Casler Electric Co. v. Carlsen

86 N.W.2d 682, 249 Iowa 289, 1957 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 550
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 17, 1957
Docket49298
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 86 N.W.2d 682 (Casler Electric Co. v. Carlsen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Casler Electric Co. v. Carlsen, 86 N.W.2d 682, 249 Iowa 289, 1957 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 550 (iowa 1957).

Opinion

Oliver, J.

This is a suit by Casler Electric Company to establish and foreclose a subcontractor’s mechanic’s lien for $1284.21 for electric wiring and fixtures, against the home of defendants Carlsen, in Sioux City. Kochen & Ericsson, building contractors, entered into a written contract with defendant Edward M. Carlsen of date June 4, 1955, to furnish the labor and materials necessary to build the house. Carlsen, a plumber employed by a Sioux City plumbing company, had planned to furnish and install the plumbing, electric fixtures, etc., himself, and that part of the contract recited Kochen & Ericsson should furnish the labor and materials for the “rough electric wiring for interior of house”, only.

Plaintiff, Casler Electric Company, had regularly furnished and was then furnishing the labor and materials for the electric wiring for various houses constructed by Kochen & Ericsson. Myron Casler testified Mr. Kochen gave him the order for the electric work on the Carlsen house by telephone: “The job was *291 given us on a time and material basis as we did all his work. By-time and material I mean they were to be billed for the time consumed on the job, and the materials used.”

Mr. Kochen testified that, when he gave the subcontract to Casler Electric Company, he told Myron Casler the contract with Carlsen provided the contractor was to do the rough wiring only. “Rough wiring includes the wiring into the house hooked up and electricity to all the outlets, switches and plugs.” It includes the boxes and plates but no fixtures of any kind.

Myron Casler testified: “Rough wiring is just the basic work necessary on a dwelling or building so that the wall covering and ceilings can be installed, just so that we can get ahead of the other trades. That does not include switches, it does not include doorbells, it would not include the plates that go over the openings, those are finishing items. It wouldn’t include the porch-light fixture, it wouldn’t even include an electric meter. It wouldn’t include hooking up a stove. That would be finishing, that wouldn’t be rough wiring.”

His testimony was based largely upon his interpretation of plaintiff’s records. He was never “on the job” but assumed Cas-ler Electric Company must have had the plans, and that their workmen, in some manner, must have been instructed what was to be done.

Casler Electric Company started the wiring June 27. The wiring was inspected and approved by the city August 11. Myron Casler testified, “Yes, it [the rough wiring] would be complete by then, I would say.” The Carlsens moved into the house September 16, 1955, at which time they had electric lights and did their cooking with an electric appliance. Mr. Carlsen testified the wiring in the new house, with the exception of installing fixtures, had been completed by November 15, 1955, at which time he made the final payment to Kochen & Ericsson on their contract. He then “had no idea” Kochen & Ericsson had not paid plaintiff’s bill for wiring the house.

Mr. Kochen testified they finished their work shortly before the end of August and did no further work after that time: “In my opinion it [the wiring] was finished. There might have been some repairs. So except in a case where they had to hook up an appliance I would say it was completed.”

*292 Late in September 1955 Carlsen went to plaintiff-company to arrange for the purchase and installation of electric fixtures. He spoke to Myron Casler who referred him to their stockman, a Mr. Griener. Carlsen testified he told Griener plaintiff had done the rough wiring for Kochen & Ericsson and he (Carlsen) wanted an estimate on fixtures: “I made it plain that we were paying for those fixtures, they were to be delivered to us.” October 1, 1955, Casler Electric Company by Fred Griener addressed to Mr. Carl-sen a written quotation, shown in evidence, for certain fixtures, less lamps, fluorescent tubes and installation of fixtures. Carlsen ordered these and other electric fixtures and subsequently they were installed for him by plaintiff-company. However, on plaintiff’s books the fixtures and their installation were charged, not to Carlsen, but to Kochen & Ericsson.

Mrs. Carlsen testified she called Casler Electric Company in November in an effort to get a bill from them. She talked to one of the secretaries, told her the Carlsens had a bill with them and requested an itemized bill so she could check it. No bill was received from them.

Plaintiff contends it understood the furnishing and installation of fixtures were part of its contract with Kochen & Ericsson. Mr. Kochen testified he instructed plaintiff to the contrary and also that Kochen & Ericsson were never billed for the fixtures and that the prices charged for them on plaintiff’s records were retail prices and not the discounted prices made contractors, to which Kochen & Ericsson would have been entitled had the sale been made to them. Myron Casler testified plaintiff quite often gives discounts on fixtures to general contractors but not to “slow paying customers”, in which category the witness apparently placed Kochen & Ericsson.

Myron Casler testified he knew in the summer of 1955 that Kochen & Ericsson were having financial difficulties. November 17 their $1597.97 check to plaintiff was returned — no funds. A few days later this check was replaced with a valid bank cashier’s check. At the end of 1955 the Kochen & Ericsson account with plaintiff was in arrears. Plaintiff’s ledger shows that on February 29, 19'56, this account was credited with $1284.21 — for lien. A notation over this entry states, “Extra — Carlsen to pay *293 (424.36) Incl.” The mechanic’s lien for $1284.21, here in suit, was actually filed March 7,1956.

Section 572.9, Code of Iowa, requires that a subcontractor’s lien be perfected by filing, within sixty days from the date on which the last of the material was furnished or the last of the labor performed. If perfected thereafter by filing and giving notice to the owner it shall be enforced against the property only to the extent of the balance due from the owner to the principal contractor, etc.

In this case the main issue was whether plaintiff’s subcontractor’s $1284.21 claim for lien, filed March 7, 1956, was filed within sixty days from the date on which it furnished the last lienable items of material or labor on its subcontract. Plaintiff contends it furnished lienable items as a subcontractor, January 9,1956, within the required sixty-day period. The last date prior to the date when plaintiff’s records show any work or materials furnished for defendants’ house was December 28, 1955, and before that December 14, 1955.

The district court disallowed the $1284.21 lien claimed by plaintiff as a subcontractor, because not perfected within the required sixty days, but permitted plaintiff to amend its petition to demand in the alternative, and the court established a lien against the property and rendered judgment against defendants for $424.36 for the fixtures plaintiff sold defendants and the completion of the wiring as a principal contractor. From this judgment plaintiff has appealed and defendants have cross-appealed.

I. Plaintiff’s first proposition for reversal is:

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.W.2d 682, 249 Iowa 289, 1957 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casler-electric-co-v-carlsen-iowa-1957.