Baerveldt Construction Co. v. Bagley

132 S.W. 688, 231 Mo. 157, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 242
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 30, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 132 S.W. 688 (Baerveldt Construction Co. v. Bagley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baerveldt Construction Co. v. Bagley, 132 S.W. 688, 231 Mo. 157, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 242 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J.

Plaintiff, a corporation, sued in two counts to recover a balance claimed to be due it for labor and materials which entered into the con[159]*159struction of a certain building, under a contract with the defendant Bagley, and to establish a mechanic’s lien on the building: the first count was a declaration on quantum meruit, the second on the contract. The balance claimed in the petition is $7038.52 with interest from September 15, 1904, when it became due and demand was made. The suit was begun January 17, 1905; the judgment was rendered June 8, 1906. The cause was tried by the court, jury waived; the finding and judgment were for the defendants and the plaintiff appealed. It is unnecessary to set out the pleadings, as no point on that phase of the case is made, and the points in controversy will sufficiently appear from a statement of the facts. No instructions were ashed or given. The plaintiff filed its claim for a mechanic’s lien in due time and due form. There is but little, if any, dispute as to the principal facts in the ease.

The land on which the building was to be erected was owned by defendant Bagley. The contract price of the building, when completed according to specifications, was $28,913.75. The building was completed and delivered to Bagley, in all respects according to the contract, except that it was not completed within the time specified. It was specified that for every day of delay in the completion beyond the date named the contractor should pay twenty dollars as liquidated damages. At that rate there was delay enough to make the sum to be so paid amount to eighteen hundred dollars and the defendant Bagley in his answer claimed that amount as a counterclaim or off-set, but the evidence showed justifiable cause for the delay, therefore the court found against him on that item; the judgment to that extent was for the plaintiff, and no appeal was taken by defendant.

During.the progress of construction there was paid to the plaintiff sums aggregating $21,875.23, leaving a balance of $7038.32 to be settled. The contract required the plaintiff to pay for all the labor and ma[160]*160terials employed and used by Mm in the building so as to protect it against mechanics’ liens, but he allowed bills.of that kind to accumulate to the amount of $3515.30 and liens for such bills to be filed. These bills defendant Bagley paid and was therefore entitled to recover that sum of plaintiff or deduct it from the balance due plaintiff, if there was such balance. Bagley set up a counterclaim for that sum.

At the time of entering into the building contract the parties made another agreement in writing whereby defendant Bagley was to convey to plaintiff, or to whom plaintiff might designate, certain real estate on Page Avenue in. the city which the plaintiff was to receive, at the agreed valuation of $6,800, in payment to that extent on the price of the building contract. A deed in due form was made by Bagley and wife to Johanna Baerveldt, the person for that purpose designated by the plaintiff, and was, by agreement of the parties, placed in the hands of the Maguire Real Estate Company to be delivered to the grantee when the plaintiff completed its contract.

By the terms of the second agreement it was specified: “that the consideration in said deed being $11,800, less an existmg deed of trust, for $5000 on said property, leaving an equity of $6800, which $6800 is accepted as a cash payment on contract,” etc. — the building contract above mentioned.

There is this difference between the recitals in the deed and those in the agreement, namely: in the deed it is specified that the property is conveyed with covenants of warranty of title “except as against taxes, special and general, for the year 1904, and a certain deed of trust on lots 19 to 23 inclusive to secure payment of five thousand dollars wMch the said party of the second part [Johanna Baerveldt] covenants and assumes to pay as a part of the consideration of this deed,” whereas in the agreement there is no mention of taxes. The deed had been drawn, signed and ac[161]*161knowledged before the execution of the agreement and Mr. Baerveldt testified that he objected to the mention of taxes therein, and that the written agreement, specifying only the five thousand dollar deed of trust to be assumed by the grantee, was so worded to comply with. his objection. Plaintiff offered in evidence a certificate of title from a title examiner which showed that certain taxes for the year 1904 were delinquent, but on objection by the defendants the offer was withdrawn, and the certificate was not afterwards introduced in-evidence, otherwise than it was attached as an exhibit to the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.

After the building was completed the plaintiff demanded of the Maguire Real Estate Company the deed held by it in escrow, but that company refused to deliver it then because of the unpaid bills for labor and materials above mentioned, which bills Bagley after-wards paid. After that, how long after is not shown, the ■ Page avenue land described in the deed- held by the Maguire Real Estate Company, or that, part of it which was covered by the five thousand dollar deed of trust, was sold under foreclosure of the trust and the title passed to a stranger.

The court found that the contract price -of the building was $28,913.75, on which plaintiff ha,d been paid $21,875.23, leaving unpaid in cash $7038.52, against which plaintiff was chargeable with the agreed price of the land covered by the deed in escrow, $6800, leaving due him $238.52. That there was due the defendant Bagley $3515.30 for the bills for labor and material above mentioned less the $238.52, balance due plaintiff, leaving $3276,78.

The judgment was that plaintiff was not entitled to a mechanic’s lien, that he should recover nothing on the first count of his petition, that Bagley recover nothing on his counterclaim for delay, but that he recover of plaintiff on his counterclaim for labor and [162]*162materials paid by him the sum of $3276.78 and have execution therefor and a lien for the same on the Page Avenue property described in the escrow, which lien should be prior to any title created by that deed; that the Maguire Real Estate Company deliver' to plaintiff or into court for plaintiff the deed so held in escrow and then stand discharged; that the other defendants be discharged, and plaintiff pay the costs of the suit. Prom that judgment the plaintiff brings this appeal.

I. Perhaps before entering upon a consideration of the merits it is well to notice the facts bearing on the question of the jurisdiction of this court of the cause.

It is an action at law, ex contractu. Plaintiff in its petition states that there is a balance due it on the account of $7038.52, that it demanded payment September 15., 1904, and the prayer is for judgment for $7038.52 and interest from that date. The petition was filed January 17, 1905; the amount of the balance claimed, with interest to that date, would be less than $7500, but on the day the judgment was rendered, June 8, 1906, if the-plaintiff had recovered what he was then claiming, it would, counting interest to that date, have been $7770:42. But the judgment was that the plaintiff recover nothing on that claim, and the plaintiff is here by appeal from that judgment, claiming now that it-should have had judgment then for $7038.52 plus interest from September 14, 1904, to June 8, 1906, that is, $7770.42. That is, therefore, “the amount in dispute,” and therefore this court has jurisdiction of the cause.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Harrison v. Harrison
334 S.W.2d 127 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1960)
Huttig v. Brennan
41 S.W.2d 1054 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1931)
State ex rel. Commonwealth Trust Co. v. Reynolds
213 S.W. 804 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1919)
Keleher v. Johnson
199 S.W. 935 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 S.W. 688, 231 Mo. 157, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baerveldt-construction-co-v-bagley-mo-1910.