Lord Lumber & Fuel Co. v. Hancock

278 Ill. App. 497, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 307
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 10, 1935
DocketGen. No. 8,872
StatusPublished

This text of 278 Ill. App. 497 (Lord Lumber & Fuel Co. v. Hancock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lord Lumber & Fuel Co. v. Hancock, 278 Ill. App. 497, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 307 (Ill. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dove

delivered the opinion of the court.

On May 7, 1927, appellant filed an action at law in the circuit court of DuPage county, making R. G. Hancock, 1ST. F. Grey as trustee, Theo. Wliaples, as trustee, E. M. Pray and unknown owners, defendants. The declaration was in assumpsit and alleged that the plaintiff as subcontractor furnished materials, a list of which was attached to the declaration, of the value of $1,120.22 for the defendant R. G. Hancock, as contractor, to be used and which were used in the construction and improvement of a building located on Lot Thirty-six (36), Block Eighteen (18), Clarendon Hills in the east half of section Ten (10) and the west half of section Eleven (11), Town Thirty-eight (38), North, Range Eleven (11) in DuPage County, Illinois, for N. F. Grey, as trustée, Theo. Whaples, as trustee, E. M. Pray and unknown owners, as owners of said land; that thereafter and within 60 days after the completion of the furnishing of said materials and on March 10, 1927, plaintiff caused a written notice of its claim for a lien and the amount due it to be served on the said owner and owners, a copy of which notice was attached to the declaration; that the amount due plaintiff, as subcontractor, was not paid within 10 days after service of said notice and is now due and unpaid and that this suit was commenced to enforce said lien within four months after the time the final payment was due. A summons was thereupon issued which was returned on June 13, 1927, by the sheriff of DuPage county, showing that none of the defendants was found in that county.

On May 10, 1927, five other suits at law were instituted by appellant against the same defendants, the declarations being substantially the same except as to the amount of the claim and the description of the property and materials furnished. Summonses were issued in each of these cases and likewise returned on June 13, 1927, not found. In each case an alias summons was issued on June 24, 1930, which was served on defendant Grey by the sheriff of Cook county on July 3, 1930, and on defendant, Pray, on July 8, 1930, by the sheriff of Cook county. Demurrers having been sustained to the several declarations, amended declarations were filed on September 8,1930. In the case filed May 7, 1927, an order was entered on November 14, 1930, dismissing the suit as to Grey, trustee, Whaples, trustee, and unknown owners and in all the cases a motion was made on November 17, 1930, to transfer the cause to the chancery docket and on December 6, 1930, this was done and leave granted the plaintiff to make G. M. Grounds or any other persons who may have an interest in the subject matter, additional parties defendant. On December 10, 1930, an order was entered consolidating the causes and directing that the issues be tried at the sanie time. On that day there was also filed in the consolidated cause a petition for mechanic’s lien, making Hancock, Pray, trustee, Whaples, trustee, Grey, trustee, “Unknown Owners,” G. M. Grounds, W. Scott Hodges, H. M. Bohlander and John S. Phipps, Henry O. Phipps and Howard Phipps, trustees, under a trust agreement dated December 31,1920, and known as the Phipps Industrial Land Trust, all parties defendant. This petition, after reciting the institution of the several common law actions, represented that Hancock had a contract, with the owner of the premises described in the petition, to build dwellings thereon, that petitioner was a dealer in lumber and building materials and that on or about July 10,1926, petitioner entered into an oral contract with Hancock to furnish the necessary lumber and materials with which said dwellings were to be constructed, that the premises upon which the dwellings were constructed were owned in fee by John S., Henry C. and Howard Phipps, as trustees, that the materials were furnished in pursuance to the contract between Hancock and petitioner, the-last deliver^ -thereof being on or about Januáry 15, 1927, and the amount unpaid and due petitioner being $6,711.97 and that claims for liens were duly filed on March 9, 1927, in the office of the circuit court of Du-Page county. The allegation with reference to Grounds, Pray, trustee, Whaples, trustee, Grey, trustee, Bohlander, Hodges and unknown owners was that they claimed some interest in the premises, but whatever interests they had accrued since the lien of petitioner and was subject thereto. Hancock, Grounds, Pray and unknown owners defaulted, answers were .filed by the other defendants and the cause referred to the master, who found that Hancock was a contractor and had a contract with John S., Henry C. and Howard Phipps as trustees, to erect dwellings upon the premises in question; that appellant furnished Hancock the materials therefor and that the last material was furnished on February 15, 1927, and that appellant became vested with a materialman’s lien upon the premises as a subcontractor for the respective amounts found due.appellant. The master further found as a proposition of law that a suit at law could only be maintained by a subcontractor against the owner and contractor jointly and that the joinder by appellant of parties other than the contractor and owner was unauthorized; that by sustaining a demurrer to the original declarations the court in effect held that no cause of action was alleged in the original declarations and that the amended declarations were filed more than four months and more than two years after the last delivery of materials by appellant and suit was therefore not brought within the limit of time in which subcontractors may institute suit; that appellant’s petition for a lien cannot be sustained because it was filed more than two years after the delivery of the last materials and each of said causes ceased to be Us pendens six months after May 7, and May 10,1927, respectively, because of the failure of appellant to give defendants •notice within six months after the several causes were instituted. The master recommended a dismissal of the petition and the chancellor, after overruling exceptions to the master’s report, rendered a decree dismissing the petition for want of equity and from that decree appellant has prosecuted this appeal.

Appellees’ counsel insist that appellant was a contractor and not a subcontractor, and therefore regardless of other questions presented by the record, the decree should be affirmed. The master found that appellant was a subcontractor and the evidence in this record which sustains his finding is that in July, 1926, the premises involved in this proceeding were owned by John S., Henry O. and Howard Phipps, as trustees. On July 26,1926, the premises were conveyed by a deed of that date recorded August 31, 1926, to George M. Grounds, who by a conveyance dated October 12, 1926, recorded on November 10, 1926, conveyed them to Erwin M. Pray, trustee, who continued to be the owner of record until after the last material was delivered by appellant. While Grounds was the owner thereof, he incumbered them by executing a senior trust deed to Newton F. Grey, trustee, and a junior trust deed to Theodore Whaples, trustee. On April 1,1926, John S., Henry O. and Howard Phipps, as trustees, the then owners of the record title to these premises, entered into contracts of sale with Raymond G. Hancock for these premises. These contracts were never recorded, but were assigned to Grounds, who' in pursuance thereof received a deed to the premises from the Phipps trustees on July 26, 1926. Ralph G.

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Bluebook (online)
278 Ill. App. 497, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lord-lumber-fuel-co-v-hancock-illappct-1935.