Jordan v. Natrona Lumber Co.

75 P.2d 378, 52 Wyo. 393, 1938 Wyo. LEXIS 34
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1938
Docket2035
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 75 P.2d 378 (Jordan v. Natrona Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jordan v. Natrona Lumber Co., 75 P.2d 378, 52 Wyo. 393, 1938 Wyo. LEXIS 34 (Wyo. 1938).

Opinion

*399 Riner, Justice.

This case brings before the court questions arising upon the record in a mechanic’s lien foreclosure suit under the provisions of Chapter 66, W. R. S. 1931. The defendant in error, Natrona Lumber Company, hereinafter usually mentioned as the “Lumber Company” was plaintiff in that suit in the district court of Na-trona County, and the plaintiff in error, Michael P. Jordan, for convenience subsequently referred to at times as the “owner” or “lessor,” was a defendant, together with other persons who are not parties to this proceeding in error. The district court aforesaid entered a judgment foreclosing a mechanic’s lien claim in plaintiff’s favor upon certain real estate owned by Jordan, and he, alleging error, asks its reversal. The material facts are very little in dispute and appear to be these:

During part of the year 1920 and at all times since then, Jordan was, and now is, the owner of lots numbered 1 to 19 inclusive in Block numbered 6 in Burlington Addition to the City of Casper. There was located upon this property a brick building, which was of considerable size and which had been erected and used for a brewery in the pre-prohibition era. During the years 1920 until 1934 it had remained unoccupied except for the presence of a caretaker.

On January 27, 1934, the Wyoming Brewing and Distributing Company, a corporation organized under the laws of this state, as second party, which for brevity will be designated hereinafter as the “Brewing Company” or the “lessee,” through its “Manager and Authorized Agent,” one A. W. Thimmig, obtained from Jordan, as first party, a lease agreement covering the property above described, wherein it was agreed, *400 among other things, that the lessee should “hold said property and premises from date of this agreement until and including July 31st, 1934, upon and for the consideration in hand paid first party by second party, in advance, receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged by first party, of 120 shares of the capital stock of second party and upon the further consideration that second party shall, on or before February 28th, 1934, commence restoration of the Brewery Building upon said property and premises, to-wit: Installation of window panes where same now are missing, re-roofing of said Brewery Building and re-flooring of said Brewery Building, such restoration details to diligently continue until completed and in any case to be completed and accomplished during the aforesaid term of this lease.” This contract, through its provisions, also gave the lessee an option to purchase the property aforesaid within the term of the lease by making certain payments commencing on or before July 1, 1934, with the privilege, under certain circumstances, of renewing the lease and exercising the option on or before the first day of February, 1935, the time for and the amounts of the several payments to be made on account thereof being duly fixed. It was specifically required, however, by the instrument that the lessee should have no right to have this option to purchase extended for the ensuing six months after the original term of the lease, or “to exercise said option in the event it shall default the aforesaid requirement of restoration of said building.” The lessee also agreed thereby “that in case of any of the defaults above mentioned or in case of any other breach by it of this agreement that then and in such case it may be lawful for first party to declare the term hereof ended and recover the said premises or any part thereof with or without process of law.”

The Brewing Company being without any funds for the purpose and haste being necessary, Thimmig pro *401 posed to it that he do the restoration and reconditioning work on the building aforesaid, as required by the lease agreement above described. The lessee’s board of directors accordingly at a meeting held January 31, 1934, authorized a contract to that effect between Thimmig and it, and this agreement was put in written form and duly executed by the president of the Brewing Company and Thimmig on the date last mentioned. The latter thereby agreed to receive as compensation for his services in the matter shares of the capital stock of the lessee in such amount as he should earn, the stock to issue as of the value of $5.00 per share. Neither the aforesaid lease nor the subsequent agreement of the Brewing Company with Thimmig was ever placed of record in the office of the County Clerk of Natrona County, Wyoming. Thimmig seems to have been the original promoter of the entire business arrangement and scheme.

He shortly thereafter went to Ladbury, who was the Secretary-Treasurer of the Lumber Company, informed him that the Brewing Company had bought the property in question, and arranged for the purchase of materials for the improvements to be made. The repairs on the building aforesaid were thereafter accomplished to the extent of putting on a new roof, setting a large amount of glass to replace broken windows, installing a number of doors and putting in place needed flooring. The Lumber Company supplied these building materials as they were ordered by Thimmig and charged them on open account to the Brewing Company. The first item of this bill for materials furnished by the Lumber Company was delivered by it on February 19, 1934, and the last item on May 1st of that year. All the items thus ordered were delivered to the Brewing Company on the property above described. Thimmig during all this time and until April 7,1934, was the General Manager of the Brewing Com- *402 party. The Lumber Company appears never to have learned of the agreement between the Brewing Company and Thimmig, referred to above, until after its claim of lien was filed. The Brewing Company failed to comply with the terms of the lease agreement between it and Jordan, and the latter cancelled it towards the end of the year 1934, or in February, 1935. Thereafter the Brewing Company seems to have gone out of business and defaulted its license fee to the state in the year 1936.

The Lumber Company’s bill for materials remaining unpaid, it duly filed in the office of the County Clerk of Natrona County its claim of lien on August 23, 1934, against M. P. Jordan and the Brewing Company, in the sum of $926.44, with interest thereon from May 1, 1934, upon the premises hereinabove described. December 29, 1934, its suit to foreclose the lien was commenced by the Lumber Company against Jordan and his lessee, as well as some other defendants who claimed an interest in the property by virtue of asserted liens. The owner appeared and filed an answer in the form of a general denial. The lessee, however, made default, and such default was entered on the trial of the case, which resulted, as has been indicated, in a judgment of foreclosure of the Lumber Company’s lien claim against Jordan’s property, the amount found to be due at that time being $1,099.35, which amount it was also adjudged the Lumber Company was entitled to recover from the Brewing Company.

It is contended on behalf of Jordan that his rever-sionary interest in the property aforesaid cannot be charged with the lien claim by the Lumber Company on account of the materials it furnished the Brewing Company for improvements made by the latter upon his building, as it was required to do by the lease it held from him.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Casey William Hardison v. The State of Wyoming
2022 WY 45 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2022)
Redco Construction v. Profile Properties, LLC
2012 WY 24 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2012)
Greenwalt v. Ram Restaurant Corp. of Wyoming
2003 WY 77 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2003)
Weyerhaeuser Co. v. Walters
707 P.2d 733 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1985)
Tottenhoff v. Rocky Mountain Construction Co.
609 P.2d 464 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1980)
Schaefer v. Lampert Lumber Co.
591 P.2d 1225 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1979)
Engle v. First National Bank of Chugwater
590 P.2d 826 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1979)
American Buildings Co. v. Wheelers Stores
585 P.2d 845 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1978)
Anderson v. Sokolik
88 So. 2d 511 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1956)
Roberts v. Jeidy
42 N.W.2d 280 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1950)
Potts v. Miller
39 N.W.2d 667 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1949)
Riedesel v. Towne
206 P.2d 747 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1949)
Weed v. Horning
33 So. 2d 648 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1947)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 P.2d 378, 52 Wyo. 393, 1938 Wyo. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-natrona-lumber-co-wyo-1938.