Chicago Lumber Co. v. Dillon

13 Colo. App. 196
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1899
DocketNo. 1565
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Colo. App. 196 (Chicago Lumber Co. v. Dillon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago Lumber Co. v. Dillon, 13 Colo. App. 196 (Colo. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Bissell, J.

As assignee of Barnett & Troutman, who were contractors and builders, the Chicago Lumber Company brought this suit to enforce a mechanic’s lien which the contractors had filed on certain property in the city of Denver. Part of the title must be stated to show the origin of the claims of the contractors and to determine their right to proceed under the statute. As to some dates the record is' not complete. Prior to any of these dealings Mrs. Cordes was the owner of the lots. For the convenience of the parties Mrs. Cordes executed three deeds to Frank S. Woodbury and put them in escrow. The date of the escrow is not certain, but the agreement between Mrs. Cordes and Peterson bears date February 24, 1893. This is the date of the deeds and they were probably put in the bank at the time the negotiations between Mrs. Cordes and Peterson were completed. Prior to these arrangements and the execution of the escrow Peterson and Wood-bury made a contract. This bears date of February 20,1893, and recites that there had been placed in escrow three deeds on certain lots by Feldhauser to Woodbury, whereby it had been provided that the deeds could be taken up on or before a year from date with interest at seven per cent and then proceeded, that it was agreed between Peterson and Wood-bury that Peters on should erect one or more houses on the ground, superintend the construction and O. K. the bills, all of which Woodbury was to pay and charge interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent until the buildings were sold or the money otherwise provided. It was further agreed that Peterson and Woodbury should divide the profits that might arise from the sale of the houses or any portion of the ground. Recalling the agreement between Mrs. Cordes and Peterson, which was probably filed with the deeds, it was therein recited that Mrs. Coldes agreed to sell the lots for $10,000 which [198]*198Peterson agreed to buy, and that the lots were bought for building purposes. Then follows this somewhat significant language: “As a convenience to him, the following conditions to the above agreement are entered into.” Mrs. Cordes then agreed to deposit three deeds to separate portions of the property running to Frank S. Woodbury. The lots covered by each deed were described, and it was provided that the second deed should be taken out first, although the same right to take up at any time within a year attached to all three. This was followed by a recital that it was mutually agreed that Peterson was to expend at least $8,000 in the erection of a house on lots conveyed by the second deed. There was no condition to build on the other lots, although it was agreed tbe contracts should be regarded as an entiret3r, and there was a stipulation for liquidated damages on both sides. This contract was signed by Mrs. Cordes and by Peterson. After these arrangements were completed, Wood-bury and Peterson acting under their original partnership contract, as it may be nob inaptíy termed, proceeded to build. They put up two houses. We are now only concerned with one. In erecting it and in making the improvements, grading, etc., $8,675 was spent. Barnett & Troutman did most of the work.' It is a matter of controversy when their work was completed. We do not intend to decide this precise question or indicate our opinion respecting it because it is a matter of considerable consequence in the further progress of this litigation. One of the contractors testified that they were doing work in October and as late as the 6th and 7th, and possibly, the 21st .of November. The importance of this matter will appear when we state the contention of the appellees that the work was finished so long before these dates that the lien was filed too late to preserve the contractors’ rights. What the facts are we do not know. The court made no finding thereon. During the trial the plaintiff offered in evidence the lien filed against this property and the one involved in the other suit. Both cases were tried together although two separate judgments were rendered. The [199]*199liens were rejected because the contractors had not complied with the law of 1893 in perfecting them. When they were ruled out the company necessarily failed in their action. If they were fundamentally bad they could not be enforced. This is all of the record to which we need advert, except one or two matters which will appear in the progress of the opinion.

At the threshold of the case it is urged that this court may not consider the record because there is no proper bill of exceptions. The plaintiff saved exceptions to the judgment, took time to file a bond and the bill, and thereafter and within the time limited and on May 5, 1895, tendered it to the trial judge. This tender is not questioned. The judge signed it but did not attach his seal. The bill was filed and thereafter the judge sealed it. The defendants insist the judge could not seal it after it had been filed, and that the plaintiff is remediless. We do not so understand the practice. As the rule has been expressed by the supreme courtj had the bill come up in its original condition leáve would have been given the plaintiff to withdraw it to permit the judge to affix his seal. It is well settled that wherever the judge marks the date of the tender which is within the specified time, although it may not be signed or sealed until after this time has gone by, the tender and the indorsement protect the plaintiff’s rights. The judge may after the time limited properly authenticate the bill. It is likewise true the bill may be withdrawn to have the seal affixed. The seasonable tender preserves the party’s rights and he may not be prejudiced by the failure or neglect of the judge to sign or seal it. This proposition must be resolved against the defendants. Fechheimer v. Trounsteine, 12 Colo. 282; Williams v. The People, 25 Colo. 251.

We now come to another proposition which may be well disposed of at this point. The lien • act has been subject to divers amendments. The act of 1883, General Statutes, 1883, sections 21 to 31 et seq., was in force until 1889. Its validity is unquestioned, and its terms and conditions have been [200]*200tolerably well settled. The act was amended in 1889 and this amendatory act has been very much questioned by counsel and by the nisi prius courts. We find an opinion by Judge Bentley incorporated into the record whereon counsel seek to question the constitutionality of the act. We do not deem it necessary to decide it. If the act be constitutional the lien was good. If it was unconstitutional, it was still good under the act of 1883. The act has been repealed by another act passed in 1898, and we therefore deem it neither incumbent on us nor wise to consider this troublesome question. If the parties had a right to file the liens under either one or the other of those acts, they are good no matter under which they may have proceeded. We dismiss this question with these observations.

We now come to the principal proposition respecting the validity of these liens. They were not filed under the act of 1893. The force and effect of this later act and the cases to which it is properly applicable have heretofore been before this court for consideration. The first case in which it came under examination was Orman v. The Crystal River Ry. Co., 5 Colo. App. 493. The next was Small v. Foley, 8 Colo. App. 435. In the first the question presented concerned the time when the suit should have been begun.

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Related

Fechheimer v. Trounstiene
12 Colo. 282 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1888)
Shapleigh v. Hull
21 Colo. 419 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1895)
Williams v. People
25 Colo. 251 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1898)
Rice v. Carmichael
4 Colo. App. 84 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1893)
Small v. Foley
8 Colo. App. 435 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1896)
Chicago Lumber Co. v. Fretz
51 Kan. 134 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1893)
Mulvane v. Chicago Lumber Co.
44 P. 613 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
13 Colo. App. 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-lumber-co-v-dillon-coloctapp-1899.