Arthur Morgan Trucking Co. v. Shartzer

174 S.W.2d 226, 237 Mo. App. 535, 1943 Mo. App. LEXIS 233
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 5, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 174 S.W.2d 226 (Arthur Morgan Trucking Co. v. Shartzer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arthur Morgan Trucking Co. v. Shartzer, 174 S.W.2d 226, 237 Mo. App. 535, 1943 Mo. App. LEXIS 233 (Mo. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

HUGHES, P. J.

This is an action to enforce a lien under the statute entitled, “Liens of Mechanics and Materialmen” (Sec. 3546 et *537 seq., R. S. 1939), for work or labor performed by plaintiff in hauling away debris and material from, and hauling necessary tools and materials to, a building being wrecked and removed from a lot located at 6th and St. Charles street, St. Louis, Missouri, in order to clear the ground for the erection of a new building.

Peter A. 0 ’Neil Estate owned the fee in the lot and the old building, and the Karon Realty Company was the owner of a 99 year leasehold thereon, by the terms of which it was required to erect a new building in place of the existing building, and the Lerner Shops of Missouri, Inc., was the owner of a 25 year leasehold from Karon Realty Company, which likewise obligated it to erect a new building in place of the existing building, the plans therefor to be approved by both the Karon Realty Company and the Peter A. O’Neil Estate. The Lerner Shops submitted plans and specifications for the new budding, the cost estimate including the wrecking of the old building; which were approved in writing by Karon Realty Company and Peter A. 0 ’Neil Estate.

Thereafter Lerner Shops contracted with Fruin Colnon Contracting Company to wreck the old building and erect the new building, and the latter company contracted with G. H. Shartzer for wrecking and removing the old building. Thereupon Shartzer entered into an agreement with plaintiff to furnish trucks and labor to haul necessary tools and material to the old building and to haul away the wreckage of the old building. Plaintiff fully complied with its agreement, and its bill in the sum of $1792.26 has never been paid by Shartzer or anyone else.

In the circuit court plaintiff had judgment by default against defendant Shartzer for $1792.26, and for $268.83 interest, aggregating $2061.09 and for costs. And upon trial plaintiff was given a lien upon the interest of the Peter A. O’Neil Estate, Karon Realty Company, and Lerner Shops of Missouri, Inc., and the three last-named defendants appeal.

Appellants’ contentions are, that (a) plaintiff’s claim against Shartzer was not predicated on lienable charges; (b) that plaintiff did not perform any work or labor upon or furnish any material for the erection of the new building, and (e) that plaintiff furnished trucks and drivers to haul away debris from a wrecked building for which the statutes do not provide a lien. No question is raised as to the amount of plaintiff’s claim being just and reasonable for the services performed, nor of the proper and timely filing of the lien and giving the required notices, and there is no contradiction of plaintiff’s evidence that it furnished the services sued for upon the faith and credit of a lien upon the premises and building. Therefore, the only issue presented is whether a mechanic’s lien will be allowed for work and labor performed in the wrecking and removal of an old building even though such work and labor is performed persuant to an integral eon- *538 tract for the removal of an old building and the erection of a new building at the same site. The question has never ■ been directly-determined by any of our Appellate Courts.

Section 3546, Revised Statutes 1939, provides:

“Every mechanic or other person, who shall do or perform any work or labor upon . . . any building, erection or improvements upon land : . . under or by virtue of any' contract with the owner or proprietor thereof, or his agent, trustee, contractor or subcontractor . . . shall have for his work or. labor done . . . a lien upon such building, erection or improvements, and upon the land belonging to such owner or proprietor on which the same are situated, ...”

Even though liberally construed as it should be the statute does not go so far as to authorize a lien on the real estate to which it is attached for the mere wrecking and removal of a building. We may go further and say that the statute gives no lien on the real estate in any case except as correlative to a lien on a building, erection or improvement, and then upon the theory that the building, erection or improvement has been a benefit to the realty and enhanced its value. This was definitely decided in the case of Holtzhour v. Meer, 59 Mo. 434, wherein the suit was for work done in tearing down an old house and “nothing was put on — no improvements were made,” and the Supreme Court affirmed the judgment of the circuit court denying the right to a lien. That case is clearly distinguishable from this wherein the entire work of removing the old and erecting the new building was performed pursuant to an indivisible contract for the improvement of the owners and lessees property. Whether performed by the original contractor in person, or by sub-contractors for the several parts of the work, the object and purpose of the owner and lessees was to have erected a new building on a site occupied by an old •building, and the whole was incorporated in one integral contract for the improvement of the owners and lessees property; the contract was impossible of fulfillment without the removal of the old building ; that work was a part and parcel of the whole scheme involved in the erection of a new building, and was within' the contemplation of both the owner and lessees, on the one part, and the contractor, on the other part, and expressly provided for in their contract. Then how could it be reasonably said, under such circumstances, that the preparation of the site by the removal of the old building was not an integral and constitutive part of the erection of the new building? There was only one settlement to be made by the lessee with the contractor, and that was for a completed new building which included the demolition of the then existing building. Under such circumstances this court has held in the case of Bruns v. Braun, 35 Mo. App. 337, that a lien was authorized because the parties had in contemplation that the whole work should form but one and not distinct matters of *539 settlement. In the Bruns ease this court, following the Kansas City Court of Appeals, stated the applicable principles of law as follows:

“The Kansas City Court of Appeals in case of Page v. Bettes, 17 Mo. App. 375, says: ‘When work, distinct in its nature is performed at different times, the law supposes it to have been performed under distinct engagements, as when the work at one time is for building, and at another time for repairing. So, when two distinct contracts are in fact made, as for different parts of the work, the work done under each contract must be considered as entire of itself. But when work, or material, is done, or furnished, all going to the same general purpose, as the building of a house or any of its parts, though such work be done'.or ordered at different times, yet if the several parts form an entire whole, or are so connected together, as to show that the parties had it in contemplation that the whole should form but one and not distinct matters of settlement, the whole account must be considered as a unit, or as being but a single contract.’ This is probably as succinct and correct a statement of the law as could be made. ’ ’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
174 S.W.2d 226, 237 Mo. App. 535, 1943 Mo. App. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arthur-morgan-trucking-co-v-shartzer-moctapp-1943.