Murphy v. Williams

124 S.W. 900, 103 Tex. 155, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 163
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1910
DocketNo. 2013.
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 124 S.W. 900 (Murphy v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murphy v. Williams, 124 S.W. 900, 103 Tex. 155, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 163 (Tex. 1910).

Opinion

*157 Mr. Justice Williams

delivered the opinion of the court.

This writ of error was granted to bring up for review a judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals affirming a judgment of the District Court establishing and foreclosing in favor of defendant in error a lien upon the homestead of the plaintiffs in error. A motion to dismiss the writ of error has been filed in this court on the ground that the petition and bond given for the writ of error from the District Court to the Court of Civil Appeals misdescribe the judgment in giving its date as April 4, when its true date, as shown by the record, is April 1, 1908. All such objections to irregularities in the proceedings, which do not render them void and entirely defeat the jurisdiction of the Appellate Court, are waived by the failure to move to dismiss the appeal, or writ of error, in the Court of Civil Appeals. (Williams v. Wiley, 96 Texas, 153; Logan v. Gay, 99 Texas, 605.) It may be further said that the objection, if made in time, would not have been good. The petition and bond give the style and number of the case, the parties to it and set out the judgment in haec verba, leaving no question that the one intended is that- found in the record. (Southern Pacific Ry. Co. v. Stanley, 76 Texas, 419.)

The facts of the case will be found fully stated in the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals. Murphy v. Williams, 116 S. W., 412. Those which are to control our decision may be condensed.

The plaintiffs in error made a contract with one Arend by which the latter, for the stipulated price of $3,200, agreed to build a house upon a lot which was the homestead of the Murphys, who agreed to and did execute to Arend their three promissory notes to cover such price. At the same time it was understood that Arend, in order to get money to enable him to build the house, should assign the notes to Williams, and a stipulation to that effect was inserted in the contract, which further provided that the lien, which it gave upon the homestead and upon three other lots as security, could only be released by Williams. This contract was properly executed by Murphy and wife in accordance with the constitutional provision. The notes were at once assigned to Williams who paid Arend $2,300 upon them. Arend entered upon and did a large part of the construction, expending for labor and material more than $2,100, but, without any reason or excuse stated, abandoned the work before it was completed, so that there" was no substantial performance of his undertaking. Murphy thereupon demanded of Williams that he complete the building and, after his refusal to do so, caused the work to be done at a cost of $1,550. Williams sought by this action a judgment for the full amount of the notes and for a foreclosure of the lien for that amount upon the homestead as well as upon the other lots, for all of which the judgment before us was rendered, except that it allows a lien upon the homestead for only the sum of $1,650, the difference between the contract price and the cost to Murphy of completing the building left unfinished by Arend. It is this last feature of the judgment that is attacked as erroneous in the specifications in the application for writ of error upon which it was granted. The Court of Civil Appeals conceded, upon the authority of Paschall *158 v. Pioneer Savings & Loan Co., 19 Texas Civ. App., 102, that Arend’s unexcused abandonment of the contract would have precluded him from recovering any judgment upon it. The principle applied in that case, which is clearly sustained by the authorities, is that one who has not substantially performed his part of a contract can not maintain an action for its enforcement, although he may sometimes be allowed to recover upon quantum meruit. (Childress v. Smith, 90 Texas, 610.) From that principle the Court of Civil Appeals, in Paschall v. Pioneer Savings & Loan Co., deduced the further proposition that, since no lien can exist in this State upon the homestead for improvements upon it except through a contract therefor joined in by the husband and wife, no lien can be enforced upon such property in favor of a party to such a contract, who, on account of his failure to perform, is disentitled to have it enforced. That proposition was recognized as correct by this court' in the refusal of a writ of error and it is in accord with most authorities elsewhere. The facts in the case referred to differed from those in this case in some respects. There a house was completed by the contractor, but it differed substantially in character, as well as in value, from that contracted for. The owners had contracted for one thing and another had been furnished. Here the work and material, so far as done and supplied, were in compliance with the contract. The work was merely left unfinished and, when Murphy voluntarily completed the building, that which had been contracted for was obtained. From this it seems to have been held by the trial court that the lien attached, pari passu with the doing of such work and the putting in of such material as the contract called for, to secure the payment for the value thereof and, to that extent, was enforceable, inasmuch as the owners received the benefit thereof in the completed building. But whatever might be the force of these facts in establishing the right to recover the value of the work and material so appropriated against one capable of thus making himself liable, it is not in harmony with the provision of the Constitution governing the fixing of liens on homesteads and the principle of contracts which we have stated, which is, that a contract entire in its character, as is one for the building of a house for a stipulated price, can not be split up so as to allow a recovery upon it of a part of the price when the house has not been built. The Murphys did not agree to pay for the value of any work and material that should he put into the house, but agreed to pay the lump sum of $3,300 for the completed building. That' Arend failed to furnish, and as he can not, because of such failure, recover that price, he can not recover upon the contract at all; and, as a lien can exist upon the homestead only by force of such a contract; none can be enforced when the contract can not be enforced.

There is a class of cases in which building contracts have stipulated for the right of owners, upon default of contractors, to complete the work and deduct the, cost of completion from the contract price, in which it is held that, where the owners have elected to enforce the contracts by so proceeding' under them, they become responsible to defaulting contractors, who have done part of the work, *159 for the balance of the contract price remaining after deducting the cost of completion and any damages sustained by the owner from the default. (Vanchief v. Van Vechten, 130 N. Y., 519; Ogden v. Alexander, 140 N. Y., 356; Weeks v. O’Brien, 141 N. Y., 199; Ringle v. Wallis Iron Works, 149 N. Y., 444, 445; McGratte v. Horgan, 76 N. Y., Supp., 412; Edison Electric Illuminating Co. v. Guavastino etc. Co., 44 N. Y. Supp., 1022.) But an examination of those decisions will make it clear that the reasoning upon which they are founded is inapplicable where there is no such stipulation, since the owner in completing the work does not then proceed upon the contract, but ignores it as he has the right to do after the default of the other party.

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Bluebook (online)
124 S.W. 900, 103 Tex. 155, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-williams-tex-1910.