Henry & Coatsworth Co. v. Fisherdick

55 N.W. 643, 37 Neb. 207, 1893 Neb. LEXIS 176
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1893
DocketNo. 5189
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 55 N.W. 643 (Henry & Coatsworth Co. v. Fisherdick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henry & Coatsworth Co. v. Fisherdick, 55 N.W. 643, 37 Neb. 207, 1893 Neb. LEXIS 176 (Neb. 1893).

Opinion

Ragan, C.

In June, 1889,'M. Isabel Bond owned lots C, D, E, and F of Bigelow’s subdivision of lots 11 and 12, block 27, in the city of Lincoln. On the 29th of this month she-entered into an agreement with, the appellee Holmes, in and by which he was to furnish the brick and perform the labor for the erection for Mrs. Bond of a four-story brick hotel on said property. At that time the appellant Marquett, held a mortgage on these lots to secure a debt of $2,200' and interest owing to him by Mrs. Bond. On the 18th day of July, this year, Mrs. Bond made application to the appellant the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Trust Company (hereinafter called the Trust Company), for a loan of' $34,000, to be secured by a mortgage on the above described property, or, as the application expressed it, Mrs. Bond appointed the Trust Company her agent for procuring such loan. The appellant Drexel made a loan through the said Trust Company to Mrs. Bond on said property for $30,000, and to secure the same took a mortgage on said real estate, bearing date August 1, 1889, but not recorded until the 26th day of that month and was not executed until about that date. The payment of this mortgage was guaranteed to Drexel by the Trust Company. On the date of the mortgage, Mrs. Bond and the Trust Company, as agent of Drexel, entered into an agreement in writing, in and by which, after reciting that Mrs. Bond had executed her obligation to Drexel for $30,000 and secured the same by a mortgage on said property, it was pro[211]*211vided that Mrs. Bond should at once erect a five-story stone and brick building on said lots and that the Trust Company, as the agent of Drexel, should pay the proceeds of said loan to Mrs. Bond as the erection of said building progressed. These payments were to be made upon the delivery to the Trust Company, or its agents, receipted bills of an equal amount as the payments due for labor and materials entering into the construction of the building.

Before the recording of the Drexel mortgage, Mrs. Bond and the appellees Holmes and the Henry & Coatsworth Company (hereinafter called the Coatsworth Company) agreed in writing with the appellant Marquett if he would release his mortgage on said lots, that Holmes would pay him thirty (30) and the Coatsworth Company forty (40) per cent of the.estimates or money that- might become payable to them for materials furnished in the erection of the building on said lots, and relying on said promises the appellant Marquett did release his mortgage.

Mrs. Bond, as principal, and the appellees Holmes and Doolittle, as sureties, executed to the appellant Drexel, on the 1st day of August, 1889, a bond in the sum of $25,000 to protect and indemnify Drexel and his agents against all liens for labor or materials that might be filed against said lots and building. This bond recited that the time allowed by statute for filing mechanics’ liens had not expired; that Mrs. Bond should pay for all work done and all material furnished for said building, and keep the same clear from all liens on account therefor; that in case she failed to perform her contract/ Drexel, or his agent, the Trust Company, might take possession of the building and complete the same and pay for the labor and materials from the funds remaining from the Drexel loan.

On the 28th day of December, 1889, Mrs. Bond executed a mortgage to the appellees Holmes and Doolittle, sureties on her indemnity bond, the conditions of which mortgage [212]*212were as follows: “ This mortgage is given to indemnify said Doolittle and Holmes against loss that may accrue to them by reason of their having become sureties for said bond in a certain indemnity to the Trust Company and Drexel for the completion and payment for material and labor in the construction of a building on said lots above described.”

On February 17, 1890, Mrs. Bond and the appellant the Trust Company entered into a written agreement which, after reciting the ownership of the lots by Mrs. Bond, that she had begun the erection thereon of a hotel, that Drexel had a mortgage on the same for $30,000 which was unpaid, that the appellees Doolittle and Holmes had executed a bond to Drexel to hold him harmless against any liens that might be filed against said hotel, that there were large sums of money owing and unpaid to certain persons who claimed to have performed labor and furnished material for said building, provided that for the. purpose of giving additional security for the fulfillment of said bond of indemnity, and for the purpose of raising money to pay for such labor and materials furnisher!, and to complete said building, Mrs. Bond should at once execute to the appellant Braley a mortgage upon the property to secure a note of $30,000, due one year from February 17, 1890, and that said appellant should at once take possession of said hotel and complete the same, and should from the proceeds of the new mortgage pay for such of the work done and material furnished as he should deem best. Braley was the agent of the Trust Company and the Trust Company was the agent of Drexel. In pursuance of this agreement, and on the same date, Mrs. Bond executed and delivered to Braley a mortgage on all the above described real estate and other property for $30,000, due in one year, and surrendered possession of the hotel and lots on which the same is situate.

The appellant Holmes began the furnishing of material and performing of labor under his contract on the 5th day [213]*213of August, 1889. The Coatsworth Company began the furnishing of material under its contract on August 21, 1889. All the other lien claimants commenced the furnishing of material or the performance of labor after the 26th day of August, 1889.

A large number of mechanics’ liens were filed against the property by various parties to this suit. All of said liens were duly assigned to the Trust Company, except the following: Holmes, the Coatsworth Company, Baird Bros., the Capital City Planing Mill Company, H. B. Dodge & Co., the Crane Elevator Company, and the Reliance Wire Works Company. Thus matters stood when the appellee the Coatsworth Company brought this action to foreclose its lien against the hotel and lots for material furnished by it in the erection of the hotel. A large number of persons were made defendants or intervened, all of whom, except four, filed answers or cross-petitions, claiming liens on the building and lots. The appellants Drexel, the Trust Company, and Braley filed their answer and cross-petition setting out the Drexel mortgage, the mortgage made by Mrs. Bond to Braley, the indemnity bond given to Drexel by Mrs. Bond, Holmes and Doolittle, and the failure of Mrs. Bond to keep the building free from mechanics’ liens. Appellant Marquett intervened in said action, and filed a cross-petition setting out the mortgage he held upon said premises and the release of the same at the request and on the strength of the promises made to him by Bond, Holmes, and the Coatsworth Company, and prayed to be subrogated to the rights of Holmes and the Coatsworth Company. The district court rendered a decree in and by which it divided the liens into five classes, as follows:

a. The first lien was given to Holmes and the Coats-worth Company, prorating.

b. The second lien was given to Drexel on his mortgage.

c. The third lien was given to Baird Bros., the Capital [214]*214City Planing Mill Company, H. B. Dodge & Co., the Crane Elevator Company, and the Reliance Wire Works Company, prorating.

d.

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Bluebook (online)
55 N.W. 643, 37 Neb. 207, 1893 Neb. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-coatsworth-co-v-fisherdick-neb-1893.