North v. La Flesh

41 N.W. 633, 73 Wis. 520, 1889 Wisc. LEXIS 180
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 41 N.W. 633 (North v. La Flesh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North v. La Flesh, 41 N.W. 633, 73 Wis. 520, 1889 Wisc. LEXIS 180 (Wis. 1889).

Opinion

Lrorr, J.

That portion of the judgment of the circuit court which denies the plaintiff a lien upon the land of Mrs. La Flesh, described in the complaint, rests mainly upon the sixth finding of fact, which is to the effect that all the merchandise sold by the plaintiff to the defendant Thomas -was charged to the latter on the books of the plaintiff in the order of their purchase in one continuous [526]*526account, without reference to the use thereof in any particular building, and without reference to any rights to or claim for a lien. In other words, that, considered in connection with other findings of fact, the transaction was a sale by one merchant to another in the usual course of business, without reference to use in any building or right to a lien.

If such finding of fact be sustained, the case is probably within the rule of Esslinger v. Huebner, 22 Wis. 632. In that case Mr. Justice PaiNe, commenting upon a certain instruction given to the jury, said: “ The plain meaning of this is that, although the lime was sold generally to E. W. Huebner on account, and without am*- reference to this or any other building, yet if he allowed any portion of it to be used in his wife’s building, that would give the lien. This is not the law. How it might be in such a case if the purchaser used the material in his own building it is not necessary to inquire. But it seems clear that one who sells materials to another generally, without reference to any building, cannot follow them with a lien into the buildings of other parties to whom the purchaser may transfer them. And it would make no difference that they were used upon the separate property of the purchaser’s wife.” Whether the rule of that case is affected by subsequent legislation upon the subject of liens, and, if so, to what extent, need not be here determined, for the reason that we are satisfied that the evidence in the case does not support the sixth finding of fact. The evidence is almost conclusive that the plaintiff sold and delivered the materials in question to the defendant Thomas to be used in the erection of the buildings on his wife’s land, and that they were in fact so used. Indeed, the only testimony to the contrary is the inference which might, perhaps, under some circumstances, bo drawn from the fact that the plaintiff charged such materials in his books in the order of sales, with non-lienable [527]*527goods. But notwithstanding his mode of book-keeping, the testimony of the plaintiff, the contractor who erected the buildings, and the agent or servant of the defendant Thomas J. La Flesh to whom a considerable portion of the materials in question was delivered, satisfies our minds that the finding in question is not sustained by the proofs.

The learned circuit judge filed a Avritten opinion, in which he cited the case of Esslinger v. Huebner, and also that of McMaster v. Merrick, 41 Mich. 505, and seems to have rested the judgment mainly upon these cases. He quotes from the latter case the following: “It is also settled that one of the plainest cases of waiver is where privileged and unprivileged claims are mingled together in the same dealings, so that the lien is not kept ascertainable without restating and charging the accounts.” We are inclined to think that this case led the circuit court into the error of giving undue influence to the fact that the plaintiff did not keep a separate account of the materials sold by him to Thomas to be used in the construction of the buildings. For this reason we will briefly review that case: There, as here, lienable and non-lienable items were charged in one general account. The transactions between the parties in respect to the lienable items related to work upon logs in sawing the same and drying and shipping the lumber, but, unlike this case, a large percentage of the account of the defendant (who did such work and claimed a lien therefor upon the lumber) had been paid by the plaintiff’s assignor, and such payments had been applied by the mutual consent of both parties in payment of a general account. The case is somewhat involved in its facts, and a full statement of it will not be attempted. It is sufficient to say that the terms of the "contract between the parties to the transactions there in question, and the course of dealing between them, rendered it impossible to ascertain from their accounts alone the amount for which the defendants should have a lien on [528]*528the lumber. To ascertain such amount it was necessary to investigate those transactions and apportion payments. Of course this could not be done “without restating and charging the accounts.” Because it could not, and because the right of the defendant to a lien was a very doubtful one, the Michigan court held that he had waived it. We make no controversy with that court in respect to the doctrine of that case. It is quite probable that we should rule the same way in a similar one. In this case, however, the value of the lienable materials is easily ascertainable from the account itself, and no restatement thereof is necessary for that purpose. The plaintiff is only required to show what materials charged therein were sold and delivered by him to be used in the construction of. the buildings in question, and that must be shown in any case. That proof having been made, the amount of lienable charges in the account becomes ,a mere matter of computation,; — not a cause for anj? restatement or recharging of the account. Hence the rule of the Michigan case has no application to tfye facts of this case.

On the same general subject counsel for defendants relies .upon certain Iowa cases, and gives what purports to be a quotation from Cotes v. Shorey, 8 Iowa, 416, to support his position. We fail to find in the report of that case the language quoted. In that case the judgment refusing to • enforce a lien was reversed because of the refusal of the trial court to instruct the jury as follows: “ If the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiff sold the materials charged in the account of the plaintiffs to the defendant for the purpose of erecting a house with the same, though the particular house was not then understood by the parties, and if the jury also believe that said materials, or any part thereof, were used by the defendant in erecting the house described in the plaintiffs’ petition, the jury will find for the plaintiffs and establish their lien as prayed,” [529]*529etc. There is nothing in the case to interfere with the right to a lien here claimed. Moreover, the Iowa statute under which Cotes v. Shorey was decided provides that “every person who ly virtue of a contract with the owner of a piece of land performs work or furnishes material especially for any building, and which material is used in the erection or reparation thereof,” has a lien, etc. The language of our statute is: “Every person who, as principal contractor, performs any work or labor, or furnishes any materials, in or about the erection, construction, repairs, protection, or removal of any dwelling-house or other building, . . . shall have a lien therefor,” etc. There is a material difference in the two statutes, in that the-Iowa statute makes a contract with the owner of the land that the materials are to be furnished especially for the building essential to the lien, while ours merely requires that they shall be furnished therefor, without reference to any contract or agreement except that implied from the sale and delivery of the materials to be so used.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 N.W. 633, 73 Wis. 520, 1889 Wisc. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-v-la-flesh-wis-1889.