Bond v. W. T. Congleton Co.

129 S.W.2d 570, 278 Ky. 829, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 501
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 2, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 129 S.W.2d 570 (Bond v. W. T. Congleton Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bond v. W. T. Congleton Co., 129 S.W.2d 570, 278 Ky. 829, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 501 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Pulton

Affirming.

The petition of appellee, Congleton Company, alleged that William Pettit, owner of two adjacent lots on Main Street in Lexington, contracted with appellee for the construction of a building thereon and agreed to pay therefor the actual cost of labor and materials and, in addition thereto, 10 per cent of the total aggregate thereof; in short, that the building was contracted for on a cost plus basis; that work began under the contract in June, 1934, and it continued to furnish labor and materials until December 5, 1934, at which *831 time the construction of the building was completed; that on February 23, 1935, it asserted a mechanic’s lien upon the property for a balance due, this balance being 10 per cent of the cost of labor and materials; that a controversy arose between it and Pettit relative to this balance and the controversy was submitted to arbitration, and that arbitrators found Pettit indebted to it in the sum of $4,356.58, which Pettit had failed and refused to pay.

The petition also set out that the property was subject to a mortgage dated August 10, 1934, duly recorded, in favor of appellant, Martha Bond, as trustee for W. M., Samuel and N. U. Bond, Jr., she being made a party defendant to the suit.

It was alleged that the mechanic’s lien asserted by it was prior and superior to the mortgage lien of appellant; that appellant had full notice and knowledge of the contract existing between it and Pettit and of the estimated costs that would be required in the construction and erection of the building, and that the defendant had notice and knowledge of the right of appellee to a lien on the property for such amount as might be due it pn account of the erection and construction of the buildingthat appellant had full notice that plaintiff had furnished considerable labor and materials in the improvement of the property and construction of the building. Summons was executed on appellant on February 26, 1936, five days after the filing of this petition.

On March 14, 1936, Pettit filed answer; demurrer was sustained thereto on June 26, 1937. Several months later, amended answer was filed by Pettit.and on October 29, 1937, demurrer was sustained to the answer as amended.

On November 4, 1937, motion was made to take the allegations of the petition for confessed and also to refer to the master commissioner to report liens. On November 6, an order was entered taking the allegations for the petition for confessed and on November 13 appellee was granted a personal judgment against Pettit and adjudged a lien upon the property prior and superior to the mortgage lien of appellant. By this judgment the cause was referred to' the commissioner to ascertain and report the amount of the mortgage debt of appellant and November 22, 1937 was fixed as the time for taking proof before the commissioner. A *832 copy of this judgment was affixed to appellant’s front door and another copy was sent to her in Florida by registered mail.

On December 1, 1937, appellant for the first time appeared in the action and filed motion to set aside so much of the judgment as adjudged a prior lien to appellee and tendered an answer and moved to be permitted to file same. In support of her motion she filed the affidavit of her husband, N. U. Bond.

The substance of the affidavit filed was that appellant had not theretofore appeared in the action because she had been informed and believed it was only a controversy between appellee and Pettit and that she did not know that it would be necessary for her to appear in the litigation until a few days before the answer was offered, when she had discovered for the first time that appellee was claiming a lien prior and superior to her mortgage. It is stated in the affidavit that she had been in Florida since October 1, 1937 and that her attorney did not reside in Lexington but lived some 80 miles therefrom.

In opposition to the motion to set aside the judgment, appellant filed the affidavit of W. T. Congleton stating that after summons was executed on appellant he had a conversation with N. U. Bond about the litigation in which Mr. Bond told him that they intended to let the action take its course without appearing in it, as they did not want to incur any expense and believed the property was sufficient to satisfy both the mortgage and appellee’s lien claim.

The answer tendered by appellant set out the execution and delivery of the mortgage by Pettit to her by the terms of which she paid off a $30,000 existing lien on the property and was to advance $60*000 additional as the construction of the building advanced; that the building was to be completed on November 1, 1934, at which time Pettit was to execute to her a promissory note for $90,000. •

It is alleged that the mortgage provides. that the sum of $60,000 included in the $9.0,000 was to be used for the construction and completion of the building in such, amounts and'at .such times as construction progressed and in payment for work actually done , and materials placed upon..the premises for use in construction of the building “as are shown by the verified esti *833 mates of the builders and the verified invoices covering the materials and the verified payrolls for labor for any period during the construction of the said building”.

The answer then sets out a number of itemized statements and invoices of labor and material sigued by appellee, and presented by it to Pettit and by him to appellant. The following allegation appears in the answer as to the final itemized statement and invoice:

“This defendant further says that thereafter and on November 15, 1934, the plaintiff and defendant, William Pettit, presented another itemized statement to the answering defendant amounting to the sum of $2,872.48, and bearing the written endorsement of the plaintiff, as follows:
“ ‘This invoice includes labor and materials furnished and paid for by us upon the Sears Roebuck building up to and including Thursday, November 15, 1935.
“ ‘W. T. Congleton Company
“ ‘By W. T. Congleton, Pres.’
“November 17, 1934
“And also bearing the written endorsement of the defendant, William Pettit, as follows: ‘Sec. in full for labor and material to date.
“‘[Signed] William Pettit.’”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 S.W.2d 570, 278 Ky. 829, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bond-v-w-t-congleton-co-kyctapphigh-1939.