Hines v. Chicago Building & Manufacturing Co.

115 Ala. 637
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 115 Ala. 637 (Hines v. Chicago Building & Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hines v. Chicago Building & Manufacturing Co., 115 Ala. 637 (Ala. 1896).

Opinion

HEAD, J.

On December 28th, 1894, the appellee, the Chicago Building & Manufacturing Co., 'entered [641]*641into a written contract with appellants, over forty in number, for the building by appellee of a butter and cheese factory, according to a plan and specifications prescribed in the contract. The materials were furnished and the building erected according to the contract, upon a parcel of land particularly described in the bill. The stipulated price was $5,250, payable in cash at the completion of the factory. The contract then continued with the following clauses : “We the subscribers hereto agree to pay the above amount for said butter and cheese factory when completed, said building to be completed within ninety days or thereabout after the above amount ($5,250) is subscribed. Any portion of the amount subscribed not paid according to contract, shall bear legal rate of interest.

“As soon as the above amount ($5,250) is subscribed, or in a reasonable time thereafter, the said subscribers agree to incorporate under the laws of the State, as therein provided, fixing the aggregate amount of stock at not less than the amount subscribed, to be divided into shares of $100 each, said share or shares, as above stated, to be issued to the subscribers hereto, in proportion to their paid up interest herein, and it is herein agreed that each stockholder shall be liable to the corporation only for the amount subscribed by him and no more.

“Subscriptions may be obtained to this agreement to any amount in excess of $5,250, the price of factory proper as above, and all subscriptions shall-belong to the first party until the full contract price has been fully collected therefor. The remainder of the subscription after the first party has been fully paid is the property of the second party, and may then be by second party also collected and used as working capital.”

There is another provision contained in the specifications annexed to the body of the contract, that whether the building be “occupied by second party [appellants] or its incorporation or its successors, there shall be no waiver of original and joint liability until the contract. price is fully paid.” The contract was signed by appellee, per ■ Dixon C. Williams, “V. P. Special agent,” just preceding the annexed specifications of the building. At the end of the specifications, it was signed by the forty-four appellants, in the following [642]*642form, to-wit: There were three columns, the first headed, “Names of Subscribers,” which was followed beneath by the names of the appellants; the second, “Number of Shares,” followed by a numeral opposite each name, the numerals varying from one to five ; and the third, “Amount of stock after Incorporation,” followed by an amount, stated in figures, set opposite each name, the amounts varying from fifty to five hundred.

The purpose of the bill, which was filed by appellee, was to establish and enforce a mechanic’s and material-man’s lien upon the lot and building for an unpaid portion of the contract price.

The bill alleges the execution of the contract by complainant and respondents, and the completion of the building on the lot described; the amount of the contract price remaining unpaid, and the filing of a lien, a copy of which is exhibited, in the office of the probate judge of the proper county, within the time required by the statute. It further alleges that the respondents are the owners of the land and factory; that they have failed to organize a corporation as agreed in the contract, but have taken possession of the land and factory, and are now holding and using the same in the manufacture and sale of butter and cheese.

After stating that, under said contract, there was due orator March 19, 1895, $5,308, which had not been paid, the bill proceeds to aver as follows : “This amount is made up of the following amounts which were agreed to be paid by the following persons of the said party of the second part to the said contract, to-wit: $50 balance due by G. H. Lancaster, $200 by G. T. Hudson, $100 each by W. G. Brooks, W. B. Whatley, J. P. Snuggs, O. D. Dodgen, G. D. Floyd and J. C. Plolliday, and $50 by J. H. Finley. Each of these amounts was due on the 19th day of March, 1895, and said person gave no note or other evidence of debt to orator for the same except the said contract, exhibit 'A.’ The following persons of the said party of the second part executed their notes to orator for the amount that they had agreed to pay under said contract at the times as specified in said notes, to-wit: J. J. Dewberry, Ada Dodgen, O. B. Ward, M. J. Strickland, B. F. Coleman, W. W. Gery, Y. W. Sherman, J. E. Henderson, J. W. Brittain, R. S. Snuggs, G. P. [643]*643Sutlierlin, J. H. Durham, W. J. Johnson, F. M. Floyd, R. L. Gilham, Miles Hundley, J. H. Hall, D. G. M. Smith, G. W. Holliday, T. J. Crowder, J. T. Rutland, J. H. Smith, A. J. Thompson, J. C. Kirkland. A copy of which said notes showing the time when they are payable, amount of the same and the credits thereon, are hereto attached as exhibit ‘C’ and made a part of this bill.”

The several amounts of the notes so taken by complainant corresponded, respectively, with the amounts subscribed by the respective makers, as indicated by their subscriptions to said contract, as herein above explained. The notes were all dated March 19, 1895, and of them, one was payable one day ; seventeen, ninety days, one, four months; and four, six months, after date ; one December 1, 1895, and the other November 1, 1896. All the respondents whose names are not above mentioned as being still in arrears, paid the amounts subscribed by them in full. It is observed that the six months prescribed by statute for the institution of suits to enforce liens of this character, expired September 19, 1895. The bill was filed September 17, 1895, hence, before the maturity of six of the notes. There are thus, four classes of respondents, viz. : (1) those who paid their subscriptions before the bill was filed; (21 those whose notes had not matured; (3) those whose notes had matured when the bill was filed; and (4) those who had not paid nor given notes.

The question is properly raised by demurrers whether those of the first and the second classes are proper parties defendant; and in it is practically involved the merits of the whole controversy, so far as now presented to us by any of the grounds of demurrer assigned to the bill.

Whatever might be said of the meaning and effect, upon the face of the instrument, of the obligations assumed by the respondents, in and by the written agreement, aforesaid, in reference to payment of the contract price of the work, there can be no doubt that, in view of the construction placed upon the contract by the parties themselves, and their acts and dealings, bringing about changed obligations and relations, in pursuance and furtherance of such construction ; and in view of the construction now made by the bill itself, and the [644]*644brief of complainant’s counsel, it is our duty to hold that the writing entered into by the parties, so far as concern, payment of the stipulated price of the work, evidenced separate and distinct contracts on the part of the said subscribers, binding each only to the payment of the amount subscribed by him. They were neither joint principals nor sureties of each other. Their obligations to pay were the same as if each had entered into a separate writing, in his own behalf alone, binding himself only to pay the specified amount of his subscription.

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Bluebook (online)
115 Ala. 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hines-v-chicago-building-manufacturing-co-ala-1896.