Culver v. Schroth

39 N.E. 115, 153 Ill. 437
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 39 N.E. 115 (Culver v. Schroth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Culver v. Schroth, 39 N.E. 115, 153 Ill. 437 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was' a petition by C. F. Schroth and Henry Ahrens, co-partners, under the firm name of Schroth & Ahrens, for a mechanic’s lien. The petition alleges, among other things, in substance, that R. J. and S. U. Anderson, two of the defendants, being about to erect a flat-building on lots 22 and 23, in Douglas Park addition to Chicago, of which they were then the owners in fee, contracted with the petitioners, who were dealers in sash, doors, blinds, frames, mouldings and kindred mill and stair-work, for the mill-work, stairs, and other like building materials to be used in and about the construction of the defendants’ building; that no particular amount of material was specifically contracted for, nor were the kinds and qualities specifically named, nor the time or times for the delivery thereof definitely fixed, but it was understood and agreed by and between the petitioners and the Andersons, that the petitioners should furnish and deliver to them such qualities of mill-work and other material as the petitioners might have for sale and the Andersons might need in the construction of their building, and as they might call for and order during the erection thereof, the building to be completed on or before January 1,1892, and all the materials contracted for to be furnished within that time, the same to be paid for by the Andersons, at the usual market prices, within sixty days from the first of the next month after their delivery; that in pursuance of this contract the petitioners commenced furnishing and delivering mill-work and materials for the building April 28, 1891, and continued thereafter to furnish and deliver such mill-work and materials until August 7, 1891, and that all the mill-work and materials so furnished were actually used by the Andersons in the construction of their building on the lots above described; that nothing had been paid to the petitioners for the materials so furnished, and that there was then due them therefor the sum of $981.64, and interest thereon from the time payments therefor became due, respectively; that on October 9,1891, the petitioners caused to be filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court a just and true statement of the account due, after allowing all credits, setting forth the times when the materials were furnished, and containing a correct description of the property to be charged with the lien, verified by affidavit, and a copy of such statement was appended as an exhibit to the petition.

The petition made the Andersons, David A. Black, who seems to have purchased the property subject to the petitioners’ lien, and certain other parties, defendants. The affidavit verifying the statement appended to the petition contains, among other things, the following recital: “The said materials were to be paid for sixty days from the first of the month next after delivery.”

The petition was subsequently amended, by leave of the court, by striking therefrom the allegation that the materials were to be paid for within sixty days after the first of the next month after delivery, and inserting in lieu thereof an allegation that they were to be paid for sixty days after the respective deliveries. By a further amendment to the petition it was alleged that the recital in the statement filed with the clerk of the circuit court that the materials were to be.- paid for sixty days from the first of the month next after delivery was erroneous, the fact being that they were to be paid’for sixty days after the delivery of each item, respectively, and that such erroneous recital as to the time of payment was inserted in the statement by misapprehension and mistake.

Ella J. Culver and another, who, as the decree finds, purchased the premises of defendant Black pendente lite, were afterwards made defendants, and Ella J. Culver first joined in a demurrer to the petition filed by Black, and that being overruled, she answered denying- the equities of the petition. The master, on reference to him, took proofs and made his report, and the cause coming on to be heard, a decree was entered finding that all the material allegations of the petition were proved, and that the equities of the case were with the petitioners. The decree accordingly established a lien in favor of the petitioners upon the premises described in the petition for $1083 and costs, and ordered the premises sold for the satisfaction thereof.

To reverse this decree, Ella J. Culver appealed to the Appellate Court, and her attorney, by his prceeipe filed with the clerk of the circuit court, directed that in making up the transcript to be used upon the appeal, the clerk should insert therein only the following papers, viz.: The petition and two amendments thereto; the order making Ella J. Culver and another, parties defendant; the order of reference; the separate answer of Ella J. Culver; so much of the master’s report as contains his conclusions, but omitting the evidence; the objections and exceptions to the report; the final decree and the appeal bond; and the clerk, in making up the transcript, inserted in it copies of the portions of the record thus specified, and certified that it was a true, perfect and complete transcript of the record as per prcecipe. Upon the record as thus presented the Appellate Court affirmed the decree, and the record now comes to this court by writ of error.

Upon well established principles, it must be held that, in the absence of a complete record, the decree of the circuit court will be supported by every reasonable intendment and presumption. Accordingly, if there are errors apparent upon the face of the fragmentary record before us, and there may be, upon any reasonable hypothesis, other portions of the record by which those apparent errors may be obviated or cured, it will be presumed, in support of the decree, that such portions of the record exist and have been omitted. In view of these presumptions, it is, to say the least, doubtful whether any questions can arise upon such record which a reviewing court can be called upon to consider. See Atkinson v. Bank of Waterville, 85 Me. 368; Johnson v. Dryer, 50 Ill. App. 243.

But waiving that view, we will consider, briefly, the points urged upon our attention by the counsel for the plaintiff in error. He insists, in the first place, that the decree is erroneous because it gives the petitioners one lien upon both of the lots in question for their entire claim, the contention being that separate buildings were erected on the two lots, and that one-half of the materials furnished went into each building, and, therefore, that a separate lien should have been declared for one-half of the petitioners’ claim on each lot.

To the point thus made, it may be said that the petition alleges the erection of but one building situated on the two lots, and the decree finds that all the material allegations of the petition are proved. This finding of the decree, the evidence not being before us, is conclusive of the fact that there was but one building, and that it was so built as to be partly on each lot. But our attention is directed to the fact that the master, in his report, found, among other things, that there were two separate buildings, one on each lot, under separate roofs, and that one-half of the materials furnished by the petitioners went into each building, and that the decree, in express terms, approved and confirmed the master’s report.

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.E. 115, 153 Ill. 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/culver-v-schroth-ill-1894.