Howe v. Kaucher-Hodges & Co.

13 Tenn. App. 367, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 144
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 28, 1930
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Tenn. App. 367 (Howe v. Kaucher-Hodges & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howe v. Kaucher-Hodges & Co., 13 Tenn. App. 367, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 144 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

SIENTER, J.

In this cause the complainants by the original bill sought to recover the sum of $3550 alleged to be due for services rendered as sub-contractors under the general contractor, the defendant, Kaucher-IIodges & Co., and to have a lien declared and enforced against the Physicians and Surgeons Annex to the Baptist Memorial Hospital situated in the city of Memphis. It is shown by the pleadings that the firm of Kaueher-Hodges & Co. was the general contractor for the erection of said annex to the Baptist Memorial Hospital; said firm was composed of George T. Kaucher and E. G. Hodges; and that said firm and the two individual members thereof had filed voluntary petitions in bankruptcy, and the defendant, F. M. Robertson, had been duly appointed trustee in said bankruptcy proceedings.

The answers of George C. Kaucher and E. G. Hodges admit that the amount sued for was justly due and owing by them to complainant; that complainant was the sub-contractor employed by said Kaueher-Hodges Co. to prepare the drawings for the structural steel work for the building and to superintend the placing of the steel in the building and also to superintend the mixing and pouring of the concrete used in the building. The answers of these two defendants and also that of the Trustee in Bankruptcy set up the bankruptcy proceedings and alleged that any judgment that should be rendered against the respective bankrupts in this suit should not be enforced by executions pending a final discharge, and alleging that this debt has been listed among the debts of the respective bankrupts.

The defendant, the Baptist Memorial Hospital, denied liability and denied that the complainant was entitled to a lien on the building for the alleged services rendered, and denied that the services rendered were of the kind and character that entitled them to a lien under the statute.

At the hearing of the cause the Chancellor decreed a judgment in favor of complainant and against the general contractor, but enjoined perpetually the issuance of an execution, but held that the complainant was not entitled to the benefits of the lien statute in force in this State, and that complainants did not come within the purview of the Mechanic’s Lien Laws in force in this State, and dismissed the bill as to the Baptist Memorial Hospital at the cost of complainants.

From so much of the decree as denied to complainants a lien on the property, and holding that complainants were not entitled to *369 a lien on the real estate improved, and in taxing complainants witb the cost of the cause, the complainants have appealed to this court, and have assigned the following two errors:

“I. The Chancellor erred in holding that Gardner and Howe are not entitled to a lien upon the property of the Baptist Memorial Hospital to secure the payment of the amount he found to be due to them for work done by them as sub-contractors in the erection of the improvements on said Baptist Memorial Hospital’s property.
“II. The Chancellor erred in holding that he was bound to deny Gardner and Howe their claimed lien and dismissed their bill on the authority of the three Tennessee cases cited in his opinion. ’ ’

There is no material conflict as to the facts. Only one deposition was taken in the case, that of H. N. Howe, who testified that his firm, operating under the firm name of Gardner & Howe, became the subcontractors under the general contractor, Kaucher-Hodges Co., to do the structual engineering and preparing working drawings and shop drawings for the steel work to be done on the building, and also to superintend the mixing and pouring the concrete used in the building, and for which service they would receive under their contract with the general contractor the sum of $3800, and that only $250 of the contract price has been paid to then} by the general contractor, leaving the balance, $3550, unpaid. By stipulation contained in the record it appears that the work was completed on November 28, 1927, and that the statutory notice as required by the statute was given to the Baptist Memorial Hospital on December 24, 1927. It further appears that the suit was instituted within ninety days, and before the expiration of the statutory lien period.

The only question involved on this appeal is as to whether the services rendered by the complainants in making the drawings for the steel work and superintending the placing of the steel, and in superintending the mixing of the concrete materials, brings the complainants within the provisions of the statute as lienors.

Appellant cites numerous authorities from other states, holding that an architect who furnishes plans and specifications for a building and supervises its construction is entitled to a lien on the building under statutes similar in language to that of this State, and especially the annotations to the case of Stephens v. Hicks, 156 N. C., L. R. A. (N. S.), Vol. 36, p. 354, and also the annotations in 16 L. R. A., 600, and numerous other authorities from other states, and text writers in support of the contention that such work or services as complainants rendered in the present suit are covered by the language of the statute, and under these authorities would include the complainants as lienors.

Appellant, in the excellent brief filed, undertakes to distinguish the Tennessee case of Thompson v. Baxter, 92 Tenn., 304, from the *370 present ease. In the Baxter case, by a majority opinion, the court held that an architect who designed the building and supervised its construction did not come within the terms of the lien laws of this State so as to entitle him to a lien on the property for this character of service. In a strong dissenting opinion, Judge Lurton disagreed with the majority holding. In the dissenting opinion, Judge Lurton stated that: “The architect employed to draw plans, and supervise the erection of the building, is a person doing ‘a part of the work,’ just as clearly as the laborer whom he supervises. The proof shows that Thompson personally by day and by night, supervised this work and 1 think him within the statute.”

However, the majority of the court held otherwise. In the body of the majority opinion the court after quoting the several sections of the statute, states:

“However, the law is strict in its requirements that the claimant shall make it clearly appear that he has a lien; but when that appears, the remedial laws for its enforcement are to be liberally construed. .
“This lien is purely statutory, and unknown to the common law. Only those enumerated and embraced in the statute are entitled to the lien. A liberal construction of the mechanic’s lien law does not mean that they shall be liberally construed in embracing or including others than those enumerated in the statutes. ... No one is entitled to the lien unless the statute includes him or them. They are not to be included by strained construction. Unless the statute gives the lien the party has none.
“Now, does the statute embrace, include, or give this lien to a supervising architect? Is he a mechanic, undertaker, founder, machinist or contractor ? Has he done any work in building the house? Has he furnished the material or any part thereof, or has he put in any fixtures, machinery or material, either of wood or metal? We think not.

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Related

Wheless v. Wheless
21 S.W. 595 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1893)
Harris v. Marable
138 Tenn. 676 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1917)
Southern Const. Co. v. Halliburton
149 Tenn. 319 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
13 Tenn. App. 367, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howe-v-kaucher-hodges-co-tennctapp-1930.