City of Seattle v. Liberman

37 P. 433, 9 Wash. 276, 1894 Wash. LEXIS 297
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1894
DocketNo. 1279
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 37 P. 433 (City of Seattle v. Liberman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Seattle v. Liberman, 37 P. 433, 9 Wash. 276, 1894 Wash. LEXIS 297 (Wash. 1894).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Scott, J.

— A motion was made to dismiss this appeal on the ground that all of the parties to the action had not been served with notice thereof, which is based upon the fact that a written notice was given which had not been served upon all of the parties entitled to service under the statute. It appears, however, that an oral notice of appeal was regularly given in open court after the rendition of judgment, and an appeal bond was given within the time required thereafter. Consequently the written notice was superfluous, and the motion is denied.

This action was begun October 5, 1893, by the city of Seattle against I. Liberman and others to determine the conflicting claims of fifty or more claimants to funds in the hands of the city devoted to a street improvement.

On September 12, 1892, the respondent, the city of Seattle, through its board of public works, entered into a contract in writing with the defendant, I. Liberman, whereby said Liberman agreed to grade to the established grade Broadway and De Forrest streets in said city from Yesler avenue to the south line of Oak street, and construct sidewalks on both sides thereof between said points, as ordered by an ordinance of said city, approved August 23, 1892. The city agreed (in the language of the contract) “to pay said Liberman for said improvement at the following rates, to wit: Earth work per cubic yard fourteen and one-half cents (14-J-); rock per cubic yard seventy-five cents (75c.); sidewalks, box drains and cross-walks, including nails and spikes, ten and twenty-five one-hundredths dollars (§10.25) for each thousand feet board measure of [278]*278lumber therein; dealing and grubbing, per acre, sixty-five dollars ($65).”

In said contract it was further provided as follows:

‘ ‘All said payments shall be made by warrants payable only from the local improvement fund, district No. 34, of Seattle, provided for by said ordinance No. 2309, and not otherwise, and said party of the second part agrees to look solely to said fund for the payment for said improvement, except that so much of said contract price as is the cost of improvement of street crossings shall be paid by said city from its general road fund, to wit, the street fund.
“Warrants shall be issued as follows: On or before the fifteenth day of each month during the progress of the work warrants shall be issued for seventy (70) per cent, of the contract price of the estimated amount of said work returned by the city engineer as having been done during the preceding calendar month, and the balance of said contract price, being thirty (30) per cent, thereof, shall be retained to secure the payment of laborers who shall have performed work thereon, and material men who shall have furnished materials therefor; and all such laborers and material men shall, for thirty days after the work has been completed, have a lien upon said thirty (30) per cent, so reserved for labor done and materials furnished, which lien shall be senior to all other liens, whether by judgment, attachment or contract; and said improvement shall not be deemed completed until the board of public works shall have filed with the city clerk a statement signed by a majority of them, declaring the same has been completed. But neither said statement nor any acceptance of said work by said board shall prevent said city from thereafter making any claim for uncompleted or defective work when the same is discovered.
“In case no lien is claimed against said thirty (30) per cent, so reserved during said thirty days, and no uncompleted or defective work shall have been discovered and reported by the city engineer during said time, then warrants for said unpaid balance shall be issued at the expiration of said period; but in case notice of any such lien is given the city during this period, by or on behalf of any [279]*279person claiming such lien, or in case the city engineer shall report any claim of the city by reason of uncompleted or defective work, then the amount of all liens so. claimed shall be reserved by said city until final determination of such lien claims, and the cost of perfecting such uncompleted or defective work shall be retained until such uncompleted or defective work shall have been perfected or arranged to the satisfaction of the board of public works, unless otherwise ordained by the city council. No warrants shall be issued in any event for any part of said thirty (30) per cent, so reserved until said party of the second part shall have filed with the city comptroller a certificate signed by the city engineer stating that said period of thirty days has elapsed and that no uncompleted or defective work has been discovered for which said city makes claim.
‘ ‘ This contract is made and entered into with reference to the charter of said city as amended and now in force, and the ordinances of said city now in force; and the provisions of said charter and ordinances relating to the subject matter of this contract are hereby made a part hereof, with the same effect as if said provisions were herein incorporated and expressly set forth. ’ ’

Liberman entered upon the work in accordance with the contract, and after some delay completed it, and it was accepted by the board of public works on August 22, 1893.

The contractor’s compensation for the construction of sidewalks, box drains and cross-walks was to be measured by the quantity of lumber used, the cost of the nails, spikes and other material and all labor of preparing, laying down and completing the structures being included in the $10.25 per thousand feet of lumber used. In order to purchase the lumber needed to carry out his contract, Liberman gave to J. L. Taylor, one of appellants, the following order.

“Seattle, Wash., February, 25, 1893.
“eT. M. Carson, Esquire:
£ £ Please pay J. L. Taylor for lumber used in the improvement of Broadway, for sidewalks, box drains, culverts or [280]*280retaining walls, at the rate of seven dollars ($7.00) per thousand feet.
“Said lumber is estimated to amount to about 570,000 feet, which, at $7.00 per M. would be $3,990.00, and for this sum, more or less, according to the city engineer’s estimate this order is given in favor of J. L. Taylor; payments to be made according to the partial and final estimates of the city engineer as the work progresses.
‘ ‘ Order for three thousand nine hundred and ninety-nine dollars, more or less. I. Liberman. ’ ’
“I hereby release the above amount only from order given me by I. Liberman for the full amount due and to become due on Broadway. J. T. Nelson.”

This order was endorsed at the comptroller’s office as follows:

‘ ‘ I. Liberman to J. L. Taylor and release of amount of lumber at $7.00 per tho. by J. T. Nelson. Release by Nelson to Fischer & Macdonald. Filed March 11, 1893.”

There had been a previous order to J. T. Nelson, but on March 15, 1893, Nelson released all claims on the fund.

On the 20th day of March, A. D. 1893, Fischer & Macdonald caused to be filed with the city comptroller an order as follows:

“Seattle, Wash., March 20, 1893.
“Ji M.

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Bluebook (online)
37 P. 433, 9 Wash. 276, 1894 Wash. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-seattle-v-liberman-wash-1894.