Lunt v. Stephens

75 Ill. 507
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 75 Ill. 507 (Lunt v. Stephens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lunt v. Stephens, 75 Ill. 507 (Ill. 1874).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a proceeding instituted under the mechanics’ lien law. A brief history of the case will be necessary to a clear understanding of the questions of law raised. Petitioner claims, the acting and managing officers of the Balback Smelting and Befining Company, a corporation existing under the laws of this State, on the 10th day of August, 1871, employed ln'm to do all the work, and furnish all the materials for the erection and completion of the mason, stone and brick work on the premises in question, for the erection of its smelting and refining works, and the appurtenances thereto, in consideration of which the company agreed to pay him ten dollars per thousand for brick in the wall, and for all other materials furnished and work done as much as the same should be reasonably worth. Petitioner further alleges, that, in pursuance of that agreement, he did all the work, and furnished all the materials required of him by the company, in the construction of its works, and the appurtenances thereto, upon the grounds described; that he fully completed the same by the 10th day of July, 1872, and on that day he had an accounting with the company, and there was found due him, for work done and materials furnished, after allowing all payments, $2,768.25, which he insists is still due and unpaid, and that he is entitled to interest thereon.

Previous to August 1st, 1871, Lawson S. Warner and one Davenport owned the premises in equal shares, with the title in Warner’s name; and about that day they sold the same, by verbal contract, to the company, for the sum of $13,260, and agreed to take their pay in the stock of the company, at twenty cents on the dollar, leaving the legal title of the premises in Warner, for the sake of convenience, where it remained up to the 23d day of December, 1871, when he, together with his wife, at the request and by the direction of the company, gave a trust deed on the premises to John Baldwin, Jr., to secure Robert H. Walker in a loan of $10,000 to the company, it being understood by all the parties at the time, the land belonged to the company, and the loan was for its benefit.

On the 1st day of November, 1872, Baldwin, as trustee, by virtue of the power contained in the trust deed, sold the premises, and the same were bid in under the direction and for the benefit of appellant, for enough to pay the debt secured by the trust-deed, with the accrued interest and expenses of sale, he furnishing the money and shortly after receiving a deed of the premises, and now claims title under that sale. This suit was commenced previous to that sale, and all parties interested, including Lunt, had notice of its pendency, and that appellee claimed a mechanic’s lien upon the premises.

Baldwin and Walker, who were made defendants to the original bill, filed a joint answer, in which they set up prior liens on the premises; one, a mortgage, bearing date May 25, 1871, made by Warner to Giles Hubbard and Lewis Stone, to secure them in the sum of $4,700; and another, a trust deed, of date June 1,1871, made by Warner to John Baldwin, Jr., to secure Robert H. Walker in the sum of $1,000 ; both being prior to the trust deed of December 23,1871, to secure Walker in the sum of $10,000, under which Lunt acquired title. By an amendment to the petition, Lunt was made a defendant.

The two propositions contained in the answers, upon which the defense seems to be rested, are: First—Whatever labor and materials were furnished the company, prior to ¡¡November, 1871, were on work that was entirely completed prior to the fire that occurred on the 9th of October of that year. Second—The petition herein not having been filed within six months from that date, the lien sought to be established cannot prevail against appellant’s rights acquired under the sale made on the 1st day of December, 1872, by virtue of the deed of trust of the date of December 23, 1871. If the first proposition be established, the latter is but a sequence from the bar created by the statute in favor of creditors.

The position of petitioner is, that the labor performed and materials furnished the Balback Company, in the construction of its works, during the years 1871 and 1872, were upon a single undertaking, which was only temporarily suspended by the prostration in business that followed the disastrous fire of October, 1871. The testimony is of that character that leaves it in serious doubt whether this theory of the case can be maintained, notwithstanding there has been a verdict in petitioner’s favor. We are not inclined to attach much importance to the verdict, for the reason, the whole case, with all its complications, seems to have been submitted to the jury under instructions, some of which were much more calculated to mislead than assist the jury in arriving at a proper conclusion. The verdict is general, finding the issues for petitioner, and also the whole amount of indebtedness of the Balback Company to him. What issues were submitted, we are unable to learn from this record. There is no finding on the more important inquiry, whether the labor performed and the materials furnished before and after the fire were under the same contract, so as to take the entire claim out of the bar of the statute, in favor of liona fide creditors.

But, regarding the verdict as finding that fact in favor of petitioner, in view of the evidence, and the erroneous character of some of the instructions, it ought not to be permitted to stand.

Petitioner insists he was to do all the mason, stone and brick work, and furnish the materials for the Balbaek Company in the erection of its works, and the appurtenances. Giving credence to his entire testimony, it hardly supports the view it is claimed the jury took of the case. His own testimony is to the effect, it was not known, when he entered upon the work, just what buildings would be required. That was in the discretion of the company. Petitioner does not claim he was employed to construct any particular number of buildings, but to do all the labor and furnish all the materials the company should require in the construction of its buildings. The most favorable construction of the contract, as he alleges it, is, that he was to do all the labor and furnish all the materials for the erection of such buildings, and appurtenances, as the company, from tim'e to time, should elect to have erected. Accordingly, in 1871 he was employed to erect certain buildings for the use of the company. That work, by all the testimony, had been nearly, or quite, completed before the fire. Warner, the secretary of the company, says they had a settlement with petitioner of every thing up to October, except, perhaps, a few thousand bricks on the ground that had not been used. Petitioner denies any settlement had been made, but the witness, Warner, is greatly strengthened in his testimony by the fact he had the original accounts rendered, and the record of them in his boobs, which were saved from the fire, as well as by other evidence equally convincing. The whole enterprise had been abandoned for the time being, in consequence of the general suspension of business. A period of more than six months elapsed before the company was enabled to resume work. The work petitioner was requested to do in April, 1872, had no necessary connection with that of the year previous. It was upon improvements the company could make or omit, at its election. The evidence affords much stronger reasons for regarding it as a new undertaking than as a continuation of the former contract.

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Bluebook (online)
75 Ill. 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lunt-v-stephens-ill-1874.