Herman H. Hettler Lumber Co. v. Hodge

227 Ill. App. 383, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 274
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 10, 1923
DocketGen. No. 27,166
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 227 Ill. App. 383 (Herman H. Hettler Lumber Co. v. Hodge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herman H. Hettler Lumber Co. v. Hodge, 227 Ill. App. 383, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 274 (Ill. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Taylor

delivered the opinion of the court.

On July 26, 1917, the petitioner, William. Sullivan Company, a corporation, filed an intervening petition —in a pending suit in equity which involved a number of claims for liens — alleging that on June 13, 1916, it entered into a written contract with the defendant, Archibald G-. Hodge, by which the petitioner, for $5,000, was to install a steam-heating plant in a thirty-six apartment building, known as the Parkway Terrace Apartments; and that it installed the heating plant as provided for and was paid the sum of $4,200, leaving a balance of $800 due under the contract. The prayer of the petition is for a mechanic’s lien upon the premises in question.

On April 15, 1918, the petitioner filed an amendment striking out certain lines and inserting the allegations that pursuant to said contract it installed a complete steam-heating plant, and in addition, at the request of Oliver S. Sollitt, agent of the defendant Hodge, furnished certain extras which made the contract price and extras amount to $5,347.11, and that $4,500 of that had been paid, leaving a balance due to the petitioner of $847.11.

The matters involved in the petition — together with other issues, which are here not in question — were referred to a master. Hearings were had, evidence was taken, and on October 22, 1920, a report was filed recommending that a decree be entered allowing the petitioner a fifth lien in the sum of $733.33.

The evidence showed that on June 13, 1916, the petitioner entered into a written contract with Hodge, trustee, to provide the work and material necessary for the installation in the building in question of a certain steam-heating plant for $5,000. That contract was made in duplicate, one copy being taken by each of the two parties. At the hearing before the master both copies were offered in evidence. Each was signed by the petitioner. In both of the exhibits, which were printed forms entitled Uniform Contract of Architects and Builders, there were interlined, in ink, in article VI, the words, “free from mechanics’ liens.” Before the master there was a controversy as to whether those wórds were interlined before or after the execution of the contract. The master, who heard the testimony, found that they were written in at the time or before its execution. But, in interpreting the words, “free from mechanics’ liens,” concluded that they referred only to the liens of subcontractors.

The evidence showed tha.t a steam-heating plant was installed, hut that it gave rise to a protracted controversy between the parties as to its quality and compliance with the contract. Certain changes were made and some extras furnished; and on October 21, 1916, the petitioner gave a written waiver of lien, as to “labor or materials, or both, furnished,” by it up to and including November 3, 1916. The petitioner was paid $3,500, and in January, 1917, was paid $1,000. Those payments covered in full all the work and materials furnished prior to October 21, 1916, the date of the waiver. The master allowed the petitioner extras of $264.35, which added to the finally agreed price of $5,000 made a total charge of $5,264.35. He credited the defendant with total payments of $4,500, and gave him a credit of $105 for an air pump, making a total credit of $4,605. The difference between $4,605 and $5,264.35 being $659.35, he allowed, mailing in all, with interest, $733.33. For the latter amount he recommended a lien.

On behalf of the defendant, objections to the master’s report were filed, and, subsequently, overruled; and, on December 8, 1920, upon filing the master’s report, an order was entered that the objections stand as exceptions. The defendant’s exceptions were to the effect (1) that the petitioner failed to complete the work according to the contract; (2) that the words, “free from mechanics’ liens” precluded it from having a lien; (3) that the petitioner did not furnish a satisfactory “air system,” and is not entitled to any charge therefor; and (4) that the petitioner is not entitled to a lien because it did not file a statement of claim for lien, verified by affidavit, as required by statute.

On June 29, 1921, the chancellor entered a decree finding that the petition as amended was insufficient in law to maintain a claim for a mechanic’s lien, and that the petitioner did not file in the office of the circuit clerk of Cook county a statement of claim for a lien within four months after the completion of its contract as required by law, and ordering the dismissal of the intervening petition as amended.

The question now arises, here, upon review, whether the petition should have been dismissed. We are of the opinion that by the words of the contract, itself, the petitioner expressly excluded himself from any and all right to a mechanic’s lien. The words in question are, “free from mechanics’ liens.” They appear, interlined, in ink, in both copies of the contract. There was some conflict as to when they were written. We have examined all the evidence on that subject, and, although the testimony of Sollitt, the beneficial owner of the property, and Hannan, secretary of the petitioner, is contradictory, we feel that the master was fully justified in finding that they were written in as an authentic part of the contract itself. Further, counsel for the petitioner seem to make no objection to considering the words as a part of the original contract, but claim that, as the master found, they refer only to liens of subcontractors.

It is provided in section 21, ch. 82, Cahill’s Ill. St. (1921) that “if the legal effect of any contract between the owner and contractor is that no lien or claim may be filed or maintained by any one, such provision shall be binding.”

In W. W. Brown Const. Co. v. Central Illinois Const. Co., 234 Ill. 397, where a subcontractor claimed a lien under an original contract which contained the words, “the completed work, when offered to the company for acceptance, shall be delivered free from any and all liens, claims or incumbrances of any description,” etc.,' the court said: “The language above quoted from the original contract in this case amounts to ‘an agreement claim that there shall be no lien,’ and as the original contract, upon which the right of the subcontractor depends, contains this provision the subcontractor has no lien.”

In Kelly v. Johnson, 251 Ill. 135, it was held that the words “do hereby waive and release any and all lien or claim, or right of lien, on said above described building and premises * * * on account of labor or materials, or both, furnished, or which may be furnished,” etc., prevented the original contractor from maintaining a mechanic’s lien for work and material which were furnished after the writing which contained the above quoted words was signed.

In Henry Marble Co. v. Church, 205 Ill. App. 249, it is stated that the contractor may waive a lien; but the actual words of the waiver in that case are not set forth in the opinion. In Cameron-Schroth-Cameron Co. v. Geseke, 251 Ill. 402, where the original contract provided that “the completed work called for by this contract, when offered to the owner for acceptance, shall be delivered free from any and all liens, claims or incumbrances of any description whatsoever,” the court assumed that those words prevented the original contractor from claiming a lien of any-kind. In Rittenhouse & Embree Co. v. F. E. Brown & Co., 254 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
227 Ill. App. 383, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herman-h-hettler-lumber-co-v-hodge-illappct-1923.