Hydraulic Press Brick Co. v. Green

164 S.W. 250, 177 Mo. App. 308, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 63
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 2, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 164 S.W. 250 (Hydraulic Press Brick Co. v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hydraulic Press Brick Co. v. Green, 164 S.W. 250, 177 Mo. App. 308, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 63 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

This is an action to enforce a mechanic’s lien prosecuted by a subcontractor or materialman against the original contractor, the owner of the premises, and the trustee and beneficiary in a deed of trust on the property. The jury found for plaintiff against defendant Creen, the contractor, and for the remaining defendants on the issues relating to the lien. Judgment was rendered accordingly and plaintiff appealed. The defendant owner, Lucy Timmons, answered by attorney but appeared alone at the trial and conducted her defense with such success that she prevailed with the jury in the face of uncontradicted evidence that the material for which the lien was filed was sold and delivered to the contractor for use in the construction of the building at reasonable prices and that practically all, if not all, of it was so used. Satisfied with her success she made no appearance in this court either in person or by attorney but as she is the respondent and the burden is on her opponent, the appellant, of showing that she obtained the judgment by means of prejudicial error, we shall give as full consideration to her side of the issues before us as we would had she appeared and presented the reasons on which she relies for an affirmance of the judg-, ment.

Counsel for plaintiff, in their brief and argument, naively and unnecessarily attempt to refute the idea that the failure of their opponent to procure a lawyer to represent her at the trial gave them any ad[311]*311vantage. “It might seem at first blush,” they say, “that the plaintiff would have a great advantage under such circumstances, but we,- as we have had the experience in trying a case against a woman who represents herself, agree with the learned trial judge, when he told Mrs.- Timmons' at the close of the trial that she won her own case and that no two lawyers in this city could have won it for her.” With some animation they ascribe their defeat to other causes than that of superior legal ability in their untrained but acute and aggressive antagonist, and we proceed to center our attention on these ascribed causes to see whether, in truth, they existed and afford sufficient ground for a reversal of the judgment.

At the trial plaintiff proved apparently beyond the possibility of successful contradiction that in good faith it sold and delivered brick of the value of $358.80 to the contractor for the improvement; that the material was so used, that only $8.80 of the account was paid and that all necessary steps were taken for preserving and enforcing a lien against the property for the remainder. Beginning with the cross-examination of the contractor, Mrs. Timmons, to whom we shall refer as the defendant, directed her efforts principally to eliciting proofs of delinquencies of the contractor in the performance of his contract with her. Counsel for plaintiff, by somewhat general objections, endeavored to prevent this digression and to keep the inquiry within the issues made by the pleadings, but on the overruling of these objections, they seemed to lose heart, objected no more and apparently lapsed into a condition of stupefied quiescence.

By means of Socratic questions embracing their own answers put to both friendly and unfriendly witnesses and of a torrential narrative of all her dealings with the contractor, defendant was suffered, without let or hindrance, to make the innocent plaintiff (whose sole offense consisted in furnishing the brick [312]*312for her new house) suffer vicariously for all the misdeeds, mistakes and negligences, real or supposed, of the contractor. The following quotation from the argument of counsel for plaintiff contains a partial recital of the wrongs defendant was allowed to show she sustained:

“It should be noticed in this connection that it is conceded that there was a two-story flat building erected by the defendant Green for defendant Lucy Timmons, and that the brick of plaintiff Hydraulic-Press Brick Company were used in the construction of the walls of that building. Whether or not the roof leaked and whether or not the brick were properly set in mortar, and whether or not the floor sagged or whether or not defendant Green forced or tried to force defendant Timmons to put a loan on the property, or whether or not defendant Timmons was a widow, or whether or not defendant Timmons was forced to take possession and rent the building in order to get her income, or whether or not defendant Green guarded the building for awhile with a gun as long as defendant Timmons, or whether or not Mrs. Timmons paid some of the bills with her private money, or whether or not rains came and washed away some of the sand that was furnished by other people than the plaintiff, or whether or not water soaked down the wall, or whether or not the plaintiff thought the credit of defendant Timmons, with whom it did not contract, would be good for a load of brick, or whether or not Mr. Green and Mrs. Timmons tried to make settlement, or whether or not four of defendant Timmons’ attorneys became friendly with defendant Green, or whether or not the hundred and one other improper and incompetent and prejudicial statements made by defendant Timmons were or were not true— whether any of these matters happened or did not happen, was wholly immaterial,. incompetent and irrele[313]*313vant and highly prejudicial to the plaintiff’s rights in this case.”

Further defendant, over the objection of plaintiff, was allowed to show that the contractor estimated the total cost of the brick for the building would not exceed $300 and, consequently, that he bought brick of the value of $58.80 in excess of the quantity actually needed and used. There is no evidence tending to connect plaintiff with such asserted wrong and when all the evidence is analyzed, it affords scant foundation for the charge against the contractor. The dimensions of the brick walls show that not less than 43,350' bricks would be required in their construction; plaintiff sold and delivered 43,600, about 250 in excess of the number actually incorporated in the walls.

It appears that through an error of the contractor one of the walls was built over on the neighboring lot and had to be torn down and rebuilt. Defendant claims that in tearing it down the employees of the contractor through carelessness broke more brick than should have been broken. The brick taken down were piled on the floor and were rained on and made so heavy that the floor gave way and dumped them into the cellar. More bricks were broken in this mishap and rendered unfit for use. The result was that neighbors built backyard walks out of brickbats for which plaintiff would have a lien against defendant’s property. The evidence of defendant in support of these charges against the contractor and his servants is not strong or convincing while the evidence of plaintiff that no more bricks were bought than were required to build the walls, taking into consideration the usual and unavoidable wastage, is most convincing. But conceding that defendant’s evidence on this subject is substantial, still it is certain that plaintiff did not participate in or know of any such misconduct on the part of the contractor, but in good faith furnished the ma[314]*314terial in the reasonable belief that all of it would be consumed in the improvement.

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.W. 250, 177 Mo. App. 308, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hydraulic-press-brick-co-v-green-moctapp-1914.