Corlett-Stone Lumber Co. v. Parker

203 N.W. 122, 230 Mich. 537, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 555
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1925
DocketDocket No. 88.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 203 N.W. 122 (Corlett-Stone Lumber Co. v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corlett-Stone Lumber Co. v. Parker, 203 N.W. 122, 230 Mich. 537, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 555 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

Fellows, J.

Defendants contracted with one Van Riessen to build a house for them for $11,500. A considerable amount of the material which went into it was furnished by plaintiff. Van Riessen had other contracts and plaintiff furnished material which went into the other jobs. The amount of material furnished by plaintiff for defendants’ house is not seriously disputed. The principal controversy grows out of a check for $1,000 given by Van Riessen to plaintiff. As produced in court it bore the notation “Parker job.” It was credited on another job, called the “O’Dell job.” Plaintiff claims this notation was *539 not on the check when received by it, and having no directions where to credit the amount it was credited on the oldest job. Defendants insist that the check bore the notation when it was signed by Van Riessen and when it was delivered to plaintiff. Plaintiff filed its claim of lien for $3,538.71, which was the amount of its account after giving certain credits but without crediting the $1,000-check to defendants’ job. The trial judge found with the defendants on the question of the notation on the check, and further found that plaintiff had fraudulently overstated its claim and dismissed its bill. We agree with the trial judge that the notation was on the check when it was delivered to the plaintiff. The testimony of the banker who saw the check when it was in the bank and before it was re-delivered to Van Riessen or he had an opportunity to in any way change it, is convincing. It is agreed by every one that if it bore the notation it should be credited on this account. We do not agree, however, with the learned trial judge that plaintiff was guilty of a fraudulent overstatement of its claim because it insisted, with the light before it when it filed its claim, that the notation was not on the check when it received it, and insisted upon a trial of that issue in the only place it could be tried, — in court. Van Riessen was not a witness; he had failed in his contracts, and, it fairly appears, had left the country. The two employees of plaintiff through whose hands checks received by the company during this period passed, one of whom was not in plaintiff’s employ at the time of the trial, testify that the notation was not on the check when it was received at the office, that if it had been it would have been credited to defendants’ job. Defendants’ counsel makes much of the fact that one of these witnesses gave testimony tending to show that Van Riessen did not usually make notations on his cheeks directing to what job they should apply, but that when he gave specific directions *540 they were usually orally given, and that several of Van Riessen’s cheeks which were produced bore directions. But it is, however, significant that in all cases except the check here involved the credit was. given the proper account. If this employee overlooked the direction on this one check out of numerous ones, and through an honest mistake applied it to the wrong account, the court will correct his mistake and apply it to the correct account, but his honest mistake-is not fraud and does not of itself defeat the lien for its true amount.

Considerable testimony was given by defendants,, over objection, tending to show an attempted settlement. We think plaintiff’s counsel opened the door for this class of testimony and he can not complain, because defendants entered the field. There came a time when it became apparent that Van Riessen would not fulfill his obligations to the parties or to-any one else. The secretary of plaintiff, Mr. Stone, and defendant Harry B. Parker got together to see if an adjustment could be effected. The rock upon which they then split, as now, was the application of this $1,000-check, and it became apparent that no settlement could be reached unless plaintiff would acquiesce in defendants’ contention that they were entitled to credit for this check. This Mr. Stone finally agreed to do, and no doubt the settlement would have-gone through had not defendants been garnisheed by one of Van Riessen’s creditors. During these negotiations Mr. Stone was shown the Van Riessen check; it. then bore the notation; he was not, however, told the information possessed by the banker who was sworn-as a witness at the hearing. At the time the settlement was agreed upon the parties all understood they must take a loss through the defaults of Van Riessen. Plaintiff’s offer to then take its share of the loss was not an admission that its original claim was made in bad faith and does not stamp it and its officers as *541 guilty of fraud because it later insisted upon its claim in full.

After the attempts to settle came to an end, Mr. Stone, secretary of plaintiff, consulted an attorney. To him he related the information he had received from his employees that the check did not bear the notation when they received it. To him he related that he had since seen the check and that it then bore the notation. As we have stated, he did not then have knowledge of the facts the banker testified to. He was advised by his attorney to file his claim for the full amount, and this he did. We think the advice was proper. There was a dispute between the parties as to when the notation was put on. Van Riessen had by this time proven himself to be a rascal; there was one place to try the disputed question and that was in court; unless he claimed the full amount he could not try that question. The case is not unlike Ypsilanti Lumber & Coal Co. v. Leslie, 218 Mich. 664. In that case the materialmen had relied on their bookkeepers for the amount to put in their affidavits; in one instance the amount claimed was over a thousand dollars too large, and in the other, it was twice too large. The same claim was there made as is here made, and we there said:

“It is insisted on behalf of the appellants that the statement of this excessive amount was not a compliance with the statute (3 Comp. Laws 1915, § 14800) requiring ‘a just and true statement or account of the demand due him/ and for this reason the lien should fail. This provision has been before this court on numerous occasions, and we have on occasion held that the lien must fail where the excess was less than the amount here involved. But we have uniformly held that where the mistake is not made in bad faith but there is an honest mistake of fact made in the honest belief of its correctness, the lien will not be lost by reason of the excessive claim. Gibbs v. Hanchette, 90 Mich. 657; Lamont v. LaFevre, 96 Mich. 175; *542 McMonegal v. Wilson, 103 Mich. 264; Scheibner v. Cohnen, 108 Mich. 165; Hulburt v. Just, 126 Mich. 337; Knowlton v. Gibbons, 210 Mich. 547.”

Defendants paid Van Riessen considerable money on the contract, and they insist they have traced into plaintiff’s hands, from money which they paid, more than the amount of plaintiff’s entire claim. They did not require the sworn statement provided for by section 14799, 3 Comp.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
203 N.W. 122, 230 Mich. 537, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corlett-stone-lumber-co-v-parker-mich-1925.