Peters v. Dona

54 P.2d 817, 49 Wyo. 306, 1936 Wyo. LEXIS 45
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1936
Docket1927
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 54 P.2d 817 (Peters v. Dona) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peters v. Dona, 54 P.2d 817, 49 Wyo. 306, 1936 Wyo. LEXIS 45 (Wyo. 1936).

Opinion

*313 Riner, Justice.

This case was commenced in the district court of Sweetwater County, and the action seems to have been one somewhat in the nature of a suit to quiet title and remove a cloud therefrom as against an alleged improper mechanic’s lien filed in the office of the County Clerk of said County, relative to certain property situated in the Tow;n of Green River, Wyoming. A judgment was rendered in the action by the court aforesaid adverse to Ernest Peters, Miriam Peters and the First National Bank of Green River, Wyoming, and they have brought the record here for review by direct appeal.

A disposition of the case requires consideration .of the following facts: Under date of September 6, 1930, by warranty deed, there was conveyed by John Hutton and wife to “Ernest R. and Miriam Peters, husband and wife,” certain real estate described as “North Seventy (70') Feet of Lot numbered Four (4) in Block numbered Thirty-six (36) in the Union Pacific Railway Company’s First Addition to the Town of Green River, Wyoming, as said lot is laid down and described on the duly recorded plat of said Addition, situate in the County of Swetwater, State of Wyoming.” The property appears to have been paid for by the joint funds of both Peters and his wife. About September 29, 1930, the parties last mentioned made a contract with one Elmer Wahlstrom for the erection of a house on said real estate, and Wahlstrom employed a subcontractor, Guy Dona by name, to do required excava *314 tion, trucking and concrete work in the course of the erection of the building. Dona’s account for what he did and furnished in the matter totaled $467.79, the last item being furnished December 15, 1930. The house was completed by the 31st of that month, and Mr. and Mrs. Peters moved into it on that date.

Wahlstrom failed to pay Dona, and accordingly, on February 20, 1931, Dona filed a statement, under the Mechanic’s Lien Law of Wyoming, in the County Clerk’s office aforesaid claiming a lien upon these premises in the sum above mentioned. This statement named Ernest Peters alone as the owner of the property affected, and recited among other things that on the 4th day of February, 1931, “the said Ernest Peters was given notice in writing that the said Guy Dona held a claim against said building and improvements, stating in said notice the amount of the same, and from whom it was due, and that said Ernest Peters has received notice as required by law, ten days before the filing of this lien.”

March 31, 1931, the warranty deed from Hutton and wife to Ernest Peters and Miriam Peters was placed of record in the office of the County Clerk of Sweet-water County.

April 17, 1931, Ernest Peters began the action already referred to, making the lien- claimant Dona and Helen Young Hamm, the County Clerk of Sweetwater County, defendants, and praying that an order be made striking said lien statement from the files of the County Clerk’s office and declaring it void. To this petition Dona filed, on May 15, 1931, his separate answer and cross-petition, seeking a foreclosure of his alleged lien upon the property aforesaid against Ernest Peters only. Under date of June 9, 1931, Peters and his wife gave a mortgage upon the real estate in question to the First National Bank of Green River, Wyoming, to' *315 secure the payment of $1700, and this instrument was duly recorded in Sweetwater County on June 18, 1931. By an order of the district court dated August 3, 1933, and filed the following day, the defendant, Guy Dona, was “permitted to make Elmer Wahlstrom, the original contractor, a party defendant to this suit, and that he be duly summoned to answer the cross-petition of defendant, Guy Dona.” Wahlstrom’s subsequent motion to quash service upon him was by court order of December 5, 1933, denied, and he was given time to plead. Nothing further seems to have been done by him or against him in the case. The First National Bank of Green River, on January 5, 1934, filed in the case its petition to intervene, setting up and relying on the mortgage already described and other matters not necessary to mention now. By a supplemental petition filed January 19, 1934, the Bank aforesaid alleged the fact that the real estate involved was held by Ernest Peters and Miriam Peters, his wife, in an estate by entireties, and alleged that Dona never notified Miriam Peters of his intention to file a lien on said property and never named or referred to her in the lien statement aforesaid, and that the Bank had no notice that Dona claimed any interest in said real estate adverse to the said Miriam Peters when it loaned the money and accepted the mortgage aforesaid. Thereafter, on motion of Dona and by order, excepted to by the plaintiff, which was dated May 26 and filed May 29,1934, the district court directed that Miriam Peters be made a party to the suit as a defendant to the cross-petition of Dona, in case she failed to join her husband as plaintiff.

On June 4, 1934, more than three years and three months after the lien statement of Dona had been filed, as above recited, the latter filed his amended separate answer and amended cross-petition, wherein Miriam Peters was for the first time named as a *316 party to the suit. Her general demurrer to the last mentioned pleading of the lien claimant was filed July 11, 1934, and it being overruled, on December 14, 1934, she filed her separate reply to said pleading. This reply, among other things, alleged the failure of Dona to make her a party to the litigation until after the lapse of more than three years from the date of the filing of his lien statement, his failure to give her any notice of his intention to file a mechanic’s lien against her property, and also the fact that she was not named at all in said statement. The case was tried to the court without a jury and the judgment entered found generally in favor of the lien claimant against the several parties who have brought this appeal; that there was due Dona from Ernest Peters and his wife, Miriam Peters, the amount claimed by Dona in his lien statement, with interest; that Ernest Peters and Miriam Peters were at all the times referred to in the lien claimant’s pleading the owners of the property aforesaid, and that his asserted lien upon said premises was valid and enforceable. It was adjudged that Dona do have and recover the sum of $599.00 and stated costs from Ernest Peters and Miriam Peters, his wife; that the lien claimed by him be foreclosed as an encumbrance prior to that of the mortgage of the intervener, the First National Bank of Green River, Wyoming, and that upon the sale of the property and confirmation thereof by the court, Peters and his wife, and all persons claiming under them, be barred of all right to the possession of the premises so sold. The appealing parties reserved their several exceptions to this judgment.

A number of questions said to arise upon the record here have been discussed by the briefs in the case, but we deem it necessary to consider but one, viz.,— whether, as urged by appellants, any serious consequences flow from the lien claimant’s failure to make *317 Miriam Peters a party to the suit sooner than he did. Our attention is directed by appellants to the fact that the property here affected was conveyed by grantors in September, 1930, to “Ernest R.

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Bluebook (online)
54 P.2d 817, 49 Wyo. 306, 1936 Wyo. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peters-v-dona-wyo-1936.