Hazard, Gould & Co. v. Rosenberg

170 P. 612, 177 Cal. 295, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 598
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1918
DocketL. A. No. 4074.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 170 P. 612 (Hazard, Gould & Co. v. Rosenberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hazard, Gould & Co. v. Rosenberg, 170 P. 612, 177 Cal. 295, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 598 (Cal. 1918).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

Actions to enforce six several mechanics’ liens were consolidated. The property against which the liens were sought was owned by appellants Rosenberg and Calkins. The National Surety Company was sued upon a contractor’s bond given by the Chaffey Concrete Construction Company, under the provisions of section 1183 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to protect Rosenberg and Calkins against liens for labor or materials. One of the lien claimants was nonsuited and is not a party to this appeal. The others were given judgments against the property owners and a personal judgment against the surety upon the contractor’s bond. After the appeal was perfected and the bill of exceptions was settled, but before the transcript was printed, a new trial was granted as to the entire claim of the Chas. R. McCormick Lumber Company, as to the claim of Hazard, Gould & Company, as to that of the California Portland Cement Company, and as to the judgment in favor of Hazard, Gould & Company rendered against appellant National Surety Company. The motion was denied as to all other claimants. From the judgment and from the order denying the motion for a new trial Rosenberg and Calkins and the National Surety Company have appealed.

Appellants rely upon nine specified alleged errors, the first six of which, they assert, are applicable to all of the lien claims and the others to particular ones. The first four of these allegations of error are attacks upon section 1183 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended in 1911, upon the grounds (1) that it is unconstitutional and void; (2) that it impairs the right of contract and consequently deprives one of property without due process of law; (3) that the section is an instance of an attempt to enact prohibited class legislation, and (4) that it deprives the surety of property without due process by placing upon it a legal obligation for which it never contracted, and, if enforced, would take from both owners and surety inherent and inalienable rights upon which the legislature has no right to encroach. All of these objec *297 tions have been considered and decided adversely to the contention of appellants in the recent ease of Roystone Company v. Darling, 171 Cal. 526, [154 Pac. 15], which was followed in the very late case of Hollenbeck-Bush Planing Mill Co. v. Amweg, ante, p. 159, [170 Pac. 148]. Upon the authority of those two decisions the objections to the section in question are found to be of no force.

In one of the findings attacked, the court declared that during all of the times mentioned in all of the complaints and cross-complaints the Chaffey Concrete Construction Company was a copartnership composed of E. C. Chaffey and N. M. Parker. Appellants say that Chaffey Concrete Construction Company was not a defendant in the complaints of Hazard, Gould & Company, and San Diego Lumber Company, but Chaffey and Parker were named individually in those pleadings although some attempt was made to state a cause of action against some sort of copartnership but the Chaffey Construction Company as such partnership or entity was not made a party to the action. In the amended cross-complaint of J. S. Schirm, reference is made to “said defendant to cross-complaint Chaffey Concrete Construction Company” as a copartnership composed of M. N. Parker and E. C. Chaffey, but the difficulty is, according to appellant, that the Concrete Company was not a defendant in the action. Moreover, say counsel for appellants, this cross-complaint names an entirely new partner, i. e., M. N. Parker. The contention is that as the Chaffey Concrete Construction Company, as an entity, was not a party to the action, and as there was no allegation of such copartnership as a fact, the finding is without the issues and is prejudicially erroneous. The error, if it be one, is not material, so far as respondent Hazard, Gould & Company is concerned. That respondent is not looking to the sureties for satisfaction of the judgment, but to the premises and to the owners. But it is not material in any aspect of the case. A contractor is not a necessary party in a suit to foreclose a mechanic’s lien. (Green v. Clifford, 94 Cal. 49, [29 Pac. 331]; Yancy v. Morton, 94 Cal. 558, [29 Pac. 1111].) It has also been held in' this state that a mistake in naming the contractor in a claim of lien is immaterial unless the misnomer misled the owner to his prejudice (Tibbetts v. Moore, 23 Cal. 208. See, also, First Presbyterian Church of Hutchinson v. Santry & Co., 52 Kan. 462 [34 Pac. 974]). It appears that *298 the owners dealt only with the Chaffey Concrete Construction Company as the contractor erecting the building, and that was the entity named in the contract. The original certificate that the so-called “company” was a partnership, and giving the names of the copartners, was produced from the files of the county clerk’s office and read into the record. This was proper (Code Civ. Proc., subd. 6, sec. 1918), and there is no merit in the contention that a certified copy would have been the only admissible evidence upon the subject. It is obvious from the record that the owners and the Surety Company were not, nor was any one of them, misled by any error or informality in the finding which is attacked. It sufficiently appears that to whomsoever the lien claimants furnished materials and labor, that was the person or entity who was acting with the knowledge and consent of the owners.

Appellant National Surety Company makes the assertion by its counsel that it offered to show by the testimony of Earl A. Garretson, its agent in San Diego, that the Chaffey Concrete Construction Company, for which the bond was issued, was a copartnership composed of A. E. and E. C. Chaffey, but that the proffered testimony was rejected by the court. The proffered testimony was purely hearsay and was properly excluded from the record. Besides, the statement regarding the personnel of the copartnership which the witness was not allowed to make, was based, he said, upon a writing which was not offered in evidence. If he had such writing (and it appears from his own statement that it had been filed with his company) his oral declarations regarding its contents were clearly not the best evidence.

The finding that certain of the plaintiffs furnished materials to the copartnership acting by A. E. Chaffey, as agent, meets with objection on the part of appellants on the ground that the evidence did not even tend to support the court’s conclusion respecting agency. It is asserted in the brief of appellants that all of the testimony regarding agency was made up of declarations of the alleged agent himself regarding his asserted authority to bind the copartnership. But Mr. Rosenberg, one of the owners of the real property, testified that A. E. Chaffey, as manager of the Chaffey Concrete Construction Company, signed the contract for the construction of the building and that the witness dealt with Mr. Chaffey as such manager. Mr. A. E. Chaffey, according to *299 the witness, always acted as manager. The representative of Hazard, Gonld & Company, testified that he entered into a contract with the Chaffey Company, transacting the business with Mr. A. B. Chaffey. There was further testimony to the effect that A. B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 P. 612, 177 Cal. 295, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hazard-gould-co-v-rosenberg-cal-1918.