Berkshire v. Holcker

218 S.W. 556, 202 Mo. App. 433, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 132
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 16, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 218 S.W. 556 (Berkshire v. Holcker) 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
Berkshire v. Holcker, 218 S.W. 556, 202 Mo. App. 433, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 132 (Mo. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

TRIMBLE, J.

Plaintiffs are a copartnership engaged in business under the name of the Berkshire Lumber Company. The -firm, as one of several lien claimants, brought this action under sections 8235a to 8235g, Laws 1911, p. 314, to establish a materialman’s lien against real estate owned by defendant, Irma' H. Holcker, wife of the defendant Otto Holcker. The other lien claimants were made parties and filed their respective petition wherein each of them, like plaintiffs, set up a right to a lien against the property on the ground that they furnished material to one, Brown, who had a written contract with the husband, Otto Holcker, for the erection of the improvements involved.

In order to establish their liens, it was necessary for the lien claimants to show some agency connection, in the nature of a moving cause, reaching from the improvements back to the owner of the land; and, as the only right or authority Brown had from any one to go upon the land and erect the improvements was the *435 written contract signed by himself and Otto Holcker, and as none of the lien claimants had any basis or authority whatever for the furnishing of material except their contracts with Brown, the only way in which' any connection reaching- back to the owner could be established was to show that Otto Holcker in making the contract with Brown was acting for*" and on behalf ‘ of his wife and as her agent within the meaning of that term as used in the lien statutes. The various lien claimants, therefore, charged in their respective petition that Otto Holcker, in contracting with Brown for the erection of the improvements, did so as the agent of his wife. This was denied by each of the Holckers. On the contrary, they asserted that Otto Holcker made the contract in fact, as it appears to be on its face, for himself ihdiviúally.

Thereupon all of the lien claimants, pursuant to section 8235f, Laws 1911, p. 316, filed a joint motion, alleging that “there is an issue of fact in this case which is common to all the mechanic’s lien claimants who ar,e parties to this action” and that the issue of fact referred to was whether or not Otto Holcker was the agent of Irma Holcker, his wife, in the erection of the building described in the pleadings, and moved the court to frame said question into an issue of fact and submit it to a jury.

This motion the trial court sustained and an issue was written and submitted whereby the jury was required to find whether the husband was the wife’s agent to erect or cause to be erected, the improvements in controversy. After a trial the jury returned said issue with their verdict stating that they “find the issues for the defendants and answer said question ‘No.’ ”

The lien claimants’ motions for new trial were sustained by the court on the sole ground that error was committed in giving instruction No. 6 for defendants, and they have appealed from that order.

Said instruction No. 6 told the jury that the sole issue (submitted by the court as above stated), for their *436 determination was whether the contract in evidence between Otto Holcker and Brown (the contractor), was entered into by Otto Holcker for and on behalf of himself, or by said Otto I-Ioleker for and on behalf of his wife, Mrs. Irma Holcker, if the jury believed from the evidence that the contract betweenn Otto Holcker and said Brown was made and entered into by said Otto Holcker for an on behalf of himself and as his own individual contract, then the verdict should be that said Otto Holcker was not the agent of Mrs. Irma Holcker. It is said that this instruction narrowed the issue. We think it did not. It states the very issue formulated by the court at the request of the lien claimants and to which no objection was offered either to its scope or form. None of the lien claimants make any claim that they furnished any labor or material directly to either Mr. or Mrs. Holcker; but all claim that they furnished it to Brown the general contractor. It is udisputed and beyond question that the only right or authority Brown had from anyone to go upon the land and erect the improvement was the written contract in evidence signed by himself and Otto Holcker. As hereinbefore stated, there was no connection of any sort between Mrs. Holcker and the general contractor, Brown, or between her and any of the lien claimants,- there was no connection between Otto Holcker and any of the lien, claimants giving them authority, even from Mm, to furnish material for the improvements 'save and except the contract he made with Brown. Consequently the only route, by -yhich any possible connection between the lien claimants and the owner could be. traced, lay through the contract between Otto Holcker and Brown. This being so, then unless it was shown that Holcker, in contracting for said improvements, did so for and in behalf of his wife, there was no relationship of any kind established between the lien claimants and the owner, Mrs. Holcker. It cannot be said that the effect of the instruction upon the minds of the jury was to withdraw from their consideration the evidence covering the gener *437 al aspects of the question whether or not the husband was acting in. his wife’s behalf^-i. e., with her active volition and consent as a moving’ cause in procuring him to erect the improvements for her — because tne instruction in no way deals with the evidence to be considered by the jury in order to determine the issue submitted; and the jury were told in plaintiffs’■ instruction No. 4 that in arriving at their verdict they were not required to find that there was any formal written authority from the wife to the husband to enter into a contract with Brown for the erection of the improvements, “but in determining whether the defendant Otto Holcker was authorized by his wife, Irma Holcker, to erect or cause to be erected the building and garage upon the real estate in question, you shall take into consideration all of the facts and circumstances in evidence.” -So that we are unable to perceive any error in said, instruction No. 6.

But it is true, as stated by claimants, that if there is any other error in the trial,- of which complaint has been made in their motions for new trial, advantage may be taken of it to justify the granting of the new trial, even though it was not mentioned by the trial court. [State ex rel. v. Thomas, 245 Mo. 65.]

Among these other allegd errors is the one that the lien claimants’ refused instruction No. 1 should have been given. The refusal, however, is fully justified because said instruction 1 is wholly covered lien claimants ’ instruction No. 4 hereinabove mentioned. Besides, -instruction No. 1 subfciitted solely the bare hypothesis whether the husband “was authorised by his wife to erect or cause to’ be erected the building and garage upon the real estate in question,” and if so, then the jury should answer the question submitted to them in the affirmative; and the court could well have refused the instruction on the ground that, under the pecular state of the evidence as to the wife’s knowing that the husband was building the house and was passively willing to allow him to do so, the instruction should *438

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Bluebook (online)
218 S.W. 556, 202 Mo. App. 433, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berkshire-v-holcker-moctapp-1919.