Dewey Lumber Co. v. McQuirk

30 P.2d 475, 96 Mont. 294, 1934 Mont. LEXIS 29
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1934
DocketNo. 7,201.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 30 P.2d 475 (Dewey Lumber Co. v. McQuirk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dewey Lumber Co. v. McQuirk, 30 P.2d 475, 96 Mont. 294, 1934 Mont. LEXIS 29 (Mo. 1934).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by the defendant Martha C. Whitesel from a judgment foreclosing two materialmen’s liens filed against her property, one by plaintiff and the other by plaintiff’s assignor, the Davis Mercantile Company.

The property, formerly defendant’s home, consists of a house and lot in the city of Poison. When she removed with her family to Seattle, the property was rented. The house was habitable and occupied until about December 1, 1930, when the defendant by contract in writing agreed to sell the property to Alpha E. McQuirk for the sum of $1,850, payable as follows: $375 upon the execution of the contract, and the sum of $20 on the first day of each month thereafter until full payment of the purchase price. It was agreed that should Mc-Quirk fail to pay the taxes or assessments levied against the property when due, or make default in the payments required, Mrs. Whitesel at her option might declare the contract no longer binding upon her, and retain all payments theretofore made, as her absolute property. Time was made of the essence of the contract.

After taking possession of the property under the contract, Mrs. McQuirk and her husband, J. J. McQuirk, proceeded to repair and remodel the house. They purchased material for this purpose from the lien claimants, who knew Mrs. Whitesel *296 was the owner of the property which Mrs. McQuirk was buying on contract. The materialmen had no dealings whatever with Mrs. Whitesel with respect to the matter; all the materials furnished were charged to the McQuirks; the materialmen dealt directly with them.

When the contract of purchase was entered into, the house was a one-story affair, 24x24 feet in size; underneath was a small basement. The McQuirks made extensive improvements; they enlarged the windows, put in two new doors, remodeled the walls by affixing plasterboard thereto which they kalso-mined, and painted the entire house, including the porch and the shingles. On the north side they made an addition one story high, 16x24 feet. In order to do that they took out the north end of the house and built in the other part. The original house had a shelf chimney, but the McQuirks built a new chimney from the basement floor resting partly on the old house and partly on the addition. The rooms were changed about and new floors put in. A new foundation was put under the house as reconstructed.

The McQuirks kept up the monthly payments required by the contract for a year, during a part of which the repairs and improvements were being made. Finding themselves unable to continue payments on the contract or to pay the amount due the lien claimants, they made default and relinquished all their rights in the property. One of the liens was filed in April, 1931, and the other in June,, IDS'!. This action was commenced in March, 1932, by plaintiff, naming the McQuirks and Martha E. Whitesel as defendants. After the issues were made up by the pleadings, the cause was referred to a referee who took testimony.

During the trial Mr. McQuirk, a witness for plaintiff, was asked if it would be possible to remove the addition without interfering with the “old house,” to which he answered that it would cut the house in two. “If we took the new part off it would leave the north end open. The roof is not in shape to be cut unless they rebuilt it.”

*297 Mr. Whitesel, a son of the defendant, said his mother was 76 years old, for some time living with him in Seattle, and that he managed her affairs. He said: “The addition added on was a part of the bedroom that was on when we lived there. The addition was a one-story addition to the north of the house. * * * The effect of moving the addition that was built on would be to cut the house in two and leave an opening there. * # # My mother did not know anything about those improvements being made. We first found out that the improvements were being made when Mr. Nash wrote that some one was making liens on the place.” Mr. Whitesel probably meant the spring of 1931. However that may be, there is no doubt that the work was practically, if not altogether, completed before he knew anything of it.

After hearing all the testimony, the referee made findings of fact and conclusions of law in favor of plaintiff as against all defendants, and also in favor of defendant Whitesel against the defendants MeQuirk. These the court adopted, rendering judgment for plaintiff against the defendants Alpha E. Me-Quirk and J. J. MeQuirk for the full amount claimed, including attorney’s fee, interest, and costs, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $1,432.18 for which it declared the McQuirks personally liable, and further adjudged the entire amount to be first and valid liens upon the “dwelling-house, building, or structure ’ ’ which it ordered sold to satisfy the amount found due plaintiff. The court also canceled the contract between the. defendant Whitesel and the defendant Alpha E. MeQuirk, and gave the defendant Whitesel judgment against the McQuirks for the sum of $100 attorney’s fee.

There was not any contract, express or implied, between the defendant Whitesel and either of the lien claimants, nor was there an attempt to plead a contract between them or either of them; there was not any consent, implied or otherwise, by Mrs. Whitesel to the purchase of the materials or the making of the improvements by the McQuirks; there is not any provision in the contract of purchase requiring the purchaser to make any repairs or improvements upon the property pur *298 chased. No question of estoppel or. ratification was presented in the pleadings or otherwise, but, for that matter, upon the facts we do not see how there could be. There is no doubt that the lien claimants extended credit to the MeQuirks alone.

Section 8339, Revised Codes 1921 (as amended by Laws 1925, Chapter 23), awards to a materialman a lien upon the property for which he furnishes material. But a mechanic’s lien necessarily is bottomed upon an indebtedness. To render the owner or his property liable for a material-man’s lien, the lien must rest upon a contract debt made either directly or indirectly with the owner of the property (Pelton v. Minah Con. Min. Co., 11 Mont. 281, 28 Pac. 310; Stenberg v. Liennemann, 20 Mont. 457, 52 Pac. 84, 63 Am. St. Rep. 636), unless the owner chooses to ratify what has been done or in some manner estops himself to question the lien.

It is not sufficient that the work done or material furnished enhances the value of the property (Belnap v. Condon, 34 Utah, 213, 97 Pac. 111, 23 L. R. A. (n. s.) 601); otherwise a stranger might do work upon and furnish materials for the enhancement of the owner’s property without the latter’s knowledge or consent, and recover the value thereof.

Section 8342, Revised Codes 1921, provides that the lien “extends to the lot or land upon which any such building, improvement, or structure is situated * * * if the land belonged to the person who caused said building to be constructed, altered, or repaired; but if such person owned less than a fee-simple estate in such land, then only his interest therein is subject to such lien.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 P.2d 475, 96 Mont. 294, 1934 Mont. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dewey-lumber-co-v-mcquirk-mont-1934.