Powers Lumber Co. v. Wade

39 S.W. 153, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 295, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 49
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 39 S.W. 153 (Powers Lumber Co. v. Wade) 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
Powers Lumber Co. v. Wade, 39 S.W. 153, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 295, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 49 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

LIGHTFOOT, Chief Justice.

Appellant’s statement of the case is adopted: This is an action of debt and foreclosure of lien brought by the appellant as plaintiff, against the appellees M. N. Wade and his wife Fannie Wade, in the District Court of Kaufman County, Texas, April 24, 1895. The debt sued on is a note for §626.85, dated October 31, 1894, with interest at 10 per cent from date, and 10 per cent additional for attorney’s fees, and credited with §219.85.

The contract sued on by appellant is set out in the original petition in hEec verba, and is as follows:

“The State of Texas, ]
“County of Hunt, j Know all men by these presents, that we, M. N. Wade and Fannie Wade, his wife, have this day contracted with the Powers Lumber Company, of Terrell, Texas, for lumber and material to erect a two-story, frame, shingle roof store house on lot No.-of block No.-in the town of Quinlan, in Hunt County, Texas, an itemized bill of which is hereto attached with the name and amount and *296 price of the"different articles therein enumerated, and said bill is marked ‘Exhibit A’ and made a part of this agreement; and said bill amounts in the aggregate to $626.85, for the payment of which the said M. N. Wade has given to said lumber company his note of this date for said amount, due January 1, 1895; and to secure the payment of said note, it is hereby expressly stipulated and agreed that the said lumber company is to have, and it is hereby given and granted, a material .and lumberman’s lien upon said building and premises above mentioned, together with all and singular the rights and appurtenances belonging thereto. M. N. Wade,
“Fannie Wade.”

The contract is also attached as an exhibit to the original petition, and in the original petition appellant charges that the note sued on was given to it by the defendant M. N. Wade for lumber furnished him by appellant for the purpose of erecting a two-story, frame house in the town of Quinlan under and by virtue of said contract, and that this contract was duly acknowledged on November 21, 1894, and thereafter, on February 13, 1895, was duly recorded in the office of the county clerk of Hunt County, Texas. The petition then describes the premises as follows: “That the said premises upon which plaintiff holds said lien consists of lot No. 9 in block No. 29, of Quinlan, Hunt County, Texas; it being a lot 25 feet by 100 feet, in the town of Quinlan, Hunt County, Texas, with a two-story, frame building situated thereon, and known and designated as the ‘Orchard Saloon.’ ”

To this original petition the defendants excepted, on the ground that “the property in plaintiff’s supposed lien upon which plaintiff seeks to enforce its said supposed lien is too vague and indefinite.” Which special exception was sustained by the court, and the plaintiff excepted and obtained leave to file a trial amendment. In this trial amendment plaintiff alleged that at the time of the original purchase of the lumber by the defendant for which the note and contract sued on were given; defendant did not then know, or represented at least to plaintiff that he did not know, and could not tell upon what particular lot in Quinlan, Texas, he would erect said building, but did know what character of house he desired to erect; that he represented to plaintiff that he wished to erect a two-story frame, shingle roof building, and expressly agreed at the time he would execute all needed papers and agreements in writing for the purpose of securing plaintiff with a lien upon the building so erected and upon the lot upon .which it should be erected, and the note and contract lien sued on were executed and delivered to plaintiff in pursuance of and in conformity with said prior understanding and agreement. That when said contract sued on was executed, defendant lived at and was engaged in business in the town of Roberts, Texas, and did not reside in Quinlan, and had no house or building in Quinlan, and the only two-story, frame, shingle roof building (such as is described in said contract) ever owned or erected by, or held in any man *297 lier by defendants in the said town of Quinlan, is the house mentioned in said contract, and fully and particularly described in plaintiff’s original petition, and this said building was erected and is now situated upon lot No. 9 of block No. 29 of said town of Quinlan, Texas, and the said lot No. 9 in block No. 29 is the only lot now owned or ever at any time owned by defendants upon which there is or has ever been a two-story, frame, shingle roof building, such as is described and mentioned in plaintiff’s original petition. Wherefore, plaintiff alleged that said premises, while not accurately described in the written contract sued on, can in fact be and are easily identified upon the ground, and can be pointed out and located with absolute and perfect certainty. Plaintiff further alleged and charged that the whole intent of all the parties to this suit was that plaintiff should have a lien upon the premises mentioned in plaintiff’s original petition, for which plaintiff paid a good and valuable consideration to the said defendants; that the defendant JVI. N. Wade is wholly insolvent, and unless plaintiff can foreclose its lien upon said lot and said building, it will lose its debt; that plaintiff in the first instance would never have sold to said defendant the lumber specified in said itemized bills attached to plaintiff’s original petition, but for the fact that said written contract was entered into by said parties; that defendants can not now be heard to say that this contract is invalid; that to do so would be a fraud upon plaintiff, and if, under all the facts and circumstances, it has not a materialman’s lien, yet it charges that it has a good and subsisting lien by contract of the parties upon the building, independent of the statute for mechanic’s lien, and said contract is binding against the said house and lot mentioned.

To this trial amendment of plaintiff defendants filed numerous exceptions, of which the following were sustained by the court:

(1) “Because no sufficient description of the property is mentioned in said pretended lien as appears in said trial amendment.

(2) “Because said amendment shows on its face that the contract declared upon was issued subsequently to the paroi agreement.

(5) “That the allegations regarding a lien distinct and separate from a materialman’s lien are foreign to the issues upon which the amendment was allowed.

(6) “If the last named pleading could be thus permitted, that the same would be stricken from the record for the further reason that the plaintiff has elected to rely upon its materialman’s lien, and is therefore bound by said election.

(1) “The allegations therein, if permitted to remain in the record, are insufficient as to fraud and estoppel.

(8) “That the allegations as to the lien, apart from the material-man’s lien, are insufficient if allowed to remain in the record, because and for the same reason that the materialman’s lien is charged to be insufficient.”

The court upon these exceptions found" the contract sued on insufficient to give plaintiff a lien on the premises in controversy, and because *298

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Bluebook (online)
39 S.W. 153, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 295, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powers-lumber-co-v-wade-texapp-1897.