom that the vendors had elected to rescind the contract. Urging this as error, appellant argues that the vendors could not both rescind the contract and enforce the payments ; that the effect nf the decree is to force appellant, if it would protect its lien, to make the remainder of the payments; that the vendors’ lien grows out of the contract and ceases to exist when the contract is rescinded. Whatever might be the merit of the argument if we were really concerned with a vendor’s lien, it seems plain that it is inapplicable when we consider, as we must, that the vendor’s interest involved is not a lien, but the legal title. Whether, by a declaration of forfeiture warranted by the terms of the contract, the vendors could have cut off appellant’s lien, it is unnecessary to consider. We know of no principle, however, upon which a rescission, or an attempted rescission, could be held to enlarge or extend the rights of the materialman. The decree leaves the contract in force just as it was when the material-man’s lien accrued. This could not, in our view, have prejudiced the rights, of appellant.

It is further urged that the court, having expressly found, at appellant’s request, that Kruegel, the vendee, “was the builder and in charge of the construction of said dance hall,” erred in refusing further to find that Kruegel was the agent of the vendors in contracting for the materials, and in using them in the construction of the dance hall. We do not think that the court intended to find that Kruegel was the “builder” in the sense that the term is used in Code 1915, § 3319. That would be inconsistent with his other findings.

This brings us to the consideration of the second of the contentions above set forth. Appellant complains of the refusal of the court to fix the value of the equitable interest to be sold at $1,680, arguing that, because this amount had been paid upon the purchase price, the vendee had obtained an interest to that extent in the property, and that the- court should have ordered a sale of an undivided interest in the property, bearing the same proportion to the whole interest that the amount paid bore to the whole purchase price. While making this argument, appellant disclaims the' right to extend its lien beyond the equitable -interest of the vendee. We must therefore conclude that it misapprehends the nature of that interest. The vendee’s right under the contract was to obtain title to the property by completing the deferred payments. This right according to the contract, might be lost by failing to make the remainder of the payments. In that case, the payments which had been made were to be retained by the vendors as liquidated damages.. This is the interest upon which appellant’s lien attached under Code 1915, § 3321. Upon this interest, the court recognized the lien and decreed foreclosure and sale.

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Bluebook (online)
1926 NMSC 033, 250 P. 21, 32 N.M. 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albuquerque-lumber-co-v-tomei-et-ux-nm-1926.