Leach v. Bopp

12 S.W.2d 512, 223 Mo. App. 254, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 145
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 9, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 12 S.W.2d 512 (Leach v. Bopp) 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
Leach v. Bopp, 12 S.W.2d 512, 223 Mo. App. 254, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 145 (Mo. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

*256 DAUES, P. J.

This is a suit in equity, authorized by statute, in which plaintiffs, as the owners of certain real estate, brought in mechanics’ lien claims against such real estate to determine their respective rights. The court on its own motion appointed a referee to try the issues of law and the facts. It seems, however, that section 7245, Revised Statutes Missouri 1919, forbids that a referee be appointed on the court’s own motion when the case is brought under the equity statute. [See Johnston v. Pump Co., 274 Mo. 414, 202 S. W. 1143.] The referee passed on the objections to the introduction and exclusion of evidence. Some of the claims were adjusted by compromise, leaving for ultimate determination the lien claims of certain subcontractors, who are appellants here, and the l'ights of plaintiffs and defendants regarding the form of the judgment. Appellants’ separate appeals were consolidated.

Plaintiffs owned a residence in St. Louis county. Stix, Baer & Fuller Dry Goods Company, a corporation, had a contract with the owners for the rempdeling and redecorating of the buildings. Plans and specifications were drawn and the cost of the whole undertaking was contracted for at $7400. After the Stix company entered into the contract, it sublet some of the work to Theodore Bopp, Sr., who, in turn, secured subcontractors for the different work, among them being appellants. When the work was completed by Bopp and his subcontractors, the owners refused to pay on the ground, among other, that the work was defective. Then the Stix company, the general contractor, filed its mechanic’s lien for approximately $6000, the balance claimed as due from the owners. Plaintiffs then brought this equity suit to bring the various mechanic’s lien claimants into court in order to have all the liens adjudicated in one suit. When *257 these claims were asserted, plaintiffs denied defendants’ right to a lien. It appears that the Stix company compromised its claim, and we therefore address ourselves to the result reached as to the appellants here.

The referee found, and the court approved, first, that defendant Rothmeier receive a judgment against the defendant Theodore Bopp, Sr., in the sum-of $337.70 with interest, but that the lien be denied, and found against plaintiffs on their counterclaim.

The claim of defendant Emil Bopp is for painting work and materials furnished under contract with the general contractor, Theodore B'opp, Sr., in one count; another count is for work and labor under an agreement direct with the owners. The referee found under the first count that the lien account was not properly separated and stated and therefore was not lienable; that the evidence showed that same was not a just and true account between the parties. The referee recommended a judgment in favor of Emil Bopp as against defendant Theodore Bopp, Sr., on this count for the sum of $1264.49 with interest. On the second count, being for $201.15, the referee found that the items were fatally intermingled, and, further, that the account was not true and correct, and found ’in favor of plaintiffs, the owners, on this count.

As to Walter T. Bopp, there were three liens filed. The first was for labor and material furnished under his contract with Theodore Bopp, Si\; the second was a lien claim for work and labor under an agreement direct with the plaintiffs, and the third was for labor and materials furnished under a contract with Theodore Bopp, Sr. The liens were denied, however the referee recommended a judgment in favor of this defendant against the contractor, Theodore Bopp, Sr., for the work done under contract with said Theodore Bopp, Sr.

This, briefly, recites the finding of the referee in so far as the issues here are concerned and which the court approved and vitalized in the judgment. The record is extremely lengthy and involved. We will discuss the pertinent portions thereof in the course of the opinion.

The record disclosed that the case was tried below by the referee in seeming apprehension that a trial for the establishment of a mechanic’s lien presents unusual technicalities and niceties.

As we read the statutes and decisions' on mechanic’s liens, we see no fearsome involvement, and certainly the trial procedure is no more intricate than in an ordinary case. Section 7227, Revised ■Statutes Missouri 1919, provides that “the court shall ascertain, by a fair trial in the usual way, the amount of the indebtedness for which the lien is prosecuted.”

*258 It was the early view (see Edgar v. Salisburg, et al., 17 Mo. 271, and Blakey v. Blakey, 27 Mo. 39), that we should construe the mechanic’s lien law strictly, since the statute was in derrogation of the common law. However, now the directly opposite view is taken by subsequent decisions of our Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal. It is now firmly settled that these statutes should be liberally construed. A full review of the cases showing this change is set forth in Carroll Contracting Co. v. Newsome, 201 Mo. App. 117, 210 S. W. 114. That case further attempted to clarify by unequivocably establishing, what we think to be the correct rule, that a subcontractor m^ay make lienable charges for superintendence charges, and while in that case the charges were for superintendence of a subcontractor which was a corporation, we entertain no doubt that where such contractor is not a corporation, charges for superintendence are lienable items. We have recently ruled in Fagan v. Brock Motor Car Co., 282 S. W. 135, that commissions charged for superintendence, planning and engineering made in a lump sum, where such item was denominated in the contract, were lienable. There can be no doubt that a charge for superintendence or “overhead” is a service entering into the construction of a building which is lienable, and where the suit is on quantum meriut, the issue arises whether the service was rendered and its reasonableness. Such charges need not be set out and applied to each .item of material and labor.

In Mercantile Co. v. Investment Co., 100 Kan. 597, the Supreme Court of that State pointedly ruled that a “profit” of twenty per cent to actual cost could be added by the material men.

Again, after much prior confusion, it is now firmly settled in State ex rel. v. Reynolds, 232 S. W. 1035, that where a definite price has been agreed upon between contractor and owner for a completed structure, the contractor’s lien statement need not set out the items of various materials furnished and the labor performed in complying with such contract. A statement of the making of such-contract and its performance is sufficient. [McCarthy Lbr. & Const. Co. v. Kinder et al., 206 Mo. App. 287, 225 S. W. 1024.]

With this clarification, we will consider the claims of Fred Rothmeier, Emil Bopp and Walter T. Bopp separately.

As to Rothmeier, the referee held that the ledger kept by this defendant was not admissible for the reason that the entries in the book were taken from memoranda slips of time of the men made by som,e one of the men on the job, and that the entries as to materials were made up from bills and tickets.

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.W.2d 512, 223 Mo. App. 254, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leach-v-bopp-moctapp-1929.