McMurray v. Brown

91 U.S. 257, 23 L. Ed. 321, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1358
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 10, 1876
Docket59
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 91 U.S. 257 (McMurray v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMurray v. Brown, 91 U.S. 257, 23 L. Ed. 321, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1358 (1876).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Clifford

delivered the opinion of the court.

Mechanics or other persons, who, by virtue of any contract witb the owner of any building, or with the agent of such owner, have, since the 2d of February, 1859, performed labor, *260 exceeding the value of twenty dollars, upon such building, -or have furnished materials, engine, or machinery exceeding that value, for the construction or repairing of such building, shall, upon filing the. notice prescribed in the second section of the Lien Act of that date, have a lien upon such building, and the lot of ground upon which the same is situated, for such labor done,' or materials, engine, or machinery furnished. 11 Stat. 376.

Building materials of great value, such as bricks and lumber, were furnished by the complainant to the first-named respondent, by virtue of a verbal agreement, as he alleges, between him and the husband of the respondent, acting as her agent.

•Service was made, and the respondent appeared, and by her' answer admitted the averments of the first, second., fourth, and seventh paragraphs of the bill of complaint, but denied every other material allegation which it contains.

Proofs were taken; and, the parties having been fully heard, the judge, at special term, entered a decree that the complainant recover of the respondent the sum of twelve hundred and thirty dollars. and sixty-two cents, with interest, as therein provided; and that the described real estate, —to wit, lots numbered thirty-six and thirty-seven, — together with the buildings and improvements thereon, be, and hereby aré, subjected to ' the satisfaction of the complainant’s demand.

Due appeal was taken by the respondent to the general term,' where the decree of the special term was in all things affirmed; and the respondent appealed to this court.

Two other persons were named as respondents in the bill of complaint who. never filed any answer, and are not parties to the decree, for the reason that no relief is sought against them, they having been joined as respondents merely for the purpose of discovery in respect to a prior lien held on the premises by the one named as trustee, to secure a debt due to the other.

Seasonable appearance' was' entered by the respondent, and she filed an answer; but, the answer having been lost, it is stipulated and agreed between the parties, that the answer, as before stated,' admitted all the averments of the first, second, fourth, and seventh;paragraphs of the bill of complaint,, and' that it denied every other allegation of the complainant.

*261 Lumber and bricks were furnished by the complainant for two houses; and the evidence shows that thé respondent owned, both lots on which the houses were being constructed, and that she was represented throughout the transaction by her husband, who acted as her agent in constructing the houses. Nothing further need be remarked respecting the deed of trust of prior date,, as it is admitted by stipulation that the deed is cancelled, and that the debt secured by it is discharged.

Due notice of the intention of the complainant to hold a lien upon the propérty, as required by the act of Congress, is admitted by the answer.; nor is it necessary to discuss the question as to the agency of her husband in the transaction, as that also is admitted by the respondent. What the respondent denies is, that either she, or her agent in her behalf, ever made any such contract with the complainant as that set forth in the bill of ■complaint, or that the complainant ever furnished and delivered to her or her agent the building materials specified in the bill of particulars annexed to the bill of complaint, or that the materials were ever used by her of by her authority in the con- . struction of the said houses.

Lots thirty-six and thirty-seven belonged to the respondent, and the proof is that they adjoin' each other. Prior to the alleged agreement with the complainant, the respondent entered into a contract with another party to build a two-story brick house for her on the lot first named, the contractor agreeing to' build the house, and furnish, at his own proper cost and.expense,

all the materials necessary to complete the same in a workmanlike manner; for which' the respondent agreed to pay to the contractor the sum of one thousand dollars, and at the same time to convey to him lot thirty-seven, and to pay the balance,' amounting to twelve hundred dollars, in notes of fifty dollars each', payable monthly, at eight per cent interest, tó be secured by a deed of trust on lot thirty-six, and the house to be built by’the contractor, subject to a.'prior deed of trust on the same ■lot. By the record^ it appears that the contract, though it bears date the 6th of June, 1871, was not actually executed until. about, the middle of July following, and that the contractor failed to fulfil the stipulations of the written contract.

Perkins,--the contractor, was. without means or credit; and *262 possessed no capital whatever, except his skill as a'builder; and the husband of the respondent, though he controlled the real estate standing in the name of his wife, was without any reSuN means at his command: consequently the materials for completing the house could not be obtained except by exchanging. some of the real estate for the same. Detailed account is given, in the testimony, of the measures adopted by the parties to effect such an exchange of ’ real estate for building materials ; but it must suffice to say that all of the negotiations failed.

All of these attempts to procure building materials by exchanging real estate for the. same took place before the contract for building the house was signed; and, at the close of those attempts, an interview occurred between the contractor •under the written agreement and the complainant, when the latter informed the former that he would furnish lumber and bricks in exchange for lot thirty-seven, computing the value of the lot at forty-five cents' per foot. Within two hours after the conversation, the former contractor reported the same to the husband of the respondent, and told him to have the deed of the lot made directly to the complainant', and proposed, at the same time, to divide between them the five cents per foot advance in price which the seller would receive beyond the consideration promised by the former contractor.

Abundant evidence is given to show that the offer of the complainant to take conveyance of the lot, and furnish the building materials as required, was accepted by the husband of the respondent; and that he, the agent, agreed that the lot should be conveyed to the complainant as proposed.

Pursuant to. that arrangement, which appears to have been fairly and understanding^ made, the complainant continued to deliver the required building materials; and the conduct of the husband of the respondent throughout the whole period the materials were furnished and delivered shows to the entire satisfaction of the court that' the materials were furnished and delivered in pursuance of that understanding, and that he knew that the owner and furnisher of the same was parting with his property in the just and full expectation that the whole passed t.o the .benefit of his wife under that arrangement.

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Bluebook (online)
91 U.S. 257, 23 L. Ed. 321, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmurray-v-brown-scotus-1876.