Jodd v. Duncan

9 Mo. App. 417, 1880 Mo. App. LEXIS 158
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 9 Mo. App. 417 (Jodd v. Duncan) 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
Jodd v. Duncan, 9 Mo. App. 417, 1880 Mo. App. LEXIS 158 (Mo. Ct. App. 1880).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action by contractor against owner, to establish a mechanic’s lien. The petition alleges that defendants Dentman and Ibers claim an interest in th? premises, adverse to defendant Duncan, with whom, as owner, the contract was made.

[419]*419There was a default as to Duncan. Defendants Dentman and Ibers deny generally all the allegations of the petition. They specifically deny that Duncan ever owned the premises described, and that he had any right or permission to erect any building thereon ; they further say that the work was done under a written contract, the terms of which were not complied with. Plaintiffs reply that there was a waiver of the terms of the contract; that Duncan knowingly accepted the work and materials, and that the same was of value to him. They claim their reasonable value.

Judgment was rendered against Duncan, and that the claim is a lien upon the building desci'ibed. .

It appeared from the testimony that one Henry Doering owned a lot of ground in St. Louis, on which he had borrowed money, secured by a deed of trust. After the execution of the deed of trust, he made an agreement with defendant Duncan to sell him the lot for $2,282, of which $10 was paid in cash, and the remainder was to be paid in sixty days. This agreement was dated July 9, 1877'. A .warranty deed was to be delivered on payment of the purchase-money, and in default the agreement was to be void, the $10 paid was to be forfeited, and Duncan to be liable to Doering for all the damages sustained by non-fulfilment of the agreement.

Under this agreement Duncan went into possession. On August 8, 1877, Duncan contracted in writing with plaintiffs for the brick and stone work of a building which he proposed to erect on the premises. This brick and stone work was to be done according to certain plans and specifications drawn by the architect. The price agreed upon was $1,095 ; the work to be completed on October 1, 1877. This agreement was signed by Duncan and his mother. Before beginning the work, plaintiffs had a conversation with Doering, in which he told them that Duncan did not own the lot, but had an agreement for a conveyance on paying the purchase-money. Plaintiffs said to Doering that. Duncan’s mother had property in Illinois, and that they [420]*420thought they would be all right. Plaintiffs then proceeded to do the brick and stone work, with the knowledge of, and without any opposition from Doering. Almost all the work was done by October 30, 1877. Some'of the brickwork then remained unfinished, because defendants Dent-man and Ibers, who had the contract for the carpenter-work, had the plans and specifications, and neglected to go on with their work. This occasioned an interval of four months, during which no brick-work was done. The last brick-work was done on March 23, 1878, and the lien was filed on September 14, 1878. On May 2,1878, the deed of trust of Doering was foreclosed ; and the property was purchased at that sale by one Plass, who, on August 1, 1878, conveyed the same to defendants Deutman and Ibers.

It is contended by appellants that, on this state of facts, Duncan was not the owner of the premises, and had no interest in them to which a lien could attach.

One who has entered into possession under a contract to purchase, and who has erected buildings, may be regarded as an owner within the meaning of the-mechanics’ lien law, and as such, might, under the law, bind his equitable Interest in the laud. If the contract to purchase the land was not carried out, the expectation of title would- fall; and the fact, that the owner knew that the building was being erected, and did not dissent, ought not to be construed into an assent that the land should be chargeable with the lien. Ph. on Liens,-sects. 69-72, and cases. The existing law under which this lien was filed provides, however (Rev. Stats, sect. 3174), that the lien shall attach to the buildings in preference to any prior Lien on the land, and any person enforcing such a lien may have such buildings or improvements sold, and the purchaser may remove the same within a reasonable time. Such purchaser gets, of course, no interest in the land. This right of enforcement is not confined to leasehold property, as has been expressly held in Kansas City Hotel Company v. Sauer, 65 Mo. 288. In every instance the improvements are regarded as the primary ob[421]*421jects which confer the lien, and the land is added thereto where it belongs to the owner or proprietor. It seems to have been the intention of the Legislature,- as is said by Judge Napton in Smith v. Phelps, 63 Mo. 588, to protect the title of the mechanic to a reimbursement for his expenditure in money or labor on the house he builds, by giving him a right to the house if all other means fail. We think that the contract in the present case, having been made by one who erected the buildings under a contract to purchase the land, was made with the owner, within the meaning of the law; and though under the evidence no lien could be established against the land, since the contract of purchase was not carried out, the lien upon the buildings was not therefore lost, and the mechanic, on obtaining his judgment, might have sold them under execution, the purchaser, if other than the owner of the land, being obliged to remove then within a resonable time. So, where land was sold under an encumbrance,: and subsequently sold under a mechanic’s lien for work begun subsequently to the orgin of the encumbrance, the first sale was held to release the land from the encumbrance of the mechanic’s lien ; but it was nevertheless held that the purchaser at the execution sale under the mechanics’ lien might have bought the erections free from all liens. Crandall v. Cooper, 62 Mo. 478. In earlier cases (Squires v. Fithian, 27 Mo. 234; Porter v. Tooke, 35 Mo. 107; Bridwell v. Clark, 39 Mo. 172) it was held that the contract must be' made with one having an estate in the land, and that one owning a mere equity of redemption could not make a contract with a mechanic or material-man that would give to a lien filed by a mechanic priority to .the mortgage or trust-deed. But these cases were decided under a different law from the one now under consideration; and if a legitimate conclusion from them is, that under the now existing law there can be no remedy by the material-man against the building in case he fails to establish a lien against the land, or that the remedy against the improvements alone is [422]*422given only in case of a lease, they are, so far, expressly disapproved by the Supreme Court in later cases. Kansas City Hotel Co. v. Sauer, supra.

The declaration in the present case is upon a quantum meruit or quantum valebant, and it is objected that, a written contract having been shown, there was a variance between the allegations and the proof, and that the court improperly admitted evidence, against the objection of appellants, as to the reasonable value of the work.

The lien is not created by contract, but by furnishing the materials and doing the work. In the present case there, was no claim for extra work, but the evidence was that the provision of the contract as to time was waived, and that there were some variations from the original-contract in immaterial particulars.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Mo. App. 417, 1880 Mo. App. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jodd-v-duncan-moctapp-1880.