Breneman v. Beaumont Lumber Co.

34 S.W. 198, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 517, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 226
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 9, 1896
DocketNo. 1334.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 34 S.W. 198 (Breneman v. Beaumont Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Breneman v. Beaumont Lumber Co., 34 S.W. 198, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 517, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 226 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

KEY, Associate Justice.

The Beaumont Lumber Company instituted this suit against several defendants, including appellant, seeking to establish a debt against Whittle & Talbot and to foreclose an alleged lien on the real property involved. Appellant answered, claiming that Whittle & Talbot owed him $1634.74 secured by a mechanic’s lien on said real property, and asked for judgment for said amount against Whittle & Talbot and the owner of the real property, and for a foreclosure of his alleged lien. Talbot was not served with any notice of appellant’s cross action, and he made no appearance in the case.

The court below filed findings of fact, which are not complained of, and which we adopt, merely adding that it was shown that the amounts paid out hy Woolsey for the owners of the buildings, for labor and material to complete said buildings, were the fair and reasonable value of said labor and material. Said findings are as follows:

*522 “1. On the first day of February, A. D. 1893, the defendants S. M. Woolsey and A. W. Carpenter, partners under the firm name and style of Woolsey & Carpenter, J. S. Holman, A. Short, William May, H. W. Harrel and A. J. Nelson were the owners in severalty of all those certain lots or parcels of land situated in the town of Hutto, in Williamson County, Texas, said lots being together described as follows, to-witr Beginning 56 feet north, 10 deg. west from southeast corner of block 3, in the I. & G. N. R. R. addition to the town of Hutto. Thence north 10 deg. west 214 feet to the northeast corner of said block No. 3. Thence south 80 deg. west 125 feet for northwest corner of this tract. Thence south 10 deg. east 214 feet for southwest corner of this tract. Thence north 80 deg. 125 feet to beginning; said lots for convenience may be divided into seven lots 125 feet in length, five of them, beginning at. the south side, being 30 feet in width, and the remaining two 32 feet, in width, and numbered, beginning at the south side, one, two, three, four, five, six, and seven. As thus designated, the said defendants Woolsey and Carpenter owned lots numbers one and five; the defendants Holman, Short and May own lot number two; the defendant Harrel owned lots numbers three and four, and the defendant A. J. Nelson owned lots, numbers six and seven.

2. On the first day of February, A. D. 1893, the said defendants, Woolsey & Carpenter, J. S. Holman, A. Short, William May and H. W., Harrel, entered into a contract in writing with J. W. Whittle and W. E.. Talbot, who were partners engaged in the business of contractors and builders under the firm name and style of Whittle & Talbot, for the erection of five brick storehouses upon the five lots owned by them, the said five brick storehouses to be built as one building, with outside walls alike- and simply partition walls between them, making each house thirty feet in width, and covering the five lots numbered from one to five, for the agreed price of $11,582.50, to be completed by the first day of June, A. D. 1893. Afterwards, but on the same day, the said defendant, A. J. Nelson, entered into a verbal contract with the said Whittle & Talbot for the construction of two brick storehouses to be built on his two lots-numbers six and seven, in accordance with the plans and specifications prepared for the other five of the said buildings, and to be the same in every respect as the said five, except that they were to join the five buildings on the north and were to be thirty-two feet in width, instead of thirty feet, as set out in specifications for the five; the wall of the fifth building to be thirteen inches in thickness as in specifications, and the-wall of the seventh house to be thirteen inches in thickness and finished the same as the said wall in the specifications; 4900, and it was agreed between Whittle & Talbot and the said A. J. Nelson that these two-buildings were to be completed by June 30th, 1893, and that their contract should also be reduced to writing at some future time, but in fact never was, but was proceeded with upon the terms of the verbal agreement.

3. After both the contracts had been entered into, the defendants *523 Woolsey & Carpenter, Holman, Short, May and Barrel had a meeting in which they agreed upon the appointment of two of their number, namely, S. M. Woolsey and J. S. Holman, who were to be a building committee to represent the owners of the five lots and superintend the construction of the five buildings, and to pay out all moneys to be paid for the erection of the said buildings. The said defendants Woolsey and Carpenter, as partners, were the proprietors of a bank at Hutto known as the Hutto Bank.

4. After the work had begun, the said defendant A. J. Nelson asked the said defendants Woolsey and Holman to look after his interest in the construction of his buildings, and he directed said Woolsey, as proprietor of the Hutto Bank, out of funds to be deposited by him, to pay out the moneys which were to be paid under his contract with the said Whittle & Talbot, when he was not present.

5. On the fourth day of February, A. D. 1893, the said Whittle and Talbot and the defendant H. L. Breneman entered into a contract in writing, of that date, by the terms of which the defendant Breneman agreed and bound himself to. and with the said Whittle & Talbot that in the erection of the said seven brick storehouses he would do all work and furnish all material necessary in making excavations for foundations, putting concrete in foundations, erecting of walls, both inside and out, and fire walls of brick, iron work for doors and tiling, all in full accordance with plans and specifications prepared for the first five of said buildings, the remaining two thereof being the same in every respect as the said five,' except that they were to join the fifth building on the north and were to be thirty-two feet in width instead of thirty; as set out in said specifications for the five; the Avail of the said fifth building to be thirteen inches in thickness as in specifications, and the wall of the seventh house to be thirteen inches in thickness and finished the same as the said fifth wall in the specifications. The said Breneman was also to furnish material and plaster all of said buildings same as provided in said specifications for the five, and all the material and work Avas to be first class in every particular and in all respects in full accordance with said specifications, which were referred to and made part of said contract. Breneman Avas also to set all cut stone furnished by Whittle & Talbot for caps and sills of Avindows and for furnishing material and doing the work as contracted to be furnished and done by him, Whittle & Talbot agreed and bound themselves to pay Breneman the sum of eight thousand dollars, to be paid in installments as such work should progress, on the first and fifteenth days of each month, on estimates of 75 per cent of the work done, and the balance when the Avork should be completed by him as therein provided; and it was also agreed that Breneman should complete all brick Avork on the five buildings covered by the said specifications in ninety days from the date of said contract,, and on the remaining two buildings within thirty days thereafter: the plastering to be done immediately after the buildings Avere under cover and in condition to receive the same; the iron Avork for AvindoAVS to be

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.W. 198, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 517, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breneman-v-beaumont-lumber-co-texapp-1896.