First National Bank v. Lyon-Gray Lumber Co.

217 S.W. 133, 110 Tex. 162, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 115
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1919
DocketNo. 3135.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 217 S.W. 133 (First National Bank v. Lyon-Gray Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. Lyon-Gray Lumber Co., 217 S.W. 133, 110 Tex. 162, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 115 (Tex. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Justice GREENWOOD

delivered the opinion of the court.

The various controversies between the parties hereto relate to a contract, of date February 18. 1914, whereby J. T. Finn, a contractor, became bound to construct a building, at Paris, for the First National Bank of Paris, furnishing necessary material and labor, for which the Bank agreed to pay $122,493.04, including additions and extras.

The Ingram Millwork Company furnished the contractor certain material for the building and duly served the Bank with notice of the items furnished, and of the amounts due and unpaid therefor, but failed to file an itemized account of its claim in the office of the county clerk of Lamar County.

On the foregoing facts, the Court of Civil Appeals reversed that portion of the judgment of the District Court which awarded to the Ingram Mill Work Company a personal judgment, for the amount of its claim, against the Bank, with foreclosure of mechanic’s lien on the Bank’s building and the lots whereon it is situated.

In our opinion, the action of the Court of Civil Appeals was correct. Such action was in accordance with the decision in Berry v. McAdams, 93 Texas, 434, 55 S. W., 1112, wherein McAdams furnished material to contractor Berry, which he wrought into a house on lots, of which Housewright, Swayze & Co., were the beneficial owners, in accordance with a contract between Berry and Housewright, Swayze & Co. Verbal notice was given by McAdams to Housewright, Swayze & Co. of the material furnished and of the account therefor, before Housewright, Swayze & Co. had settled with Berry, but McAdams failed to give any written notice, as required by statute, until Berry had received all the compensation to which, he was entitled under the contract. The substance of the questions *172 certified by the Court of Civil Appeals was did McAdams have a lien, created by the Constitution, which could be enforced, against the owners and their property, notwithstanding the failure, by McAdams, to comply with the statutes? The Supreme Court answered: “The validity of McAdams’ lien against the property of Housewright, Swayze & Co. depends upon his compliance with the requirements of the statutes enacted in pursuance of the Constitution of this State.....Assuming, . . . for the purpose of this case, that the Constitution does give a lien in favor of the class of persons to which the appellee belongs, it, at the same time, requires of the Legislature to enact laws for the enforcement of such liens, which has been done, and we hold that the laws above referred to are within the powers of the Legislature over the subject, and that a failure by the appellee to comply with their requirements defeats his lien claimed under the Constitution. In other words, it is a reasonable and just regulation for the efficient enforcement of the lien of the materialman which he must comply with in order to avail himself of the benefits of the provisions of the Constitution. There being valid laws upon the subject, the question what would be appellee’s rights if there were no such statute cannot arise.” 93 Texas, 435, 437.

Articles 5623, 5635 and 5637 clearly express the legislative intent to make the filing of an itemized account, as well as written notice, a prerequisite to the enforcement of a debt, incurred by a contractor or sub-contractor with a materialman, as against the owner or his property. Because the Ingram Mill work Company did not file any account or claim whatsoever in the county clerk’s office, as required by this valid provision of the statutes, it failed to establish the right to enforce its claim against the Bank or its building and lots.

It would defeat the purpose expressed by the words of the law to say that the liability of the owner, or a lien on his property, might be enforced, without the filing of the required itemized account.

The statutes are dealing with the owner’s personal liability and a lien on the owner’s property, when the filing of accounts is prescribed, and not with the mere enforcement of liens as against subsequent purchasers or lien-holders, and we do not approve of the expressions in the opinions of the Courts of Civil Appeals, in Beilharz v. Illingsworth, 62 Texas Civ. App., 647, 132 S. W., 109, Texas Builders’ Supply Co. v. Beaumont Const. Co., 150 S. W., 772, and Seeling v. Alamo Iron Works, 173 S. W., 522, to the effect that only subsequent purchasers may prevent the enforcement of a lien by reason of the failure of a materialman to file the required itemized account in the office of the county clerk.

*173 Nichols v. Dixon, 99 Texas, 263, 89 S. W., 765; Bullard v. Norton, 107 Texas, 576, 182 S. W., 668, and Texas Glass & Paint Co. v. Crowdus, 108 Texas, 351, 193 S. W., 1072, recognize compliance with the statutes to be indispensable to establish the right of the material-man to enforce his account for material furnished the contractor, as against the owner or his property.

The Lyon-Gray Lumber Company recovered a personal judgment against the Bank for the full amount of its debt for material furnished the contractor, with foreclosure of lien on the Bank’s building and lots, and the Court of Civil Appeals declined to disturb the judgment in favor of the Lumber Company.

The items of material furnished the Bank at various dates from March 1, 1914, to Nov. 9, 1914, amounted in price to $12,433.98, besides interest. As the items were delivered, written notices were given to the Bank by the Lumber Company, and, on January 28, 1915, an itemized and verified account of its claim was duly filed by the Lumber Company in the office of the county clerk of Lamar County. The Bank paid the contractor, on estimates of the architect on work in performance of the building contract, from March 28, 1914 to December 30, 1914, the sum of $97,785.13.

It is not denied that the Bank paid the contractor amounts far in excess of the Lumber Company’s claim, after being properly served with written notice, nor that the Lumber Company complied with every statutory requirement for fixing a materialman’s lien. But, it is contended by the Bank and the surety on a bond given by the contractor to secure the performance of his contract that since the contractor abandoned his contract, on February 9, 1915, and the Bank had to complete the building at a cost of over $14,000 in excess of the contract price, the Lumber Company was not entitled to either a personal judgment or foreclosure of lien.

This contention cannot be sustained. To sustain same would mean for us to announce a rule, which would necessarily result in either licensing the contractor to himself retain monies in defiance of those having a declared better right to them, or at least to prefer parties, regardless of their compliance with what the statutes prescribe as essential conditions of preference. As applied to the facts of this case, should we sustain the Bank’s and the surety’s contention, and even assume that all of the monies paid the contractor went for labor and material for the building, though such assumption is not supported by the record, then we would uphold the preference of those who had taken no steps to get priority over, or even equality with, a claimant, who had done all things' required by law to gain priority.

The decree, as to the Lumber Company, simply enforces the statutes, as they have heretofore been uniformly construed. Fullenwider v.

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Bluebook (online)
217 S.W. 133, 110 Tex. 162, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-lyon-gray-lumber-co-tex-1919.