Antrim Lbr. Co. v. Mendlik

1925 OK 358, 236 P. 422, 110 Okla. 76, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 770
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 12, 1925
Docket14755
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1925 OK 358 (Antrim Lbr. Co. v. Mendlik) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Antrim Lbr. Co. v. Mendlik, 1925 OK 358, 236 P. 422, 110 Okla. 76, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 770 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

THOMPSON, C.

This action wag commenced in the district court of Comanche county, Okla., by the Antrim Lumber Company, a corporation, one of the plaintiffs in error, plaintiff below, against Pauline Shara Mendlik, defendant in error, H. M. Welsh, O. A. Wolverton and W. F. Wolverton, a partnership doing business under the name and style of Wolverton Brothers Electric Company, defendants below, on account and to enforce a lien for labor and material. Judgment for the Antrim Lumber Company and Wolverton Brothers Electric Company against II. M. Welsh for amount of accounts and denying the lien against the property of Pauline Shara Mendlik. The Antrim Lumber Company and Wolver-ton Brothers Electric Company appeal from the judgment, denying the lien against the property of Páuline Shara Mendlik.

The Antrim Lumber Company filed its petition against all of the other parties, in which it alleged, among other bhangs, that H. M. Welsh was the lessee of a building, known as the Met Theater, located in the' city of Lawton, Comanche county, Okla., under a written contract with Pauline Shara Mendlik, the owner of said building, which contract authorized H. M. Welsh to make repairs and alterations on said theatre building; that, under an oral contract with H.. M. Welsh, it furnished material and labor for the alteration and repair of said theatre building for which H. M. Welsh was to pay; that it furnished said material under said contract to the said H. M. Welsh to tlie amount of $180.85: that upon failure of II. M. Welsh to pay said account, it filed its lien statement in the office, of the court clerk of Comanche county, in due course, for the amount due it from H. M. Welsh for said material furnished and labor performed with the name of Pauline Shara Mendlik as owner; that Wolverton Brothers Electric Company claimed a lien on said premises, but that the same was inferior and junior to its claim and lien, and asked *77 for judgment for the amount sued for, $50 attorney's fees, and for foreclosure of its lien and sale of the property. A copy of the lien statement was attached to the petition.

The Wolverton Brothers Company filed its separate answer and cross-petition, claiming that it, under an oral contract, furnished material and labor for the repair and alteration of the electrical installation in said building to H. M. Welsh., lessee of the premises, with full consent and authority under the lease contract from Pauline Shara Mendlik, the owner of the building; that the amount of its claim was $145.65, and that it had filed its account and lien statement with the court clerk of Comanche county in due course; and prayed for judgment for the amount sued for, together with $50 attorneys’ fees, and for foreclosure of ■its lien as a first lien upon the premises and for the sale of the property. A copy of its lien statement and account was filed' with and made a part of the answer and cross-petition.

H. M. Welsh filed no pleading or answer in the cause and made no appearance.

Pauline Shara Mendlik filed separate answers to the petition and cross-petition of Wolverton Brothers Electric Company, which were similar, by way of general denial, but for further answer admitted that she was the owner of the Met Theater building, described in the petition of the Antrim Lumber Company and the cross-petition of the Wol-verton Brothers Electric Company, and for further answer denied that H. M. Welsh was ever, in any manner whatsoever, authorized by the terms and conditions of any lease to make repairs and alterations on the Met Theater building in the city of Lawton, which should, in any way be charged to said building or the owner thereof, but, on the contrary, alleged the facts to be that such repairs were only authorized to be made at the sole expense of the said H. M. Welsh and in no other manner or form whatsoever ; and denied that n. M. Welsh was ever at any time her agent for the purpose of making any contracts for any material or labor for making any repairs upon said Met Theater building, and that, if said H. M. Welsh did make such contracts, they were wholly and entirely without authority from her; that she had never had any notice or knowledge of the making of any repairs or the making of any contracts for material or labor for repairs, if any such contracts were made, until the notice of the filing of mechanic’s lien was served upon her.

The Antrim Lumber Company and the Wolverton Brothers Electric Company filed their separate replies to the answer of Pauline Shara Mendlik, which are similar, setting up the terms of the lease contract between Pauline Shara Mendlik and H. M. Welsh’, which leas,e contract was made a part of said replies.

Upon these issues the cause proceeded to trial to the court, the jury being specially waived, and at the close of all the testimony in the case Pauline Shara Mendlik filed separate demurrers to the evidence of plaintiff, Antrim Lumber Company, and the Wol-verton Brothers Electric Company, cross-pe-titionejV. Demurrers were by the court sustained and exceptions reserved. The court pronounced judgment for the amounts of the accounts of the Antrim Lumber Company and the Wolverton Brothers Electric Company against H. M. Welsh, and denied a lien for the payment of said judgments against' the Met Theater building, the property of Pauline Shara Mendlik, from which judgment denying the lien the Antrim Lumber Company and Wolverton Brothers Electric Company appeal to this court for review.

The attorneys for plaintiffs in error set up three specifications of error, but content themselves in arguing the same under one proposition, which is whether the lease contract between Pauline Shara Mendlik and H. M. Welsh was of such a character as to deprive plaintiffs in error, as subcontractors, of the right to protection under the lien laws of the state.

The uneontroverted evidence in this case is that the defendant in error, Pauline Shara Mendlik, was the owner of a theater building in Lawton, Okla.; that she, by written contract, leased the same to H. M. Welsh on the 18th day of July, 1921, for the term of five years, the term to begin on the 15th day of August, 1921, for the sum of $15,000, $250 of which was payable on the 15th day of each month beginning on the 15th of August, 1921, until' the entire sum of $15,-000 in rents was paid. Among other stipulations of said contract, the lessee was to surrender the leased premises at the end of the lease period in as good condition as when received by him, reasonable wear and tear and action of the elements excepted, and that he should replace and repair, at his own expense, any loss or damage to the leased property caused by his own negligence or through the negligence or wrongful act of anyone working for or under him, or any damage accruing through his use or occupancy of the same; that he should main *78

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 358, 236 P. 422, 110 Okla. 76, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antrim-lbr-co-v-mendlik-okla-1925.