Progress Press Brick & Machine Co. v. Gratiot Brick & Quarry Co.

52 S.W. 401, 151 Mo. 501, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 328
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 12, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 52 S.W. 401 (Progress Press Brick & Machine Co. v. Gratiot Brick & Quarry Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Progress Press Brick & Machine Co. v. Gratiot Brick & Quarry Co., 52 S.W. 401, 151 Mo. 501, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 328 (Mo. 1899).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J.

This is an action to establish a mechanic’s lien.

The petition is in two counts. The first count alleges that the Gratiot Brick & Quarry Company bought of the plaintiff hard bricks to the amount of $1,000; that said bricks were furnished for and used in the construction of a one and two-story brick and frame structure, containing clay sheds, brick kilns, press, machine and boiler house and appurtenances, known as a brick plant, erected on certain real estate described,comprising seven contiguous lots; that the fee simple title to the real estate was in the Gratiot Brick & Quarry Company at the dates of furnishing said materials; that on the 28th day of February, 1896, the Gratiot Brick & Quarry Company executed a certain deed of trust to Robert P. Williams, trustee for the American Exchange Bank, on these lots and other lots; that prior to these events, on the 10th day of May, 1893, Daniel McAllister and J. G. Hardy, who at that time owned said premises, executed a deed of trust on the same to Robert W. Frank, trustee for Albert J. Erank, securing an indebtedness therein described, which said indebtedness is now .owned by defendant, O. Herman Beckman; that a general voluntary assignment was made by the Gratiot Brick & Quarry Company to defendant John G. Parrish, on the 28th of February, 1896; that the said bricks were furnished continuously from the 6th of August, 1895, to the 29th [510]*510of August, 1895, when the demand accrued; that plaintiff filed its lien account on the 25tfi of February, 1896; tbat no part of said account bas been paid.

The second count alleges tbat on tbe 31st of July, 1895, plaintiff contracted to furnish for tbe defendant, Gratiot Brick & Quarry Company, for tbe sum of $5,000, a six-mold press brick machine complete upon foundations; tbat said press should be able to make 30,000 good bricks per day of ten hours. Tbe plaintiff furnished said machine for tbe one and two-story brick and frame structure heretofore described, and situated upon tbe same premises; tbat said machine was furnished by plaintiff and accepted by defendant on September 24, 1895, and became a part of said frame and brick structure at said date; tbat there bad been paid, in tbe shape of stock, $2,000 on tbe purchase price of said machine; tbat tbe balance, $3,000, is still due and unpaid; tbat tbe lien account was filed on tbe 25th of February, 1896.

Gratiot Brick & Quarry Company made default. Defendants Robert P. Williams, trustee, American Exchange Bank, Robert W. Frank, trustee, and J. G. Parrish, assignee, answered admitting tbat tbe title to tbe premises in question was as stated in tbe petition and admitting tbe transfers as alleged in tbe petition, but denying all tbe other facts.

Tbe trial developed these facts: Prior to August 5th, 1895, one McAllister owned lots 5 to 21 inclusive in City Block 4777 of tbe city of St. Louis, and bad commenced tbe construction of a dry pressed brick plant thereon, tbe buildings needed therefor resting on parts of lots 11, 12,13, 14,15, 16, and 17. He sold tbe premises to tbe defendant, who continued and completed the erection of tbe improvements, for tbe same purposes. Tbe plant consisted of a press bouse, office, boiler and engine room, kilns and day sheds, which were so constructed tbat tbe whole was covered by one continuous roof, in order to go from one part to tbe other without exposing tbe dry clay to tbe elements; tbe part called tbe press [511]*511house was inclosed on all sides, was a frame building, two stories high with a gravel roof; the whole plant was used as one plant and the several parts were necessary to make up the whole plant, which would mot be a complete plant if any of the parts were omitted. After the defendant purchased the premises, it bought from the plaintiff 202,000 hard bricks (for $1,111) which were used in constructing the kilns, and also bought one six-mold pressed brick machine, weighing over 52,000 pounds, which was also necessary to complete the plant, and which was placed in the press-house on a rock and cement foundation, the flanges of the bed plate of the machine extending downward on the outside and inside of the rock foundation and were embedded in cement about four and a half inches thick, so that the machine was fastened solidly to the foundation so that it could not be removed without breaking the machine or the foundation; the press was connected with the boiler room by steam pipes and the necessary belting and shafting, and was also connected with the second story or hopper room, by belting and shafting and machinery for driving and conveying clay by means of an elevator; the dry or harvested clay was brought from the clay sheds to the hopper and carried into the machine by the elevators; the boiler house was constructed of brick and frame; the engine was partly in the press room and partly in the engine room; the whole plant, except the driveway and'the coal chute, was enclosed on all sides and was covered, by one roof, and all the parts were connected so that the manufacture of the bricks might be carried on in one building so as not to expose the clay to the elements while being manufactured. The contract price for the machine was $5,000, of which $2,000 was to be in stock of the defendant company, so that the balance due the plaintiff is $4,111, for which in due time a lien was filed.

When the defendant company purchased the property there was a mortgage on it, put there by the former owner. [512]*512After the plaintiff’s rights under the lien had become fixed the defendant gave a second mortgage on the property to Williams as trustee for the American Exchange Bank, and afterwards the company made an assignment for the benefit of creditors.

The court gave the following instructions at the instance of the plaintiff:

“That there is no evidence to show any fraud or fraudulent design or purpose on the part of plaintiff in the preparation and filing of its lien claim; therefore, if from the evidence the court believes and finds that plaintiff is not entitled to ,a mechanic’s lien for all of its claim, or that plaintiff is not entitled to such lien against all the property therein ' described, the court should, nevertheless, award to plaintiff a lien for such sum and to such extent as from the evidence the court may believe and find plaintiff is justly entitled to.”

The court refused the following instruction offered at the instance of the plaintiff:

“That if the court from the evidence believes the facts to be that defendant, Gratiot Brick & Quarry Company, acquired the lots which are in the petition and lien claim in this ' case described, for the purpose of erecting thereon a plant for the manufacture of brick by the dry process; that at the time when defendant so acquired said lots there was standing thereon in an unfinished condition a building designed to be used in the manufacture of brick; that thereafter said de^ fendant ordered from plaintiff the brick press mentioned in said petition, and also ordered from plaintiff the brick in said petition specified; that plaintiff delivered said brick to said defendant, and the same were at the instance of said defendant used in putting up necessary kilns for the completion of said plant; that plaintiff also brought to defendant’s said premises said press, and so affixed and built the same into the building aforesaid that th'e same became a part thereof; that there was also attached to said building a boiler and engine [513]

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.W. 401, 151 Mo. 501, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/progress-press-brick-machine-co-v-gratiot-brick-quarry-co-mo-1899.