Imse-Schilling Sash & Door Co. v. Kellems

179 S.W.2d 910, 237 Mo. App. 960, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 184
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 2, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 179 S.W.2d 910 (Imse-Schilling Sash & Door Co. v. Kellems) 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
Imse-Schilling Sash & Door Co. v. Kellems, 179 S.W.2d 910, 237 Mo. App. 960, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 184 (Mo. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinions

This is a proceeding by writ of error to review the record and proceedings of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis in an equitable mechanic's lien suit which was prosecuted in said court for the purpose of determining, establishing, and enforcing the various rights, interests, and liens of the respective lien claimants, owners, and other parties in interest in and against certain contiguous lots and the improvements thereon known as 2343-45 Madison Street in the City of St. Louis.

It appears from the decree that in September, 1927, the original owners of the property, Clarence J. Hicks and Pearl Hicks, his wife, executed a deed of trust upon the property in favor of one Viola Dawes, who later married and is now known as Viola Dawes Kellems. Patrick J. Slattery was named as trustee in the deed of trust, which was apparently given to secure a building loan. Subsequently the record title to the property was transferred to Viola Dawes, whereupon, according to the court's decree, the entire title became merged in her, and the deed of trust became a nullity.

The court further found that Clarence J. Hicks, Pearl Hicks, and Viola Dawes, as owners of the property, entered into a contract with Paul R. Kerzel as original contractor for the making of certain improvements upon the property. Thereafter, at Kerzel's special instance and request, labor and materials which entered into the improvements were furnished, respectively, by Imse-Schilling Sash and Door Company and Charles P. Koehler.

Within due time after their respective accounts had accrued, liens were filed by Kerzel, Koehler, and Imse-Schilling Sash and Door Company; and on April 16, 1931, prior to the bringing of the equitable suit involved in this proceeding, Koehler instituted an independent suit for the establishment and enforcement of his separate lien.

On June 13, 1931, approximately two months after the institution of Koehler's independent suit, and within ninety days after the filing of its lien, Imse-Schilling Sash and Door Company commenced an equitable mechanic's lien suit for the determination, adjudication, and enforcement of the rights of all interested parties in such single suit. Clarence J. Hicks, Pearl Hicks, Viola Dawes, Patrick J. Slattery, Paul R. Kerzel, and Charles P. Koehler, were all named as defendants in said suit; and personal service in said suit was eventually obtained upon all of such defendants except Pearl Hicks and Viola Dawes.

On July 21, 1931, which was within ninety days after the filing of his lien, and was two days before the service of summons upon him in the then pending Imse-Schilling Sash and Door Company suit, Kerzel likewise commenced an equitable mechanic's lien suit for the determination, adjudication, and enforcement of the same liens, rights, and interests as were involved in the Imse-Schilling Sash and Door *Page 964 Company suit. Clarence J. Hicks, Pearl Hicks, Viola Dawes, Patrick J. Slattery, Charles P. Koehler, and Imse-Schilling Sash and Door Company were all named as defendants in Kerzel's suit; and personal service in said suit was obtained on all of such defendants except Pearl Hicks, as to whom an order of dismissal was subsequently entered in the final submission to the court.

Of the facts we have noted respecting the institution of the two equitable suits and the service obtained upon the several defendants therein, there are two circumstances to be kept particularly in mind for whatever their legal significance may be — the first, that while the Imse-Schilling Sash and Door Company suit was concededly pending at the time of the institution of Kerzel's suit, Kerzel had not been served with process as a defendant in the Imse-Schilling Sash and Door Company suit at the time of the commencement of his own suit; and the second, that Viola Dawes was only served in Kerzel's suit, and not in the Imse-Schilling Sash and Door Company suit, which was the first to be instituted in point of time.

It will be recalled that Koehler had instituted his independent mechanic's lien suit on April 16, 1931, long before the bringing of either of the equitable suits; and on July 21, 1931, the very day that Kerzel's suit was instituted, Koehler entered his appearance in such suit, and filed his answer and cross-bill therein for the adjudication and enforcement of his lien. It appears, incidentally, that he and Kerzel were represented by the same attorneys, which may explain why his cross bill was filed in Kerzel's suit rather than in the pending Imse-Schilling Sash and Door Company's suit, in which, as a matter of fact, he had been served with process as a party defendant five days before the entry of his appearance in Kerzel's suit.

On August 7, 1931, Kerzel filed a motion in the Imse-Schilling Sash and Door Company suit in which he asked that the two equitable suits be consolidated so that all the identical matters embraced in the two suits might be determined in one proceeding. On January 9, 1940, more than eight years later, said motion was taken up and sustained by the court and an order entered that the two suits be consolidated under the number previously given the Imse-Schilling Sash and Door Company suit.

On November 27, 1942, the court entered its decree in the consolidated cause, in which it recited that Imse-Schilling Sash and Door Company, Kerzel, and Koehler had all appeared in person and by counsel; that the suit had been dismissed as to Pearl Hicks; and that Clarence J. Hicks, Patrick J. Slattery, and Viola Dawes had made default. Each of the liens was sustained, all for an amount within the pecuniary jurisdiction of this court, and with a direction that the amounts due Koehler and Imse-Schilling Sash and Door Company be satisfied out of the judgment in favor of Kerzel, with any residue, after the satisfaction of all the liens, to be paid to Viola Dawes. *Page 965

So matters stood until November 26, 1943, when this court, upon the application of Viola Dawes, Patrick J. Slattery, and Clarence J. Hicks, ordered a writ of error to issue upon such decree to the end that the record and proceedings in the cause might be reviewed and any error corrected.

The chief controversy between the parties goes to the question of whether Viola Dawes was propertly before the court as a party defendant in the case so as to be bound by the final decree establishing the several mechanic's liens against the property in which the court found that she had become vested with the entire estate upon the merger of her beneficial interest under the deed of trust with the legal title transferred to her by Clarence J. Hicks and Pearl Hicks, the former owners of the property. It is not denied that she was a necessary party in the case; nor is there any pretense that if she was not legally before the court, her interest is not affected by the adjudication of the liens.

It will be once again recalled that Viola Dawes was only served in Kerzel's suit, and not in the prior suit brought by Imse-Schilling Sash and Door Company, so that, in the final analysis, the question of whether she was legally before the court so as to be bound by its decree depends upon whether or not Kerzel's suit had legal status and effect. If so, then having been served with process in such suit, she was unquestionably before the court by virtue of the order of consolidation which was entered before the trial.

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.W.2d 910, 237 Mo. App. 960, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/imse-schilling-sash-door-co-v-kellems-moctapp-1944.