Libbey v. Tidden

78 N.E. 313, 192 Mass. 175, 1906 Mass. LEXIS 925
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 19, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 78 N.E. 313 (Libbey v. Tidden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Libbey v. Tidden, 78 N.E. 313, 192 Mass. 175, 1906 Mass. LEXIS 925 (Mass. 1906).

Opinion

Hammond, J.

This is a petition to enforce a mechanic’s lien apon a lot of land in Brookline, upon which an apartment hotel known as Putnam Chambers has been erected. The petition as amended alleges that the work was done under a contract between the petitioners and the respondent Tidden, by the terms of which the petitioners were to furnish all labor and materials required for the erection and completion of the building, except the foundation, cut stone, gas piping, electric wiring, heating, plumbing and painting, for the sum of $71,000; that under this contract the petitioners proceeded to furnish labor and materials actually used in the construction of the building; that without their own fault they were prevented from fully performing the contract by reason of Tidden’s failure to perform his part, and that there is due to them a balance of $26,372.65, as shown in an account annexed, for which amount the lien is claimed.

An intervening petition was filed by Sheehan, alleging a contract between him and Tidden, by which Sheehan was to prepare plans and specifications and supervise the erection of the building for $2,500. The intervening petition contained allegations similar to those in the original petition as to the partial performance of the work and the prevention of its com[178]*178pletion, and as to the ownership of the property; and alleged that there was due as a reasonable compensation for the work done the sum of $975, for which amount a lien is claimed.

Tidden appeared, but filed no answer. The respondent Skinner filed an answer in which he denies generally the allegations of the petition, and alleges that on April 2,1902, the date of the contract described in the amended petition, Tidden was not the owner of the premises, and did not have any right, title or interest in or to the same until April 14,1902, on which day the owner conveyed to him and at the same time and as a part of the same transaction he mortgaged the premises to the Massachusetts Title Insurance Company for the sum of $80,000, and that both the deed and mortgage were recorded together, so that Tidden had only an instantaneous seizure of the land ; that the mortgage was duly foreclosed and that Skinner purchased at the foreclosure sale, and is now the owner free from all liens which may have accrued subsequent to the mortgage. The answer further alleges that at no time before the recording of the mortgage did the petitioner make any contract with the owner, or any person having authority from him ; that his labor and materials were not performed or furnished by virtue of any agreement with or by the consent of the owner or any person having authority from him before the date of the mortgage, and that no notice was given to the owner before the date of the mortgage. A similar answer to the intervening petition also was filed by Skinner.

The case was referred to an auditor. At the trial in the Superior Court the case was heard by a judge sitting without a jury, the only evidence being the report of the auditor together with nine exhibits. The judge found for the original petitioners for the amount claimed, and for Sheehan in the sum of $800; and ordered that liens be established for these respective sums. The case is before us upon certain exceptions alleged by the respondent Skinner to the findings of fact made by the judge, and to the orders establishing the liens as well as to certain rulings and refusals to rule. In considering the case the term “ petitioners ” will be used to designate only Libbey and Dixon, the original petitioners. Sheehan, as hereinbefore seen, is an intervening petitioner.

[179]*1791. As to the contract: One of the grounds of the defence is that the contract under which the petitioners claim was not made until after the mortgage under which Skinner held. As to this the judge found that, on April 11, 1902, a contract was made between Tidden and the petitioners Libbey and Dixon, “ whereby the firm was to furnish labor and materials necessary to construct the mason work, carpenter work and roofing of” the building “ for the entire price of $71,000. The amounts and times of payments were not agreed upon, but it was agreed in a general way that they were to be made as the floors went on. It was also agreed that Libbey and Dixon were to have later what is known as a ‘ uniform contract,’ being the form, of contract adopted and recommended for general use by the American Institute of Architects and the National Association of Builders. The ‘ uniform contract ’ was given on August 2, 1902, but that instrument did not in any essential particular alter the existing contract of April 11, and was an affirmation of it and not a substitute for it.”

The respondent contends that the above findings are not warranted by the evidence. Inasmuch as the only evidence was the auditor’s report and the exhibits, this point must be decided by an inspection of the report. Upon this question the auditor reports as follows:

“ On April 2, 1902, Tidden and Libbey went to the Putnam lot and had a conversation in regard to the building which Tidden said he was intending to erect upon it, in the course of which Tidden told Libbey that he wished him to see Sheehan and then give him, Tidden, an estimate of the cost of such a building. [Another] building known as Stearns Chambers was then under construction just across the street, and Libbey and Dixon were the contractors and Sheehan was the architect. Libbey went to see Sheehan, got the plans and made figures on the cost, and on April 10 or 11 gave Tidden an estimate of $150,000. Tidden then asked him what he would do the mason work, the carpenter work and the roofing for, and Libbey said he would do it for $71,000, to which Tidden replied, ‘ All right, I will give you the contract.’ The amounts and times of payments were not agreed upon, but it was agreed in a general way that they were to be made as the floors went on. It was [180]*180also agreed that Libbey and Dixon were to have later what is known as a ‘ uniform contract,’ being the form of contract adopted and recommended for general use by the American Institute of Architects and the National Association of Builders. On April 12, Libbey went to the lot and drove some stakes to indicate where the excavation for the cellar was to be made, and during the time from April 2 to that date he had frequent interviews with Tidden in regard to the building. The first item in his statement of account is a charge of $80 covering these ten days at $8 a day and including the wages of his son and another young man who went to the lot with him and helped him drive the stakes. He did nothing else in reference to the building until June 21, when he sent two carpenters there to put up the permanent batter-boards. On July 16, and on five other days in that month he laid thirty-five thousand brick in the building of cross walls in the cellar, at an estimated cost of $700, the mortar being taken from the mortar beds at the Stearns Chambers job. On August 2 the written contract was signed, and it appears in evidence as ‘ Exhibit 1.’ Mr. Libbey said that there was no particular reason why it was not signed before, although he had spoken to Tidden frequently in regard to it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 N.E. 313, 192 Mass. 175, 1906 Mass. LEXIS 925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/libbey-v-tidden-mass-1906.