Lena Lumber Co. v. Brickhouse

292 S.W. 1007, 173 Ark. 348, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 207
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 21, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 292 S.W. 1007 (Lena Lumber Co. v. Brickhouse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lena Lumber Co. v. Brickhouse, 292 S.W. 1007, 173 Ark. 348, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 207 (Ark. 1927).

Opinions

On March 7, 1923, appellee, W. W. Brickhouse, being the owner of a certain lot at 1915 Izard Street, in the city of Little Rock, employed J. H. Levillian, a local building contractor, to build for him an eight-room brick veneer residence thereon, according to *Page 349 certain plans and specifications made by Ray Burks, architect, and to furnish and supply all labor and materials therefor, for the contract price of $6,000. The contract between them is in writing, and it provides that the payments thereon shall be made "on certificates of superintendent, from time to time as the work progresses, to-wit, 80 per cent. of the estimated value of same, subject to additions and reduction as hereinafter provided. Said 80 per cent. to be paid as the work progresses on said residence, and the remainder on satisfactory completion and acceptance of the entire work, after the expiration of ten days." The following clause, written in the contract between them, was stricken out before the contract was signed. "It is agreed by the parties that ___ per cent. of the contract price shall be held by the owner as security for the faithful completion of the work, and may be applied, under the direction of the superintendent, in the liquidation of any damages under this contract; furnishing to the owner a release from any liens or right of lien, also a sworn statement, as required by law, before commencing work on this contract, and hereby acknowledges receipt of notice to furnish same."

Appellee Brickhouse required Levillian to give a bond to complete the house according to the plans and specifications and in accordance with said written contract, and, on the same date, the appellant, National Surety Company, became surety on Levillian's bond, binding itself unto Brickhouse "(as well as to the persons who may become entitled to liens under the contract hereinbefore mentioned), in the sum of $6,000, * * * to be paid to the said W. W. Brickhouse, and to said parties who may be entitled to liens," etc. Said bond is conditioned for the due performance by Levillian of all the "covenants, conditions, and agreements" in said contract, "and shall duly and promptly pay and discharge all indebtedness that may be incurred by said J. H. Levillian in carrying out the said contract, and complete same free from all mechanics' liens, * * * as *Page 350 well as all costs, including attorney's fees, in enforcing the payment and collection of any and all indebtedness incurred by said J. H. Levillian in carrying out said contract." Another clause in said bond is as follows: "This bond is made for the use and benefit of all persons who may become entitled to liens under said contract, according to provisions of law in such cases made and provided, and may be sued upon by them as if executed to them in proper person."

On the same date appellant, Lena Lumber Company, executed and delivered to appellee, National Surety Company, an indemnity agreement by which it agreed "to indemnify the company (National Surety Company) from and against any and all liability, loss, costs, damages, attorney's fees, and expenses of whatever kind or nature which the company may sustain or incur by reason or in consequence" of executing the bond for Levillian. The whole matter is based on the fact that Brickhouse wanted to build a house for $6,000 by contract with a bond. Levillian wanted the contract, but had to have help to make the bond. The Lena Lumber Company wanted to sell the lumber and millwork, and agreed to indemnify the surety company on the bond to get this contract from Levillian, and so it was done to the satisfaction of all concerned.

Construction work was begun, and, on July 9, 1923, the house was completed, and appellee and his family moved into it on July 10. Shortly thereafter his troubles began. Various material furnishers, within the time limited by law, served notices of their claims on him and thereafter filed affidavits for liens, with their accounts attached, in the proper office. It was agreed by counsel, in open court, that, up to and including September 25, 1923, appellee Brickhouse had paid out for labor and material $6,085.62, $85.62 in excess of the original contract price.

On October 1, 1923, appellant, Lena Lumber Company, brought suit in the Pulaski Chancery Court, alleging that it had furnished to Levillian for said house *Page 351 lumber and other building material amounting to $1,801.84; that it had been paid $1,300, leaving a balance due it of $501.84, for which it asked judgment, and that same be declared a lien on said property. The various lienors filed interventions in said suit for the amounts due them. Appellees, in due time, filed an answer, later an amended answer and cross-complaint, against Lena Lumber Company, and still later an amended cross-complaint against both appellants, Lena Lumber Company and National Surety Company, and still later a substitute for amended answer and cross-complaint, setting out the bond hereinbefore mentioned, and alleging that, after the completion of the house, and after he had paid the contract price of $6,000, liens had been filed amounting to $2,300, which Levillian and the surety company had failed and refused to pay, for which he prayed judgment, for all costs and attorney's fees.

The court entered its decreed as follows:

1. In favor of Lena Lumber Company against Levillian and costs, and its complaint as to all other parties dismissed for want of equity .................................... $501.80

2. In favor of Brickhouse against the surety company for amounts paid by Brickhouse to settle liens of Crabb Electric Company ......... $ 50.00 Little Rock Paint Wallpaper Co. 130.00 Gregg Hardware Co. ............. 36.85 Bracy Bros. Hardware Co. ....... 145.00 Attorney's fee taxed by court in this cause ..................... 150.00 511.85

3. In favor of interveners who are decreed to have a lien on Brickhouse property against the surety company, as follows: R. A. Thiemie .................. 434.12 Henry-Johnson Co. .............. 84.90 D. W. Dwiggins Co. ........... 81.00 Stuart Roofing Co. ............. 66.50 Arkansas Brick Tile Co. ...... 396.22 1,062.74 *Page 352

4. In favor of Bracy Bros. Hardware Co; against Brickhouse for extras ...... 198.50

5. In favor of surety company against Lena Lumber Co. on its indemnity contract, which included the $150 attorney's fee allowed Brickhouse against it .............. 1,724.59

6. In favor of Lena Lumber Co. against Levillian, including the $501.86 awarded it under item 1, the total sum of ..... 2,024.59

(This was an error. The total amount should be $2,076.39).

From the decree against them as aforesaid, the National Surety Company and the Lena Lumber Company have appealed to this court.

There is no dispute about the correctness of the items due to the holders of liens or the lienable items paid by Brickhouse. Counsel for Lena Lumber Company feel that the court should have given it a lien for the $501.80 balance due it by Levillian, but, under the view we take of this case, if the bond is valid, it would be immaterial, for, as indemnitor for the surety, it would have to pay its own claim.

Counsel for both appellants earnestly insist that appellee, Brickhouse, breached the contract by paying to the contractor the full contract price without retaining 20 per cent. thereof, as they claim the contract requires. The germane provisions of the contract have already been set out, and we will not repeat them. But that is exactly what the parties refused to put in their contract. By one paragraph of the written contract it was provided that "20 per cent.

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292 S.W. 1007, 173 Ark. 348, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lena-lumber-co-v-brickhouse-ark-1927.