Kahler v. Carruthers

45 S.W. 160, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 216, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 53
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 5, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 45 S.W. 160 (Kahler v. Carruthers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kahler v. Carruthers, 45 S.W. 160, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 216, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 53 (Tex. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

HUNTER, Associate Justice.

In this action the appellees, Samuel Carruthers, original plaintiff, and Gary & Smith, interveners, sought to foreclose the mechanic’s lien given by two certain contracts on a certain two-story brick house in Dallas, Texas, and the lot on which it was erected and which it covered, on Commerce Street, 42£ feet front by 200 feet deep. The suit was originally brought against the Security Mortgage and Trust Compan;', S. B. Hopkins, Mrs. J. B. Cowan, and W. J. Betterton, and during the pendency of the suit appellant H. A. Kahler was appointed receiver of the property of the said Security Mortgage and Trust Company, and thereupon was made a party defendant in the District Court.

The plaintiff alleged, in substance, that on the 15th day of September, 1891. J. B. Cowan, being then the owner of the lot upon which the building in question was erected, entered into a written contract with plaintiff, wherein he agreed to pay plaintiff $11,850, if he would furnish all material and erect a two-story stone and brick building on the lot aforesaid, according to certain plans and specifications designed and drawn by A. J. Armstrong, architect, who was agreed upon to superintend the work of construction and give certificate of completion according to contract when finished.

Plaintiff also alleged that soon after the signing of this contract it was-agreed between him and Cowan that Cowan should have the right to furnish the brick and stone and put up the walls of the building, and for this he was to have credit on the original contract price of $2660.80; that he completed the building according to his contract on the 21st of December, 1891, and the same was accepted by Cowan, and that after giving the credit aforesaid, there remained due him the sum of $9189.20, with legal interest from said last named date; that he had fixed his lien on the house and lot within four months, according to the statute, by filing and recording his contract in the office of the clerk of the County Court of Dallas County: that J. B. Cowan died on the 20th day of April, 1892, hopelessly insolvent, leaving Mrs. J. B. Cowan his surviving widow and *218 survivor in the community estate; that no administration was ever granted upon his estate, and none was necessary; that the Security Mortgage and Trust Company, S. B. Hopkins, and W. J. Betterton were claiming some title or interest to the lot and building, but that his lien was superior to said claim; that the lot was worth $5000, and the house thereon was worth $12,000; and prayed that if the court should determine that his lien on the house was superior to defendant’s, and his lien on the lot secondary and inferior, the relative values thereof be found, and that the same be sold together, and the proceeds be distributed in proportion to the respective claims of the parties.

The interveners, Gary & Smith, set up an original contract in substance the same as plaintiff’s, made with J. B. Cowan on the 16th day of September, 1891, whereby, in consideration of their furnishing all the material and erecting the walls of the building, Cowan agreed to pay them the sum of $3110, payments to he made every two weeks on account of pay roll and material, the remainder when the work was completed. They also pleaded substantially the same as the plaintiff, admitting credits in the aggregate sufficient to reduce the claim to $1476.34 at the day of completion, December 21, 1891. They also alleged the filing and recording of their contract within four months, according to the provisions of the statute, so as to fix and secure their lien for said amount on both lot and house; and their prayer was substantially the same as the plaintiff’s.

The defendants Mrs. J. B. Cowan and S. B. Hopkins answered by disclaiming all title and interest and claim to the property or any part thereof, praying judgment for their costs only.

The Security Mortgage and Trust Company and W. J. Betterton, who adopted its answer, as did also the said receiver, pleaded, among other things, a general denial, and that it held on March 1, 1892, two vendor’s lien notes, of. $10,000 each, against the lot upon which the building was erected, dated July 7, 1890, and secured by deed of trust of same date, with power of sale, and that J. B. Cowan when he bought said lot on the 22d of June, 1891, assumed to pay said notes; that on said March 1, 1892, said notes being due and unpaid, it caused said lot and building thereon to be sold by the trustee named in said deed of trust, and at said sale W. J. Betterton bought the same, and in payment thereof executed to it three notes of $5000 each, with mortgage on lot and building to secure said notes; that the house and lot were, at the time plaintiff’s and intervener’s contracts were signed, the business homestead of J. B. Cowan, and that his wife never signed said contracts as required by statute to fix a mechanic’s lien upon a homestead, and that consequently there was no mechanic’s lien fixed thereon; that Gary & Smith were subcontractors under Carruthers, who had a contract for the erection of the entire building, and had not filed their contract in time to fix a mechanic’s lien.

There were also several other issues raised by the pleadings and sub *219 mitted to the jury, which we consider now as immaterial to the proper disposition of this writ of error.

Special issues were submitted to the jury, and the court filed its conclusions of law, and rendered judgment and decree on the special findings of the jury establishing Carruther’s debt at $11,968.50, and Gary & Smith’s at $19.22.93, with mechanic’s liens of equal dignity, and foreclosing the same on the new building erected by them, which was valued at $10,800, establishing the title to the lot in Betterton and the mortgage company, valued at $6000, and the walls and vault of the old building on the lot valued at $1200, free from all claims and liens on the part of plaintiff and interveners. The decree further established that the building could not be removed from the lot without great loss and expense, and directed a sale of the house and lot as a whole, and distribution of the proceeds in proportion to the values fixed by the decree and the amount of the debts and liens as therein established, directing that three-fifths of the proceeds be divided between Carruthers and Gary & Smith, in the proportion that their respective debts bear to the said three-fifths, and that Betterton and the mortgage company receive the other two-fiftlis, the same to be paid into court, however, to be disposed of as between them as their interests might be established. Judgment was also rendered against Mrs. Cowan and Hopkins upon their disclaimers, and in their favor for costs. To review this judgment the Security Mortgage and Trust Company and W. J. Betterton have sued out this writ of error.

The facts, as disclosed by the record, are as follows:

1. On September 15, 1891, J. B. Cowan was the owner of the lot on which the building was erected, subject to the purchase money mortgage ■of $20,000 held by the Security Mortgage and Trust Company, and on that day entered into a written contract with Samuel Carruthers, by which Carruthers contracted to furnish all the material and labor and erect the two-story brick and stone building on the lot.

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Bluebook (online)
45 S.W. 160, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 216, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kahler-v-carruthers-texapp-1898.