Flint v. Bronson

86 P.2d 218, 197 Wash. 686
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1939
DocketNo. 27368. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 86 P.2d 218 (Flint v. Bronson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flint v. Bronson, 86 P.2d 218, 197 Wash. 686 (Wash. 1939).

Opinion

Main, J.

This action was brought to foreclose a lien for labor and material furnished in the construction of a dwelling house. Aside from the plaintiff, there were a number of other lien claimants who were made parties defendant. The principal defendants *688 were Robert E. Bronson and Marie Bronson, his wife, the owners of the property. A trial was to the court without a jury, and resulted in a decree sustaining a number of the liens and in a personal judgment, either against the contractor or against the owners of the property. From the decree, as entered, Bronson and wife appeal.

The facts, while somewhat complicated, may be summarized as follows: In the early spring of 1936, the Seattle First National Bank, as trustee under the will of N. H. Latimer, deceased, and Mrs. Margaret M. Latimer were the owners of a certain tract of land in the city of Seattle, known as Laurelcrest addition. The First Rental & Sales Corporation, of which J. L. Carroll was president, had a contract with the owners under which, as real estate agents, they were attempting to sell the lots comprising the tract. For the purpose of expediting the sale and attracting customers, it was agreed between the owners and the sales corporation that a model home be erected upon one of the lots, to be sold at cost. For the purpose of financing the building of this home, $7,250 was borrowed, which was secured by a first mortgage upon the property. William J. Bain was employed as architect, and he prepared the plans for the dwelling house.

May 4, 1936, a contract for the erection of the house was entered into between Carroll and C. A. Steele, the contractor, whereby the latter agreed to build the home, complete, for $7,300. When the project was well under way, but before the house was completed, it was sold to the appellants, who made a down payment at the time the earnest money receipt was signed, and assumed the mortgage and agreed to pay an additional sum in cash upon the consummation of the deal.

Desiring certain changes and additions in the house, the appellants entered into a separate contract with *689 Steele, the contractor, by which the latter agreed to do this additional work for a sum specified. Steele, the contractor, was unable to pay for all of the material and labor furnished in the construction of the building and a number of claims for hens were filed, as above indicated. These were resisted by the appellants.

After the action was brought, Carroll, who had financed the project, was owing the contractor a substantial balance, and he paid, of this sum, into the registry of the court, $1,825. The other six hundred dollars was paid over to The Lawyers & Realtors Title Insurance Company to indemnify that company against loss by reason of the allowance of a policy of title insurance. Subsequently, $500.59 was, by the title insurance company, paid over to the Grunbaum Bros. Furniture Company, which had on file a conditional sales contract for linoleum which had been used in the house. The balance of the six hundred dollars was paid into the registry of the court.

The first question presented is whether certain of the claimants, who had a right to hens on account of labor performed, had forfeited that right by agreeing with others, who had furnished material, that the latter should share in the fund paid into court. The fund was sufficient to pay the labor claims, had it all been applied to that purpose.

Under Rem. Rev. Stat., § 1157a [P. C. § 9664b], persons performing labor have a prior right over those furnishing material. The only persons that are complaining about this distribution are the appellants. Had the labor claims been paid in full out of the money deposited in the registry of the court, the claims for material would have been increased and the property would have been subject to a lien in the same amount as it was after a portion of the money was applied to the labor claims and a portion to the claim for material. *690 We do not see how the, appellants were prejudiced by this distribution, even though it did not conform to the statute.

The appellants complain of the provision of the decree which sustained the lien claim of the Builders Hardware & Supply Company and gave a personal judgment against the appellants for the amount thereof. Whether the personal judgment was properly entered, depends upon whether the appellants ordered the material which was involved in this claim. Upon this question, the evidence is in dispute. While the trial judge did not formally make findings of fact and conclusions of law, separate and distinct from the decree, he prepared a comprehensive memorandum opinion in which his views on the facts were unequivocally and distinctly stated. With reference to the right of the claimant to a personal judgment against the appellants, the court said, after reviewing the evidence, that the appellants were “primarily liable.” The record, as we view it, furnishes no reason why the judgment of the trial court upon this question should be disturbed.

With reference to this same claim, the appellants complain of the allowance of the lien. This question, in view of the fact that a personal judgment was entered against the appellants, from a practical standpoint, so far as this case is concerned, is not very important. The objection to the lien is that it was not filed within ninety days following the date of the last delivery of material. The house, as constructed, as testified by the architect, had a fixed glass window in the front door, which was changed to make out of it what is called a “wicket,” and this was done at the request of Mr. Bronson. The cost of the change was a small sum, to-wit, $1.55. The lien claim, if the time dates from this change in the door, was filed in time. *691 On the other hand, if the making of that change did not extend the time for filing the lien, it was not timely filed.

In this connection, the appellants rely upon the cases of Petro Paint Mfg. Co. v. Taylor, 147 Wash. 158, 265 Pac. 155, and Brown v. Mychel Co., 186 Wash. 97, 56 P. (2d) 1020; but we are of the view that the rule of those cases is not here applicable. This case, as it appears to us, falls within the holdings of the cases of Rieflin v. Grafton, 63 Wash. 387, 115 Pac. 851, and American Plumbing & Steam Supply Co. v. Alavekiu, 154 Wash. 436, 282 Pac. 917, because, in the present case, the material was not furnished for the purpose of prolonging the time for the filing of the claim or for the purpose of renewing a right to a lien which had been lost by delay.

The appellants complain of the payment to the Grunbaum Bros. Furniture Company by Carroll of the sum of $500.59 for linoleum furnished. As stated, Carroll retained, out of what he owed the contractor, the sum of six hundred dollars and deposited it with The Lawyers & Realtors Title Insurance Company to indemnify that company against loss by reason of the conditional bill of sale filed for the linoleum. No one is complaining of this payment except the appellants, and it was not made an issue upon the trial of the case. When the matter was called to the attention of the court upon the trial, no objection appears to have been made.

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Bluebook (online)
86 P.2d 218, 197 Wash. 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flint-v-bronson-wash-1939.