Powers v. Brewer

38 S.W.2d 466, 238 Ky. 579, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 290
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 1, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 38 S.W.2d 466 (Powers v. Brewer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powers v. Brewer, 38 S.W.2d 466, 238 Ky. 579, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 290 (Ky. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Dietzman

Affirming.

Since the latter part of the year 1926, the appellee H. L. Bryant has been the owner of two lots and part of a third lot contiguous to each other on the south side of Kentucky avenue in Pineville, Ky. These lots are located in block 8 of the Hull and Barclay addition to the city of Pineville. Bryant owns all of lot 18, all of lot 19, each of which is 25 feet in width, and 15 feet of lot 20 in this block. He acquired lot 18 and the west 5 feet of lot 19 in 1922 and the remaining 20 feet of lot 19 and the 15 feet of lot 20 in 1926. For some reason not in the record, it appears that Bryant failed to record his deeds to the property embraced in these lots, but the record shows that his ownership of all of these lots was apparent from the assessor’s record. There were and still are two residences on the three lots. One residence occupies a portion of lot 18 and extends 5 feet over on lot 19<. The other house rests in part on lot 19 and in part on lot 20. Bryant determined in the fall of 1927 to remodel this last-mentioned house. He employed as architects the firm of L. C. Powers & Sons, and they prepared the plans and specifications for the remodeling work. The general contract for the work was let to the appellee F. F. Brewer. He in turn contracted with the appellant, W. W. Powers, to do the labor required in laying the brickwork in the remodeling*. The appellant was a son of one of the partners and brother of the other two partners composing the firm of architects which had prepared the plans and specifications for this work. The contract between the appellant and Brewer provided that the appellant was to furnish all the labor required “to finish complete” the brickwork on the H. L. Bryant residence remodeling job “to the entire satisfaction of the architect and owner” at the rate per thousand brick set out in the contract. The contract further provided that, in computing the brick to be laid, openings in the_ wall for doors and windows were not to be deducted, and payment on the work was to be made “at the rate of 75 per cent, every two weeks.” Appellant began his work in *581 the late fall of 1927 and quit the latter part of January, 1928.

On January 27, 1928, he sent the following notice to Bryant:

“You are hereby notified that I expect to file and require a lien on lots 18 and 5 feet 19, bit. 8, Hull and Barclay Addition to the City of Pineville, Ky., for the following itemized statement for labor furnished F. P. Brewer as follows: (Here follows a statement of the number of brick laid at the price specified in the contract, totaling $719.65, subject to a credit of $350', leaving a balance on brickwork of $369.65, to which was added these extras-: Selection of face brick, $80; setting of steel lintels $28; scaffolding work, $75; brickwork on porch changed and setting tile in chimney, $56.50 — total due on the job, $609.15.)
The notice then continued: “You are notified that I will file proper lien and have same recorded in the office of the Bell county court clerk within the time fixed by statute whereof, you will take notice.**

On January 30th following, appellant filed with the county clerk the statement required by section 2468 of the Statutes to perfect a mechanic’s lien. In the statement itself he set out that there was due him a net balance of $609.15, as shown by a statement of the account filed with “the statement of mechanic’s lien” the account being due “for the improvements to the property owned by H. L. Bryant” by appellant, which property consisted of building “lying and being located on lots 18 and 5 feet of 19 in block 8 of the Hull and Barclay Addition to the City of Pineville. ’ ’ In the statement of account filed with this statement of mechanic’s lien, the figures as set out in the notice of January 27th are copied. This statement of account is headed thus:

“Statement of W. W. Powers on work done under contract with P. P. Brewer, contractor on the building of II. L. Bryant on lots 18 and part 19, blk. 8, of Hull and Barclay Addition to the City of Pine-ville, Bell County, Ky.”

It will be noted that the property described by lot and block number in the notice of January 27th, in the *582 statement of mechanic’s lien, and in the statement of account filed with the mechanic's lien, is the old residence of Bryant and the property upon which it was located and upon which appellant had done no work. None of these documents described by lot and block number Bryant’s residence on which the work had been done; that is, the 20 feet of lot 19 and 15 feet of lot 20. The appellant’s account not having’ been paid, he brought this suit to recover a personal judgment against Brewer for the $609.15, alleged due, and to enforce against lot 18 and 5 feet of lot 19 his claimed mechanic’s lien. A demurrer to the original petition was overruled as to Brewer but sustained as to Bryant. The petition was thereupon amended to show that notice of the claimed lien had been sent to Bryant within the time prescribed by statute. Kentucky Statutes, sec. 2163. The demurrer to the petition as amended was thereupon overruled. Brewer filed his answer and counterclaim, in which he denied that he was liable for any of the extras claimed, and in which he asserted that the work had not been done satisfactorily to the owner or completed according to contract, and that he had been compelled to complete it at a cost to him of $...................................................... (sic), for which he asked judgment. The appellee Bryant filed his answer to the amended petition, in which Brewer also joined. It alleged that the* appellant had done no work on the property described in the notice, in the statement of mechanic’s lien, and in the petition, but that the work had been done on other property. The appellant traversed this answer to his amended petition. The case was then referred to the master commissioner, who found that, by reason of the facts set up in Bryant’s answer, which were established without dispute by the proof, no lien existed in favor of the appellant. On the issue between appellant and Brewer, he found that appellant was entitled to recover the full amount sued for. Powers and Brewer filed exceptions to this report. The circuit court overruled the exceptions of Powers, but sustained those of Brewer to the extent that he allowed no recovery in favor of the appellant for the extras claimed. These being eliminated, the chancellor gave judgment in favor of the appellant against Brewer for the sum of $372.05 and dismissed the petition as to Bryant. Powers has appealed from both parts of the judgment.

The first ground relied upon by appellant for reversal of the judgment in favor of Bryant is rested on the *583 contention that the statute gives to a laborer or materialman a complete perfect and subsisting lien against the property upon which he has labored or furnished material even though no notice is given to the owner and no statement of the lien is filed as required by section 2468 of the Statutes, providing that the owner knows that the labor has been done on or the material has been furnished to his property and no question of priorities or of bona fide purchasers intervenes: This contention of the appellant has been expressly denied by this court in many of its decisions. To cite but one, the case of Woods et al. v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 S.W.2d 466, 238 Ky. 579, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powers-v-brewer-kyctapphigh-1931.