Frehner v. Morton

424 P.2d 446, 18 Utah 2d 422, 1967 Utah LEXIS 680
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1967
Docket10525
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 424 P.2d 446 (Frehner v. Morton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frehner v. Morton, 424 P.2d 446, 18 Utah 2d 422, 1967 Utah LEXIS 680 (Utah 1967).

Opinions

ELLETT, Justice:

Plaintiffs sued to collect for services rendered in landscaping around a newly constructed house owned by defendants Skeen in Summit Park, east of Salt Lake City, Utah. From a jury verdict and judgment thereon in favor of the plaintiffs, the defendants appeal.

The points urged are (1) that the court erred in ruling that the landscaping work comes within the laborers’ and materialmen’s lien statute; and (2) that the evidence shows that the defendants did not authorize the work done.

In the fall of 1964 the defendants Skeen obtained a loan from the defendant Prudential Federal Savings & Loan Association to finance the building of a house on a lot they owned in Summit Park, so that their married daughter, Margaret Skeen Morton, and her children would have a place to live. It is shown that Margaret was given permission to direct the construction according to her wishes and that she proceeded to oversee and make changes in the job as she desired. With Mr. Skeen’s knowledge she engaged the plaintiffs to do the landscaping on the grounds, which included installation of a concrete waterfall and pool.

[424]*424The statute under which plaintiffs claim authorizes a lien for labor and material used in the “ * * * construction or alteration of, or addition to, or repair of, any building, structure or improvement upon land.” (Section 38-1-3, U.C.A.1953.)

The purpose of this statute as applied to this case is to protect those who have added directly to the value of real property by performing labor or furnishing material upon it. (Stanton Transportation Company v. Davis, 9 Utah 2d 184, 341 P.2d 207.) The statute is intended and designed to prevent the owner of land from taking the benefits of improvements placed on his property without paying for the labor and material that went into them. (King Brothers, Inc. v. Utah Dry Kiln Company, 13 Utah 2d 339, 374 P.2d 254.)

Architects are also protected and have a lien when they have furnished plats, plans, maps, superintendence and so forth, or when they have rendered other like professional services at the instance of the owner or any other person acting by his authority as agent, contractor or otherwise. (See Headlund v. Daniels, 50 Utah 381, 167 P. 1170.)

Leon Frehner, one of the plaintiffs, was a professional landscape architect, and his wife, the other plaintiff, was a landscape contractor holding a license from the State of Utah as a specialty contractor. They designed and completed the landscaping in connection with the house being built by a general contractor. The defendants refused to pay on the grounds that they had not authorized the work. It is plain from the record that the defendant D. A. Skeen wanted his daughter, Margaret, and her children to have a home, that all should be in accordance with her desires, and that in conformity with this purpose she was given a comparatively free hand as to its construction. Mr. Skeen indicated that he had had previous unsatisfactory dealings with the plaintiff, Mr. Frehner. Notwithstanding this, he permitted Margaret to go ahead and obtain the plaintiff’s services if she so desired. He also testified:

Q. * * *, when she told you she wanted to landscape the land, did you have any other conversation with her about going ahead with it?
A. Yes. I said, “If that is your decision, Margaret, I want to have you happy, you make your decision — you be independent on it. I realize we will have to provide money to pay for the building, and if the landscaping is not included in that, I will have to get the money on the side.”

It is further shown that there was talk between the general contractor and Mr. Skeen about the plaintiff Frehner doing the work and that Mr. Skeen made no objection but allowed Frehner to continue. These facts provide a reasonable [425]*425basis for the conclusions that the daughter, Margaret, was authorized by the defendants to engage the plaintiff to do the landscaping; that it was done with the defendants’ knowledge; and that, therefore, under the statute their interest in the property was liable for the improvement thus conferred upon it.

The trial judge impaneled a jury to try various issues but finally directed them as to liability and decided as a matter of law that plaintiffs held a valid and subsisting lien on the realty. The amount due and the amount thereof subject to the lien were left for determination by the jury, as was the amount of attorney’s fees to be allowed for foreclosing the lien.

The statute providing for attorney’s fees is as follows:

In any action brought to enforce any lien under this chapter the successful party shall be entitled to recover a reasonable attorneys’ fee, to be fixed by the court, which shall be taxed as costs in the action. (Section 38-1-18, U.C.A. 1953.)

The jury awarded a fee of $750, but on hearing defendants’ motion for a new trial and to set aside the verdict and judgment thereon, the court required the plaintiffs to submit to a reduction of attorney’s fee to one-half of the total amount covered by the lien.

The plaintiffs cross-appealed and asked that the $750 attorney’s fee be reinstated by this court.

It would seem that the jury could only have been advisory to the trial judge, as it is his sole prerogative to determine disputed questions of fact in equity matters. At the time of enacting Section 38-1-18 above, the legislature undoubtedly wordedi the statute as they did because they believed the foreclosure of a mechanic’s lien to be an equitable proceeding.

The following language is taken from 36 Am.Jr., Mechanics’ Liens, § 239, at page 152:

Where the distinction between actions at law and suits in equity is maintained, proceedings to enforce mechanics’ liens are regarded as suits in equity, although the complainant retains the title of the materials furnished until paid for, and are governed by the rules of chancery practice except so far as the mechanic’s lien laws have otherwise provided.

The statute does not otherwise provide. Dwyer v. Salt Lake City Copper Mfg. Co., 14 Utah 339, 47 P. 311, holds a lien foreclosure to be equitable.

In Utah the District Court has jurisdiction of both equity and law matters, yet the proceedings in equitable matters are not the same as in law matters. (See [426]*426Rules 1 and 72(a), Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, and Section 59-12-20, Utah Code Annotated 1953 as amended; see also Zeile v. Moritz, 1 Utah 283.)

We, therefore, dismiss the plaintiffs’ cross-appeal as being without merit, even assuming that they are entitled to a lien. If they are not entitled to a lien, they would not be entitled to an attorney’s fee even though one or more of the defendants might be liable for the value of the work done

This leaves us with the problem of whether or not landscaping under the Utah law is work that may be protected by a mechanic’s lien. The lien statute covers material furnished and work done in the construction, alteration, or addition to or repair of any b%iilding, structure, or improvement upon land. It will be noted that the statute does not give the lien solely for improvements to the land.

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Frehner v. Morton
424 P.2d 446 (Utah Supreme Court, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
424 P.2d 446, 18 Utah 2d 422, 1967 Utah LEXIS 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frehner-v-morton-utah-1967.