M. L. Virden Lumber Co. v. Sherrod

139 So. 813, 167 Miss. 297, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 192
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1932
DocketNo. 29595.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 139 So. 813 (M. L. Virden Lumber Co. v. Sherrod) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M. L. Virden Lumber Co. v. Sherrod, 139 So. 813, 167 Miss. 297, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 192 (Mich. 1932).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

M. L. Virden Lumber Company, a corporation, appellant here, filed its petition to enforce a materialman’s lien on certain real property and certain fixtures located on a described lot of land for the sum of one thousand, one hundred ninety-nine dollars and forty-seven cents. Attached to its petition were fifty-two invoices for materials alleged to' have been furnished in the repair or change in construction of a certain warehouse located on the -lot described; also there was a note for that amount executed in favor of the M. L. Virden Lumber Company, *299 in which it was specifically agreed that the lien was not extinguished by the execution of the note.

The Dixie Warehouse Company, C. F. Sherrod, Jr., “and all other persons, firms or corporations claiming a lien on, or interest in, the property,” were made parties defendant. Upon an amendment of the petition, the Federal Cotton Seed Storage Company was made a party defendant. Sherrod appeared and filed a plea setting out a petition in bankruptcy. The Federal Cotton Seed Storage Company appeared and filed an answer and notice of nonjoinder. There was publication for the Dixie Warehouse Company.

The Federal Cotton Seed Storage Company in its answer denied that there was a materialman’s lien existing on the lands described, because the M. L. Virden Lumber Company had lost its lien, for the reason that, at the time the material was furnished, M. L. Virden, as an individual, was the owner of the purchase-money note secured by a deed of trust on the lands described, and before suit was filed herein said deed of trust had been foreclosed on said property and M. L. Virden had acquired, by trustee’s deed, the land and property so sold. The answer specifically denied that there was any lien on the fixtures located in the building; that it was interested only as a user of the warehouse under an arrangement with Sherrod, alleged to be a lessee of Virden, the owner. The answer further alleged that M. L. Virden, the owner of the property in question, was a necessary and proper party to the proceedings. '

Virden appeared and filed a plea to the effect that he had actual and constructive notice at and before the time the materials were furnished to the Dixie Warehouse Company, or C. F. Sherrod, Jr.,' and at and before the foreclosure sale at which Virden was the purchaser oh August 11, 1930. He alleged that the fixtures in the building located on the land in controversy were wholly and' entirely his property, had become a part of the realty, and were “subject to the rights of the said plaintiff,” *300 and lie prayed that an issue be joined between him and the Federal Cotton Seed- .Storage Company.

The M. L. Virden Lumber Company filed its replication to. the plea and notice of- nonjoinder of the Federal Cotton Seed Storage Company, which denied that the deed of trust of Virden was a prior lien on the property, and denied that the Federal Cotton Seed Storage Company owned the fixtures andi equipments located in the building, and averred that, if the Federal Cotton Seed Storage Company had acquired any right, it was subsequent to the filing in the chancery court by the plaintiff: of a lis pendens notice of its claim to a materialman’s lien. The replication further -noted the fact that M. L. Virden had appeared in court and filed his plea.

The evidence on behalf of appellant is in substance as follows: That the material was furnished to the Dixie Warehouse Company and/or C. F. Sherrod, Jr., to be used- in a change or alteration of a warehouse so as to install therein and affix thereto certain motors, fans, pipes, conveyors, and other like connected machinery. In order to effect this alteration, it was necessary to remove part of the- sides of the building, parts of the floors on the ground floor and on the second story, and construct pillars to' support the building. The evidence further shows that the machinery in question was firmly and securely annexed to the building. In connection therewith there was also a lighting equipment. The major portion of this machinery seems to have been for the purpose of more adequately loading and unloading cotton seed into the building. It is shown that the floor for a space of six feet wide by five hundred feet long was torn out, and that, in order to' restore the building to' the condition it was in before the installation of this machinery, an expenditure of one thousand five hundred dollars would be required; that the building could not be used for any purpose, unless rebuilt; that where the fans and conveyors were placed would have to be rebuilt entirely, and the floor space would have to be filled in and *301 rebuilt. The effect of the change by the installation of the machinery in the building was to make it, as reflected by this record, a more adequate and modern storage warehouse for cotton seed.

The following record of conveyances was offered in evidence by the M. L. Virden Lumber Company: On October 1, 1928, M. L. Virden, individually, executed a warranty deed in favor' of C. F. Sherrod, Jr., to the lot of land and warehouse described in the petition. On The same date C. F. Sherrod, Jr., executed to Farish, trustee, a deed of trust on the same property to secure the payment of nineteen notes, two thousand, five hundred dollars each, and one note for one thousand dollars, payable at intervals within ten years. On August 11, 1930, Ernest Kellner, as substituted trustee, foreclosed said trust deed and executed a trustee’s deed to the property described to M. L. Virden, the mortgagee and purchaser ait:the sale. The petition in this ease was filed subsequent to this trustee’s sale and deed. The material furnished herein was in 1929 and prior to March, 1930.

The appellant, plaintiff in the court below, further offered in evidence the bill of sale executed by the Dixie Warehouse Company,-.dated July 11,1930', signed by C. F. Sherrod, Jr., president, and H. J. Landry, secretary, of the Dixie Warehouse; Company,, conveying certain machinery described as "being htr this warehouse to C. F. Sherrod, Jr., and subsequent thereto C. F. Sherrod, Jr., conveyed the same machinery to the Federal Cotton Seed Storage Company by a bill of sale, acknowledged on the 31st day of July, 1930*, and filed for récord September 22, 1930, subsequent to the beginning of the suit herein. At the conclusion of the evidence for the plaintiff in the court below, the record shows that all parties rested their case, and that the M. L. Yirden Lumber Company and the Federal Cotton Seed Storage Company each requested of the co art a peremptory instruction, and thereupon the court granted the 'peremptory instruction requested by the M. L. Yirden Lumber Company. Imme *302 diately thereafter the Federal Cotton Seed Storage Company presented to' the court orally and in writing its motion for a judgment non obstante veredicto, whereupon the court entered a judgment sustaining the motion for a judgment non obstante veredicto' made on behalf of one of the defendants in the case, which judgment recited the granting of a peremptory instruction in favor of a plaintiff, and the verdict of the jury thereon to that effect, and the entry of the judgment non obstante veredicto dismissing the cause as in favor of the Federal Cotton Seed Storage Company and C. F. Sherrod, Jr.

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Bluebook (online)
139 So. 813, 167 Miss. 297, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-l-virden-lumber-co-v-sherrod-miss-1932.