Globe Electric Co. v. Union Leasehold Co.

6 P.2d 394, 166 Wash. 45, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1172
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1931
DocketNo. 23312. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 6 P.2d 394 (Globe Electric Co. v. Union Leasehold Co.) 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
Globe Electric Co. v. Union Leasehold Co., 6 P.2d 394, 166 Wash. 45, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1172 (Wash. 1931).

Opinion

Beals, J.

Plaintiff, Globe Electric Company, a corporation (hereinafter referred to as the Globe Co.), has been for many years engaged in business as a wholesale dealer in electrical supplies, numbering among its patrons Burton Dinsmore, a contractor who specialized in the installation of electrical equipment. Defendant Mary H. Murray, a widow, during the year 1920 acquired the title to a tract of land on the corner of Third avenue and Union street, Seattle, her title being subject to a fifty year lease which provided for the erection by the lessee of a building which, at the termination of the lease, should become the property of the owner of the fee. Defendants Union Leasehold Company (hereinafter referred to as the Union Co.) and Vance Lumber Company (hereinafter referred to as the Vance Co.), corporations, jointly own the lease, under assignments from prior lessees, the precise nature of their respective interests being unimportant.

During the month of June, 1929, the Union Co. awarded Mr. Dinsmore a contract for the installation of the electrical equipment (the contract price being something under twenty thousand dollars) in the building which was being constructed pursuant to the lease above referred to. At this time, Mr. Dinsmore was *47 indebted to the.Globe Co. in the stun of approximately $3,600 for material which he had purchased and used on other jobs, and, July 15, 1929, Mr. Dinsmore executed and delivered to the Globe Co. two trade acceptances, payable September 15 and October 15, 1929, respectively, aggregating in amount $2,859.44. The day after receiving these trade acceptances, the Globe Co. discounted them at its bank, where they were left for the purpose of collection from Mr. Dinsmore’s account, as they should fall due.

Shortly after the time of the execution of the contract between the Union Co. and Mr. Dinsmore, the secretary of the Globe Co. accompanied Mr. Dinsmore to the office of a bonding company, where Mr. Dins-more was to procure the bond which he was required to execute in favor of the Union Co., on which occasion Mr. Dinsmore stated, in the presence of the representative of the Globe Co., who then recommended Mr. Dinsmore as a good risk, that he owed the Globe Co. no more than $750, that being his indebtedness over and above the two trade acceptances; the fact being that, at that time, Mr. Dinsmore owed the Globe Co., including the acceptances, over $3,600.

Mr. Dinsmore entered upon the work under his contract soon after July 15,1929, and the Globe Co. made its first delivery of material July 25. The Union Co. made to Mr. Dinsmore payments under the contract, the first in the sum of $552.50, August 5,1929, and the last May 6,1930, the payments aggregating $19,055.99. Mr. Dinsmore deposited in his bank account the money which he received from the Union Co., and the bank paid therefrom the amount of the trade acceptances above referred to. July 31,1929, Mr. Dinsmore’s bank balance amounted to $474.63, and all the sums deposited by Mr. Dinsmore during the months of August, *48 September and October came from tbe job with which we are here concerned, save the amount of approximately $850 received from other sources.

During the months of June, July, August and September, the Globe Co. furnished Mr. Dinsmore, for jobs other than the one with which we are here concerned, material of the value of $290.84, and during the period mentioned, together with the month of October, received from him, on account of material furnished for other jobs, the sum of two hundred dollars. The Globe Co. furnished for the building with which we are here concerned, on order of Mr. Dinsmore, material of the value of $15,984.13, and filed a lien for an unpaid balance of $7,129.47 of this amount.

This action was brought to foreclose this lien, and the court awarded the Globe Co. a recovery in the sum of $6,516.21; it appearing on the trial that material to the amount of $636.60 had been in fact used by Mr. Dinsmore for installations which he had made on orders received by him from prospective tenants of the building, who were equipping their own quarters therein, a further credit having been entered after the trial by the application to the Globe account of the retained percentage still in the hands of the Union Co., under its contract with Mr. Dinsmore, in the sum of $3,546.56.

From the judgment of foreclosure in the sum of $3,399.68, together with interest and attorney’s fee in the sum of six hundred dollars, the Union Co. and the Vance Co. have jointly appealed, and Mary H. Murray has prosecuted a separate appeal on her own behalf.

We shall first discuss the questions presented by Mrs. Murray on her appeal. Section 1129, Eem. Comp. Stat., among other things, creates a statutory agency which, under certain circumstances, may re- *49 suit in the creation of a situation which will allow those whose labor or material have aided in the improvement of real estate a lien thereon for the amount due. Section 1133 provides, however, that as a prerequisite to the establishment of such a lien in favor of a materialman, he must, within the time provided, ‘ deliver or mail to the owner or reputed owner of the property” a written notice stating that he has commenced to deliver materials and supplies for use on the property, together with certain other information, as provided in the section of the statute referred to. Appellant Mary H. Murray, during the year 1920, acquired title to the real estate with which we are here concerned, and was the owner thereof up to the time of trial.

In the case of Seattle Lighting Fixture Co. v. Broadway Central Market, 156 Wash. 189, 286 Pac. 43, 1119, it was held that, under a contract between the owner of land and a lessee thereof, which contract obligated the lessee to construct a building thereon which should become the property of the owner at the termination of the lease, the lessee became, under § 1129, above referred to, the statutory agent of the owner for the purpose of constructing the building.

Prom the record in the case at bar, it appears that respondent, prior to the time it commenced to furnish materials on Mr. Dinsmore’s order, investigated the ownership of the real property upon which the materials were to he placed, and, as the result of its investigation, gave the notice provided for by § 1133 to the Union Co. and the Vance Co., as owners or reputed owners of the premises. The trial court made a specific finding concerning the investigation made by respondent as to the ownership of the land, in which is set forth at length the situation disclosed by this investigation. While this indicates that the matter of the ownership *50 of the lease of the premises was rather confused, Mrs. Murray’s fee title is clearly indicated.

Eespondent argues that, under the circumstances here shown, the owner of the fee and the lessee, who was to construct a building thereon, title to which should vest in the owner at the termination of the lease, were engaged in a joint enterprise, and that, under such circumstances, notice by a materialman to the lessee, as owner or reputed owner, should be held sufficient.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Jack Endo Electric, Inc. v. Lear Siegler, Inc.
585 P.2d 1265 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1978)
Maynard Inv. Co., Inc. v. McCann
465 P.2d 657 (Washington Supreme Court, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 P.2d 394, 166 Wash. 45, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/globe-electric-co-v-union-leasehold-co-wash-1931.