McQuerry v. Glenn

1 S.W.2d 339
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 22, 1927
DocketNo. 11857. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 S.W.2d 339 (McQuerry v. Glenn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McQuerry v. Glenn, 1 S.W.2d 339 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

This suit was instituted in the Forty-Eighth judicial district court of Tarrant county by A. J. McQuerry against Porter E. Glenn, the Mid-Texas Petroleum Corporation, H. F. Spellman and W. A. Johnson, and W. D. Benson, receivers of the Mid-Texas Petroleum Corporation, to recover upon an itemized account for labor and material to he hereinafter set out, aggregating $1,-080.85.

. The record discloses that the trial below proceeded upon appellant’s first amended original petition 'filed on May 28, 1926, the date of the filing of the original petition not appearing in the record. Appellant alleged, in substance, that on or about the 1st day of January, 1921, the defendant Glenn, for himself and for the Mid-Texas Petroleum Corporation, of which he was then president and' manager, entered into a contract with plaintiff .to furnish material and labor for the construction of a brick building, designed for offices, gasoline filling station, and for' other purposes for the Mid-Texas Petroleum Corporation, to be located on lots 23 and 24, in block 27, of North Fort Worth, Tex.; that said contracts, as made, were oral and covered the items in the account and statement hereinbefore referred to and attached as an exhibit to the petition. It was further alleged that Glenn and the Mid-Texas Petroleum Corporation contracted to pay plaintiff a daily wage of $8 for each and every day that plaintiff should labor in the erection and construction of said building, and pay him proportionately for any and all fractions of a day that he should so labor, and that for all laborers that plaintiff should employ to labor in said erection and construction they would pay plaintiff such sum or sums as he should contract with said laborers to pay them, and that for all material plaintiff should purchase or use in the erection and construction of said building, they would pay plaintiff the same amount that he should pay or contract to pay for such material, and that they would pay plaintiff any and all other expenses and outlay that he should make in the erection and construction of said building.

It was alleged that in compliance with said contract plaintiff himself labored and also furnished all labor and material required of him under the contract, for said building, for all of which plaintiff has been paid, “except those items set forth in said exhibit, which is here and now made a part of this petition.” It was further alleged that while plaintiff’s work was in progress, the defendant Mid-Texas Petroleum Corporation went into the hands of a receiver, and that his duties under the contract thereafter were performed under the direction of W. A. Johnson, who was the original receiver, but who was succeeded by W. D. Benson as receiver, defendants Glenn and said corporation agreeing to continue to carry out plaintiff’s original contract; that plaintiff completed the work and other services under the contract on or about July 31, 1921, at which time there was then due him from all of defendants, except Spellman, the sum of $1,089.85, of which, however, he had been paid the sum of $216.17, leaving an unpaid balance of $864.-68, for which the plaintiff sued.

It was further alleged that the plaintiff had and has good, valid, and subsisting “mechanic’s, contractor’s, materialman’s, and laborer’s liens upon said land and improvements jointly and séverally; and that for the purpose of more fully complying with the law for such liens, plaintiff did, on or about the 19th day of August, 1921, and within 30 days after his said work and other services were completed under said contracts, file for record with the county clerk of Tar-rant county, Tex., his affidavit and an itemized statement and account of his services, which remain unpaid, * * * a substantial copy of said affidavit and account being *341 hereto attached and marked as an exhibit, and made a part of this petition.,r It was further alleged that defendant Spellman was claiming some sort of interest in the land and improvements, which, as charged, was inferior to the plaintiff’s lien, and Spellman was accordingly made a party defendant to the suit.

The exhibit referred to in the plaintiff’s petition consists of plaintiff’s affidavit, to the effect that the subjoined account for “labor performed and furnished and expenses incurred-by him to and for the Mid-Texas Petroleum Corporation and its receiver W. A. Johnson under contract with said Mid-Texas Petroleum Corporation, and under contract with said receiver for the use and benefit of said corporation,” was true and correct; that the labor performed and furnished and expenses incurred for said corporation and receiver were at the times mentioned in the account, and affiant claimed a lien therefor on said lots 23 and 24 in block 27. The subjoined account is as follows:

Pay Roll Disbursement of:
A. J. McQuerry, Fort Worth. Job No. from July 1 to 31, 1921.
Name of Employee
A. J. McQuerry 19 days at
W. A. Day 18 “
J. E. Allen 18 "
Joe Slaughter 4 “ 7 hrs. **
W. J. Dussett 6 « “
W. H. Spears 4 hrs.
A. C. Crawford 4 “ “
McCubbine 4 '* “
C. Love 2 " 4 « «
J. T. Tinsley 2 “ 4 **
Ice 3.25
Blacksmithing .25 Glue .85
Pd. Plasterer, acct. 35.00
8.00 per 8 8 8 8 8 8 8
3.50 3.50
day $152.00 144.00 144.00 31.00 48.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 8.75 8.75 3.25
.85
35.00
From.February 1 to June 19, 1921 587.85
A. J. McQuerry 61 days 5 hrs. at 8.00 per day 493.00
Total $1,080.85

The defendants Glenn and the Mid-Texas Petroleum Corporation made no appearance, but defendant Spellman appeared and answered by general and special demurrers, a general denial, and specially to the effect that on July 14, 1921, the plaintiff had made application to be adjudged a bankrupt in the United States District Court, and on July 20th was adjudged a bankrupt on his petition; that at the time the plaintiff filed Jais petition in bankruptcy and at the time he made application for discharge, which was in September, 1921, he listed and surrendered all of his property and assets to the trustee in bankruptcy.; that the trustee had no knowledge of appellant’s omission of the claim asserted in this suit, which had been fraudulently and intentionally withheld from the trustee, by reason of which it was pleaded plaintiff could not recover. Spellman further pleaded that on September 18, 1920, P. E. Glenn purchased certain property, including the lots .in controversy, from one J. B.

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Bluebook (online)
1 S.W.2d 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcquerry-v-glenn-texapp-1927.