Guest v. Shamburger

1926 OK 837, 251 P. 97, 120 Okla. 164, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 414
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 19, 1926
Docket16850
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1926 OK 837 (Guest v. Shamburger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guest v. Shamburger, 1926 OK 837, 251 P. 97, 120 Okla. 164, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 414 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

RUTH, C.

C. D. Shamburger, as plaintiff, brought his action against J. L. C. Guest, as defendant, praying foreclosure of a materialman’s and mechanic’s lien against certain real property owned by defendant.

The petition of plaintiff alleges as a first cause of action, that defendant entered into a contract with one J. P. Eagan, whereby Eagan was to erect a dwelling on the land of defendant, for the sum of $1,964, and that plaintiff furnished certain building material for such building :of the value of $1,-229.92, and prays judgment for the last-stated sum.

It appears J. F. Eagan had also filed his lien against the land in the sum of $1,534.45, and being indebted to plaintiff, Eagan assigned his lien claim to plaintiff, and this constitutes the second cause of action, and on this cause of action, judgment was rendered for defendant, and this judgment was not appealed.

For a third cause of action plaintiff alleges he made a contract direct with the defendant, whereby plaintiff furnished other material of the value of $736.82 to defendant for repairing or altering buildings on the same lots or real property.

The contract between defendant and Eagan contains the following clause:

“Security against mechanics’ or-other liens upon said building is hereby, guaranteed by said J. F. Eagan, contractor, and each party hereto binds himself, his heirs, executors, and assigns to the other firmly by these presents.

Defendant answered by general denial, and further alleged that Eagan agreed to complete the building in May, 1922: that Eagan failed to furnish first-class material or workmanship, whereby defendant was damaged in the sum of $555. Defendant further alleges he notified the agent of plaintiff that he was obtaining a loan from G. W. Yeager to erect the building, and that all subcontractors would have to look to Eagan and the loan for their money, and that plaintiff neglected to collect his money from Yeager, and Eagan obtained the sum of $1,694.85 from Yeager and “skipped the country,” and therefore defendant is not indebted to plaintiff. Defendant admits certain extra work ordered by him, for which he was indebted to Eagan, and pleads his offset for damages, itemizing same, and further alleges that by reason of the “security against liens” clause in the contract, and the assignment of lien claims by Eagan to- plaintiff, the plaintiff became liable for all damages and liens, and further alleges that some, of the building material alleged to have been furnished to defendant’s building was taken by Eagan to other buildings being constructed by Eagan.

The cause was tried to a jury, and a verdict rendered for plaintiff on the first and third causes of action, and defendant appeals. The verdict on the second cause of action was for defendant and no cross-appeal was filed by plaintiff.

Defendant assigns 15 specifications of error, and argues them under three propositions or “points,” and insists that where there is any evidence in support of an allegation in an answer, it is error for the court to refuse to submit such evidence to the jury. This is true if the testimony is competent testimony, but in the instant case the defendant insists the testimony relative to inferior materials and faulty workmanship was applicable to the first and third causes of action, but the court instructed the jury that the testimony was competent as to the second cause of action, and we find no error in so restricting the testimony to such second cause.

“Point 2, presented by defendant and argued in connection with point 1, is to the effect that:

“The assignee of a chose in action takes such chose with all the burdens imposed thereon by the contract between the assignor and the other party to the contract.”

The defendant argues from the wrong premise. He proceeds upon the theory that Eagan assigned his “contract” to build, whereas Eagan assigned only his lien claim after the contract was completed, and to secure plaintiff in the sum of $250, and the court instructed the jury as to this second cause of action, that if they found from the *166 evidence that Eagan caused the defendant, Guest, any damages by reason of poor workmanship, or failure to comply with the contract, the damages so found might be offset against any amount found to be due Eagan on the assigned claim constituting the second cause of action, but not as against the first and third causes of action. We think this instruction correctly states the law.

The third cause of action was founded upon a contract for material ordered by Guest for repairs to garage, for construction of cement sidewalks, driveways, etc., which was contracted for by Guest after the contract made with Eagan, and was a separate and distinct transaction between plaintiff and defendant in which Eagan played no part, except to use the material as it was supplied by defendant, Guest.

The first cause of action was founded upon a claim for material furnished by plaintiff under Eagan’s contract with defendant, and if there was faulty workmanship on the part of Eagan, if the material furnished was such as Eagan ordered, but did not conform to the specifications, this could not be charged against fhe plaintiff.

The defendant, under the terms of the contract, reserved the right to reject any faulty material or workmanship, and although visiting the building “every day,” he never objected to either, but moved into the house upon completion. The lien of plaintiff being timely and properly filed, plaintiff was entitled to- recover on his first cause of action. To adopt any other rule would open the door to fraud and collusion, and permit an owner of property to contract for the erection of a building with a time limit of construction clause, and a specified amount as liquidated damages (sometimes placed at the rental value of the property) for each day beyond the time limit so specified that it took the contractor to complete the work, and if this per diem sum as liquidated damages, together with claims for faulty workmanship and inferior material, could be set off against lien claims of workmen and materialmen, our mechanic’s and materialman’s lien law would be a mere nullity.

Defendant cites 5 Corpus Juris, 962, par. 150; 2 R. C. L. 265, par. 34; Jack v. National Bank of Wichita, 17 Okla. 430, 89 Pac. 219; and Citizens Bank of Wakita v. Garnett et al., 21 Okla. 200, 95 Pac. 755, in support of his contention that “plaintiff cannot sue on this contract and claim the benefits thereof, and at the same time repudiate the burdens provided for in said contract.” The cited' cases are not analogous, and, as we have pointed out, plaintiff was not the as-signee of the contract, but of the lien claim, and if defendant owed nothing to Eagan under plaintiff’s second cause of action, nothing could be recovered, and damages to defendant might be set off against this cause of action alone.

Defendant’s objection was leveled against Instructions numbered 2 and 7 as given by the court, and he also includes under this head or “point,” his objection to the refusal of the court to give instructions numbered 3 and 4 and 5 requested by defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 837, 251 P. 97, 120 Okla. 164, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guest-v-shamburger-okla-1926.