H. B. McCray Lumber Co. v. Terry

278 P. 746, 128 Kan. 529, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 373
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 6, 1929
DocketNo. 28,784
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 278 P. 746 (H. B. McCray Lumber Co. v. Terry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H. B. McCray Lumber Co. v. Terry, 278 P. 746, 128 Kan. 529, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 373 (kan 1929).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

The action was one to foreclose a subcontractor’s mechanic’s lien. Plaintiff recovered judgment against Terry, the contractor, for the price of lumber sold and delivered to. Terry which Terry used in building a house for Matney, and recovered judgment [530]*530against Matney for foreclosure of mechanic’s lien. Both defendants appeal.

The contract between Terry and Matney was in writing, and was dated September 30, 1925. Apparently the date should have been September 29, but the mistake is not material. The contract provided that Terry would furnish material and labor to build and complete a house according to annexed plans and specifications, and contained the following recital:

“For the faithful performance of the above, the party of the second part [Matney] agrees to pay to the party of the first part [Terry] the sum of four thousand five hundred ($4,500) — $2,000 at the signing of this contract, . . .”

Matney gave Terry a check for the cash payment of $2,000, receipt of which was acknowledged in the contract. The check was presented and paid, and for a portion of the amount Terry took a cashier’s check for $1,000, dated September 29, 1925, and payable to his order. Terry was already indebted to the lumber company in a sum in excess of $1,000 for lumber previously purchased, and on the day he received the cashier’s check he indorsed it and delivered it to the lumber company. The lumber company applied the check on Terry’s existing indebtedness. Construction of Matney’s house was not begun until the latter part of October. The first material was furnished on October 21.

A jury was impaneled. The petition contained an itemized account of the material sold to Terry for the Matney house, the answer was unverified, and as the trial proceeded defendants admitted the account was correct. On further consideration of the case the court-discharged the jury, and on the pleadings and the evidence found the lumber company was entitled to recover from the contractor the balance due on the account, with interest.

Terry’s answer said H. B. McCray, president of the lumber company, knowing Terry’s embarrassed financial condition, persuaded and induced Terry to advance to the lumber company $1,000 of the Matney money, which McCray knew was paid to Terry to buy lumber for Matney’s house—

“Telling this defendant that when this defendant realized on the building he was constructing at 1400 South Twenty-sixth street, Argentine, Kan., as aforesaid, he could replace the $1,000 to the Matney fund that he had advanced to the McCray Lumber Company, as requested to relieve the strain of said McCray Lumber Company, which it was represented at said time by said H. B. McCray was pressed for money.”

[531]*531The building contract was introduced in evidence. It disclosed that the $2,000, part of which Terry used in purchasing the cashier’s check, was not given “to buy lumber.” The purpose for which the check was given was stated in the contract. It was given generally for performance of the contract, and the court properly declined to permit a condition to be attached to the contract by parol evidence which would limit the use the contractor could make of the money, and which would follow the money into the hands of any creditor of the contractor who had notice of the source from which it was derived.

It will be observed the answer did not assert that Terry loaned $1,000 to the lumber company. The lumber company was not to replace the money. Terry was to replace the money in his “Matney fund” when he realized on another contract. The answer did not assert that there was any agreement between Terry and McCray to make future application of the money to indebtedness which might arise on account of future purchase of material for the Matney house. Of course the -answer did not assert that Terry directed application of the cashier’s check when he delivered it, and his attorneys admitted at the trial he gave no direction as to how it should be applied. The result was that, so far as the answer was concerned, the lumber company was at liberty to apply the check on Terry’s existing indebtedness.

Terry was permitted to tell about delivery of the cashier’s check to the lumber company. In some of his testimony he enlarged on his answer. He said he loaned the $1,000 to McCray; he gave McCray the money as a friend; he let McCray have $1,000 to relieve him temporarily, “and apply it further on.” In other portions of his testimony Terry acknowledged he paid the $1,000 on lumber he had purchased from the lumber company:

“Q. Now, then, on the same date that you got this cheek from Mr. Matney, September 30, 1925— A. Yes, sir.
“Q. You then paid to the McCray Lumber Company $1,000 on lumber you had bought from them; A. Yes.
“Q. That is the cashier’s check you delivered to the H. B. McCray Lumber Company? A. I delivered to them, evidently, it is signed by me.
“Q. That went to pay for some lumber you owed them? A. Evidently.”

Terry also said he was under the impression that when McCray got the cashier’s check he applied it on a certain bill amounting to [532]*532more than $800, and he said the cashier’s check did not pay all the bills he owed the lumber company. It was the province of the trial court to deal with testimony of this character, and on the pleadings and the evidence the trial court sustained the lien for the full amount claimed.

Terry’s answer contained the following:

“That as a condition precedent to defendant advancing the $1,000 of the Matney money, H. B. McCray promised this defendant that in any event the McCray Lumber Company, plaintiff herein, would take care of this defendant, which this defendant understood to mean that if he was unable to-realize his funds, tied up, in the building located at 1400 South Twenty-sixth street, Argentine, Kansas, so that he could replace the $1,000 from the Matney fund and advanced to H. B. McCray Lumber Company and credited on other accounts that this defendant owed said plaintiff, that no liens would be claimed or filed against the property of George H. Matney, . . .”

The court properly held the answer did not plead any agreement of the lumber company with Terry or for Matney’s benefit not to file a lien on the house which Terry contemplated building in the future for Matney. Before any evidence was introduced, the court indicated that an agreement to waive lien would be of consequence, but no proof tending to show such an agreement was offered.

Matney's answer to the petition was that, to enable Terry to pay cash for lumber to be used in building Matney’s house, Matney advanced $2,000 to Terry. The answer further stated that Matney was informed by Terry and was told in the presence of McCray that the lumber company received $1,000 of the money, knowing it was advanced by Matney, and knowing the purpose for which it was to be used.

Matney was allowed to testify concerning his negotiations with Terry resulting in execution of the contract and payment to Terry of $2,000. When asked if McCray was present when the conversation occurred, Matney said McCray never heard of it. The testimony follows :

“A.

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

Related

Clark Lumber Co. v. Passig
339 P.2d 280 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1959)
Wimmer v. Filizola
226 P.2d 841 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
278 P. 746, 128 Kan. 529, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-b-mccray-lumber-co-v-terry-kan-1929.