Flanagan Bros. v. O'Connell

88 Mo. App. 1, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 4
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 4, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 88 Mo. App. 1 (Flanagan Bros. v. O'Connell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flanagan Bros. v. O'Connell, 88 Mo. App. 1, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 4 (Mo. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

SMITH, P. J.

This case may be stated in this way: The defendant O’Oonnell entered into a general contract with the other defendants, Myers and wife, for the erection of two residence buildings and a boiler house on certain lots in Kansas City. The plaintiffs contracted with O’Oonnell to perform all the brick work on said buildings as called for by the plans and specifications for $2,979. The plaintiffs’ claim is that they did the work and furnished the materials for said improvement according to contract for which they received all of the contract price except the sum of $416, for which latter amount they filed their statutory lien against the property upon which the improvement was erected. This suit was brought against the contractor and owners of the property to foreclose the lien.

The property-owners filed an answer which put in issue the existence of the plaintiffs’ alleged lien. It also contained [5]*5allegations to the effect following: “That on the seventh day of December, 1899, a suit was filed in the circuit court of Jackson county, Missouri, at Kansas City, by Ered J. Dwyer et al., against the plaintiffs and defendants in this action, wherein they claim and seek to enforce against the above described property of these defendants an alleged lien for brick and other material furnished to the plaintiffs under subcontract with the defendant, Matt. O’Connell, and a lien therefor was filed by said Dwyer et al., in the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Jackson county, Missouri, at Kansas City, against the above-described property. It is further alleged in said petition in the Dwyer ease that the plaintiffs, James W. Flanagan and August Flanagan, are indebted for the brick and the materials aforesaid therein alleged to have been used on the 'buildings of these defendants aforesaid in the sum of $111.50, together with interest thereon, from the second day of September, 1899, at the rate of six per cent per annum.” These allegations were followed with a prayer that the court stay this suit and not to allow plaintiffs to take any further steps therein until they satisfied the alleged lien of said Dwyer, or until the same be declared invalid.

There was a trial, at the inception of which the court on the application of the property-owners heard the affirmative allegations of the answer and the proofs submitted in support thereof and then declined to make an order staying the prosecution of the suit. After disposing of this preliminary matter the case was tried by the court on the merits which resulted in judgment for plaintiffs. The property-owners who have appealed assign as error the action of the court in denying their motion for a stay of the prosecution of the suit. They contend that under section 1223, Kevised Statutes 1899, the stay should have been ordered.

This section provides that when a lien shall be filed under [6]*6this article — article 1, chapter II — by any person other than a contractor, it shall be the duty of the contractor to defend any action brought thereon at his own expense; and that during the pendency of such action, the owner may withhold from the contractor the amount of money for which such lien shall be filed; and in case of judgment against the owner or his property upon the lien, he shall be entitled to take from any amount due by him to the contractor, the amount of such judgment and costs; and, if he shall have settled with the contractor in full, he shall be entitled to recover back from the contractor any amount so paid by the owner for which the contractor was originally the party liable. Manifestly, this section has no application in this case. The contractor mentioned therein is one in privity with the property owner, or else, how could “the property-owner withhold from the contractor the amount of the lien,” or when there is judgment, take from any amount due by him to the contractor from the amount of the judgment. There is no privity — no contractual relations — between the plaintiffs, who were subcontractors, and the property-owners.

Undoubtedly, courts of general jurisdiction have the power tó stay proceedings in any case pending before them to prevent an undue advantage or injustice. Nor can it be doubted that where a subcontractor and materialman both have lien claims, as they may under the statute, for the same materials furnished by them for a building, that the property-owner ought not to he required to discharge both of said liens, or, which is the same thing, pay twice for the same material. But if both liens are valid then he should discharge one or the other of them.

The question raised by the property-owners’ motion in the trial court was whether or not even if the validity of both the lien of the subcontractor and that of the materialman were disputed, the court should stay the prosecution of the subcontractor’s suit to foreclose until that of the materialman was [7]*7finally decided. At the time the motion was filed it remained, to be determined whether either lien was valid. If the property-owners had admitted that the lien of the subcontractor was valid, then it is easy to see the danger they would be in should the lien of the materialman be upheld. In such case a court would not hesitate to stay the suit foreclosing the lien of the former until that of the latter should be determined. This would be done to protect the property-owners against a threatened injustice. But where, as here, the validity of the subcontractor’s lien is put in issue by the property-owners, no reason is seen why a suit to foreclose such lien should be stayed until that to foreclose the materialman’s lien should be finally determined.

If the materialman’s lien should be declared invalid, then there would be no occasion for staying the prosecution of the suit of the subcontractor; but if the validity of both liens should be upheld and judgment of foreclosure be given, the court could then interfere, for it has entire control over its process and in its discretion it could grant or stay the execution in each case accordingly as the circumstances should seem to it to equitably require. This is one of the common-law powers of the court which may be exercised in an almost infinite variety of circumstances in order to promote the ends of justice. Phillips v. Evans, 64 Mo. 24; Eaton v. Railway, 41 Fed. Rep. 421; Sawin v. Bank, 2 R. I. 383; Steere v. Stafford, 12 R. I. 131; Robinson v. Yon, 8 Fla. 355; Commonwealth v. Magee, 8 Pa. St. 240. After judgment the court could make such orders in respect to the issue of execution as it would seem right and, proper under the particular circumstances.

If the property-owner should be compelled to discharge either or both of said judgments, no reason is seen why, under the provisions of section 4223, ante, they may not, if they have paid the contractor in full, as we may infer to be the fact, re[8]*8cover of such contractor the amount thereof. If this suit were by the contractor instead of the subcontractor the cited case of Macomber v. Bigelow, 123 Cal. 532, would be an authority upholding the property-owners’ contention. In this connection, we may say that an examination of the several other cases cited by counsel for the property-owners has not convinced us that they lend any support to his -contention. No fault has been found by us with the action of the court in denying the order to stay the prosecution of the suit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 Mo. App. 1, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flanagan-bros-v-oconnell-moctapp-1901.