Barrett-Hicks Co. v. Glas

99 P. 856, 9 Cal. App. 491, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 98
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 7, 1908
DocketCiv. No. 475.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 99 P. 856 (Barrett-Hicks Co. v. Glas) 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
Barrett-Hicks Co. v. Glas, 99 P. 856, 9 Cal. App. 491, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 98 (Cal. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Foreclosure of mechanics ’ and material-men’s liens. The detailed facts will be found stated in the consolidated action under this title in 97 Pac. 423 and 99 Pac. 857. Certain of the causes of action were first disposed of in this court which were later taken to the supreme court by transfer, where the conclusions of this court were concurred in. The present appeal, which is on a separate transcript, was taken by plaintiff: First, from that part of the judgment entered in the first cause of action set out in the complaint, adjudging that plaintiffs are not entitled to the lien claimed, to wit, for certain building materials furnished defendants Glas through their agent, Sircy, amounting in value to $89.10, with interest thereon at seven per cent per annum, from May 11, 1904; and, second, from that part of the judgment, to like effect, entered in the second cause of action, to wit, for 'certain work and materials furnished by one Madary, amounting to the sum of $387.24, with interest at seven per cent from May 11, 1904, which said claim and lien were duly assigned to plaintiffs.

*493 1. As to the first of these causes of action the nineteenth finding of the court is as follows: “The court finds that said building materials furnished by plaintiff, Barrett, Hicks Co., were not furnished at the special instance and request of said defendants, Frank Glas Jr. and W. H. Glas, through their said agent, W. J. Sircy, but that said materials aforesaid were furnished at the special instance and request of M. R. Madary, and were charged on the books of said plaintiff corporation to the account of said M. R. Madary, and the allegation in plaintiff’s complaint in that regard is untrue, as is likewise the statement in its said notice and claim of lien, that said materials were furnished to W. J. Sircy, the contractor; that plaintiff paid out and expended for the filing and recording of said notice of lien the sum of $1.50. ’ ’

The allegation of the complaint, so found to be untrue, was as follows: “And that during the erection and construction of said building said Barrett, Hicks & Company, a corporation, at the special instance and request of said defendants, Frank Glas Jr. and Wm. H. Glas, through their agent, W. J. Sircy, did furnish certain building materials to be used and which were actually used in the erection and construction of said brick building.”

The contention of appellant is that the evidence, without conflict, shows that the allegation is true, and therefore the finding is unsupported and should have been the other way. There is not much evidence upon this claim, and we quote it in its entirety. It will be borne in mind that Sircy was the contractor, and as such is spoken of as the agent of the Glas brothers. Sircy testified as follows:

“When I went to Barrett-Hicks Company to get the material, Mr. Madary did not go along with me. When I bought these goods from Barrett-Hicks Company I did not know who they were charged to, I never saw the books. They were sold to me; I went in and made arrangements with Charley Barrett myself. Barrett-Hicks Company didn’t say anything about Mr. Madary when I had my conversation with them. I told Charley. Barrett when I bought the stuff that this money comes from Mr. Madary, that that was where they were to get their money from. The goods were sold to me and shipped to me here, but I don’t know how the charge was made upon the books. They knew Madary was getting all the *494 money and that they were to be paid through Hr. Madary. Barrett-Hicks Company told me what they would deliver the goods on the car for, and the price was mentioned, that is, I told them about how many squares there would be, and it cost so much per square. Before getting the material from Barrett-Hicks Company I had a talk with Mr. Madary about it. I think I told Mr. Madary I could get it cheaper from them than anywhere else.”

“Mr. Cory (Attorney for Plaintiff): If there is anything important in that I am perfectly willing to state that at the time he went to Barrett-Hicks to furnish this material, they talked with Mr. Madary about it, and he told them that that was all right, that he would see that their claim was paid. ■ There is no question about that fact at all.”

Madary testified as- follows: “. . . All I know about guaranteeing Barrett-Hicks & Co.’s bill is that Mr. Barrett called me by ’phone and said Mr. Sircy had come there and ordered some iron for the Glas Brothers’ building of Madera, and that he told them I was handling the money for the job, and Mr. Barrett wanted to know if that was so, and I told him that it was, and I asked him how much the bill was and he told me it was $87.00 and I told him it would be all right, I would guarantee the bill, I was handling the money and I would guarantee it. I never thought of such a thing as purchasing the material, I had no use for it.”

There was also introduced in evidence, without objection, a statement from the books of Barrett-Hicks Company showing that the account for the material so furnished was charged to M. R. Madary, upon the books of that company.

It is uncontradicted that Sircy purchased the materials from plaintiff, and that he ordered them delivered to him at the building; and that they were so delivered and used in its construction. It is also uncontradieted that Madary was told “over the ’phone” by plaintiff that Sircy had “ordered some iron for the Glas Brothers building and that he told them” (Barrett-Hicks Company) that he, Madary, “was handling the money for the job”; that they “wanted to know if that was so” and were told it was, and after being told the amount of the purchase, Madary said “it was all right”; that he “would guarantee the bill”; that he “was handling the money and would guarantee it” (the bill). All the parties *495 knew that the material was for the building being erected by Sircy, as contractor, and Madary testified that he had “no use for it” and “never thought of such a thing as purchasing the material.”

It appeared that plaintiff charged the bill to Madary on its books, but it had no authority to do so otherwise than as guarantor, and his obligation to plaintiff was that of guarantor. Plaintiff could not change Madary’s contractual relation to it without his consent by an entry on its books. That Madary’s relation to plaintiff was that of guarantor conclusively appears from his testimony. He distinctly stated that he would guarantee the payment of the bill, and the obligation of guarantor arises only where there is a principal debtor. (Kilbride v. Moss, 113 Cal. 432, [54 Am. St. Rep. 361, 45 Pac. 812].) The evidence, without conflict, is that the materials were furnished by plaintiff at the special instance and request of Sircy for the express purpose, as found by the court, of being used in the construction of the building and were so used. Section 1183 of the Code of Civil Procedure gives any person furnishing materials so to be used and which were so used, a lien therefor, for their value, and where the contract for the erection of the building is void, as was the case here, for noncompliance with the provisions of the statute, the materials so furnished shall be deemed to have been furnished at the instance and request of the owner. The materials were furnished to Sircy and the notice of lien correctly so stated.

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Bluebook (online)
99 P. 856, 9 Cal. App. 491, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrett-hicks-co-v-glas-calctapp-1908.