Dickerson Lumber Co. v. Herson

187 A.2d 689, 230 Md. 487, 1963 Md. LEXIS 548
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 30, 1963
Docket[No. 95, September Term, 1962.]
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 187 A.2d 689 (Dickerson Lumber Co. v. Herson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickerson Lumber Co. v. Herson, 187 A.2d 689, 230 Md. 487, 1963 Md. LEXIS 548 (Md. 1963).

Opinion

Bruns, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff-appellant, Dickerson Lumber Co., Inc., (the Lumber Company) filed a bill in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County against the defendants-appellees, Nathaniel and Anita Herson, to foreclose a mechanic’s lien for materials furnished to a builder, Marson, Incorporated (Marson), for the construction of a house for the defendants. The Circuit Court dismissed the bill and the Lumber Company appeals.

The Hersons entered into a contract dated March 2, 1959, with Marson for the construction of a residence located on what was then known as Woolsey Court at a cost of $39,340.00. The price was to be payable in instalments as the work progressed. The Hersons also arranged for a construction loan of $25,000.00 from Liberty Savings and Loan Association, which was to be disbursed in instalments as the work progressed. To obtain this loan the Hersons, as principals, and George McKenzie and Wayne Dickerson, as sureties, executed a completion bond dated March 17, 1959, in the amount of $25,000.00 running to the treasurer of the Association and his successors in office. Under it they undertook that the house would be completed within six months and that within six months after its completion the premises would be free of liens for work, labor, services or materials furnished in connection with the construction of the house. Dickerson was the president and McKenzie was the secretary and treasurer of the Lumber Company, and the two of them owned the Company. The Lumber Company had done business with Marson in the past, and at the time the bond was executed Marson owed the Lumber Company nearly $6,000.00. $2,000.00 was paid by Marson on April 24, 1959, the source of which does not appear from the record before us. McKenzie’s and Dickerson’s reasons for executing the Herson construction bond are not clearly stated (if stated at all) in the testimony. Doubtless they intended and expected the Lumber Company to get the business of furnishing the lumber and millwork for the Her- *489 son house (as it did), and it is readily inferable that they wished to help their customer and debtor Marson, and particularly that they wished to help Marson to pay its debts to the Lumber Company.

The first delivery of materials for the Herson job was made by the Lumber Company on April 23 and the last on October 20, 1959. The Lumber Company did not segregate on its ledger sheets billings to Marson for the three construction projects for which it was furnishing lumber or other materials. The ledger sheets show, in addition to the amounts of invoices, some advances by the Lumber Company to Marson for payroll or other purposes. They also show some payments received, without allocating them to specific jobs. On October 20, 1959, the account shows a balance due the Lumber Company of $7,524.93. All of this was charged against the Her-sons. According to the account filed with the lien this amount represents the difference between total billings (after credits for returns) against the Herson job and what are described as “Receipts Applicable to above [total billing]” of $781.21. These receipts are not itemized in the account. The testimony indicates that the Lumber Company applied all monies derived from the Herson loan (in the manner described below) to the payment of Marson’s indebtedness on two other jobs until they were discharged and then applied the balance to the Herson account.

There were five disbursements of the construction loan. The first four were made by checks of the Savings and Loan Association dated, respectively, May 4, May 15, June 10 and August 18, 1959. Each of the first three was for $2,500.00; the fourth was for $5,000.00. The first and third checks were payable to the two Hersons and McKenzie and Dickerson; the second and fourth were payable to the two Hersons and McKenzie or Dickerson. Each of these checks was first endorsed by the two Hersons, the first three were also endorsed by both McKenzie and Dickerson, the fourth by Dickerson. All four were endorsed for deposit by Marson, were turned over to Marson, and were deposited in Marson’s bank account. Mr. McKenzie testified that the Lumber Company re *490 ceived from Marson between $8,500.00 and $9,000.00, between the date when the Herson job started and October 30, 1959, of which $3,500.00 was received before the first “draw” on the Herson loan. It also appears that only $781.21 was credited against materials delivered for the Herson house. There is also no dispute that in May, 1959, Marson gave the Lumber Company a bad check for $1,500.00, and that on August 18, 1959, the Lumber Company advanced $175.00 to Marson to meet a payroll. The appellant asserts the right to apply all payments received from the debtor, Marson, in the absence of contrary instructions from the debtor (and none are shown) to any indebtedness due to it from Marson; and the appellant seeks to assert a mechanic’s lien for the balance left unpaid on the Herson job after its application of these payments to other indebtedness of Marson. The appellees contend that the Lumber Company actually had control of the total amount of $12,500.00 represented by the first four checks, and that it thus either received payment for the entire amount of its claim or else that it waived or is estopped to assert a mechanic’s lien when it could and should have applied these monies to the payment of its claim.

The appellant claims that the fifth “draw” under the Her-son construction loan payable when the trim was in, which amounted to $7,500.00 and was made on October 30, 1959, should have been used to pay the balance of the Marson indebtedness to the Lumber Company for materials for the Her-son house. The check for this “draw” was payable only to the Hersons and it never came into the possession of the Lumber Company or its officers. We do not agree with this contention of the appellant. There was no agreement that this advance should be used to pay for lumber, trim or any other specific materials. The contract between the Hersons and Marson and the construction loan contemplated payments on account of the contract price and disbursements of the loan as construction work progressed.

The special position of the Lumber Company and its officers in this matter gave the Lumber Company ample opportunity to protect itself against loss on the Herson job for all *491 amounts due up to August 18, 1959. It seems patent that the officers, McKenzie and Dickerson, were acting on behalf of the Company. It further seems clear that these officers and the Company through them knew the source of funds paid to the Lumber Company by Marson out of the proceeds of the first four “draws” under the construction loan. At the time of the first “draw” of $2,500.00 on May 4, Marson’s purchases of material from the Lumber Company for the Herson job aggregated $2,280.33. Not a cent of the Herson money appears to have been applied to this indebtedness. On the contrary, whatever part of that money was paid by Marson to the Lumber Company was applied to other accounts. Similarly, at the time of the second “draw”, May 15, charges against the Herson job had increased to $4,138.37, and at the time of the third “draw”, June 10, to $5,621.61, and the fourth, on August 18, to $6,147.89. All charges against the Herson job up to the dates of each of the several draws would have been paid in full if the Herson money had been applied first to that purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
187 A.2d 689, 230 Md. 487, 1963 Md. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickerson-lumber-co-v-herson-md-1963.