Chicago Brick Co. v. McLester

165 Ill. App. 114, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 141
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 20, 1911
DocketGen. No. 15,984
StatusPublished

This text of 165 Ill. App. 114 (Chicago Brick Co. v. McLester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago Brick Co. v. McLester, 165 Ill. App. 114, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 141 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Baldwin

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 4th of December, 1906, appellee, the Chicago Brick Company, filed its petition for a mechanics ’ lien against certain real estate owned by appellants. The South Side Lumber Company and William Downs, respectively, became parties to the proceeding by answers and intervening petitions, and set up their own respective claims for mechanics’ liens upon the same property. Other intervening petitions filed in the case were dismissed in the court below, and are not involved in this appeal.

The intervening petitioners, the South Side Lumber Company, and Downs, respectively, claim under contracts made by them severally with George W. McLester, as agent, for and on behalf of appellants, while the Chicago Brick Company claims as a subcontractor under one Fritz Nelson, who had a similar contract with George W. McLester, as agent, for all the mason work for the three buildings. The case was referred to a master in chancery, who reported in favor of a lien for each of the claimants. Upon a hearing, the court entered a decree on the 9th of April, 1909, sustaining the master’s report, except that the court reduced the amount of the lien of William Downs; the decree established the liens in favor of the Brick Company for $257.50 with interest and costs, the Lumber Company for $297.88 with interest and costs, and William Downs for $295 with interest and costs, instead of $445 as fixed by the master.

The appeal brings before us for review the three alleged liens on the property belonging to Edward C. McLester and Nora McLester, his wife, and also the cross errors of William Downs who objects to the reduction made by the court in the amount of his claimed lien. The same questions (as to the Byan property) are pending in this court, as No. 15985, on a separate appeal. (Post, p. 120.)

It appears that the premises involved in this proceeding is one of three adjoining lots; one of the three is owned by Pauline McLester, wife of George W. McLester, another by appellants, Edward C. McLester and Nora McLester, his wife; and the third by Edward J. Ryan and Mary A. Ryan, his wife, as joint tenants. Each of these parties decided to erect improvements on their respective lots in 1906. George W. McLester took charge of the erection of the house upon the lot owned by his wife, and also entered into a contract or agreement with the owners of the other two lots, under which he was to let the contracts for and to supervise the erection of the improvements upon their respective premises, for which he was to receive a stipulated sum as compensation. The various contracts for furnishing labor and material for the three improvements were made by George W. McLester on behalf of, and as agent of bis respective principals.

The proceeding involves the question whether improvements made on three separate, though adjacent and contiguous, pieces of ground, owned by three separate owners, and where the contracts under which the liens are claimed, were made with the agent of all the owners, afford the basis for mechanics’ liens in favor of the respective contractors, who furnish labor and material for the improvements. The houses were identical in size and the buildings were accepted by their respective owners without objection.

It is stated that Pauline McLester paid the respective contractors for the building constructed by them for her, and that accordingly no lien proceedings were instituted against her property.

The principal contention of appellants as to all the claimants, is (1st) that the mechanics’ lien law of this state does not entitle a claimant to a lien under an entire contract to furnish labor or deliver material jointly to two or more persons for improvements on two or more pieces of property; (2nd) that as to all three of the claims there is a variance between the allegations and the proofs; (3rd) that interest was improperly allowed upon the claims; and (4th) as to the Chicago Brick Company, that the notice of lien is not shown to have been properly served.

At the outset, we observe that there appears to be no denial that the material was furnished and delivered and the work performed according to the respective contracts; indeed, upon this record, we are justified in finding it as an established fact.

Section 39, Mechanics’ Lien Act of 1903, chapter 82, B. S., provides in terms that the mechanics’ lien act “is, and shall be liberally construed as, a remedial act.” Under this mandate of the Legislature, and the conceded and proven facts in the case, we do not see any legal objection to sustaining the several liens, even though the improvements were erected on separate parcels of land, belonging to different owners; indeed, sections 1, 2 and 21, of the statutes, providing for mechanics’ liens, seem to contemplate and in terms to provide for just such a situation.

In the case at bar, it should be noted that the owners of these separate and contiguous lots severally authorized one person to act as their agent in the matter of making the proposed improvements, letting contracts, etc., and that George W. McLester did, as the agent for the others, actually let the contracts for, and supervise the improvements in question. There is no dispute in the evidence that the material and labor furnished, and for which the mechanics’ lien was decreed, were furnished equally for each of the buildings. The decree declared the liens of the three appellees severally, for the respective amounts heretofore shown, upon the lot owned by appellants.

The contention made by appellants that such liens could be enforced against several pieces of property only when owned by the same person, cannot be sustained. The phraseology of the statute (sections 1 and 7) seems clearly to negative that contention. Moreover, it is said in Steigleman v. McBride, 17 Ill. 300:

“A mechanics’ lien, as created by the statute, is not upon the specific thing furnished, nor upon the interest alone of the party in the land, for whom furnished, but against the land, to be satisfied in any way consistent with the statute and the principles of equity.”

To substantially the same effect, see also Lewis et al. v. Rose, 82 Ill. 574; and see also Paulsen v. Manske, 126 Ill. 72, where it is said:

“He (Paulson) was in fact acting for and on behalf of the Browns, and they cannot be permitted to receive the benefit and escape the liability of the mechanics’ lien attaching to their interest.”

In Sorg v. Crandall, 233 Ill. 79, the court, in defining the word “owner” of real estate, held, in effect, that the word “owner”, as used in the act, means all owners who are acting together in the making of the improvements.

We think, therefore, under the conditions shown in this case, the liens were properly enforceable.

If appellants desired to insist upon their point that' there was a variance between the proofs and allegations, they should have specifically and with clearness made that objection before the master, instead of relying upon only general objections; indeed, it is not clear that the court was bound to consider them; they should have been specific. Thornton v. Commonwealth Loan & Building Association, 181 Ill. 456-459.

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Related

Steigleman v. McBride
17 Ill. 300 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1855)
Lewis v. Rose
82 Ill. 574 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1876)
Paulsen v. Manske
18 N.E. 275 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1888)
Monarch Brewing Co. v. Wolford
53 N.E. 583 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1899)
Thornton v. Commonwealth Loan & Building Ass'n
54 N.E. 1037 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1899)
Carey-Lombard Lumber Co. v. Jones
58 N.E. 347 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1900)
Sorg v. Crandall
84 N.E. 181 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1908)
Roby v. Chicago Title & Trust Co.
94 Ill. App. 379 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1901)
Murphy v. Cicero Lumber Co.
97 Ill. App. 510 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1901)
Merritt v. Crane Co.
126 Ill. App. 337 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1906)
Sorg v. Crandall
129 Ill. App. 255 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 Ill. App. 114, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-brick-co-v-mclester-illappct-1911.