Rankin & Co. v. City of Cincinnati

1 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 393
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedApril 15, 1871
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 393 (Rankin & Co. v. City of Cincinnati) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rankin & Co. v. City of Cincinnati, 1 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 393 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1871).

Opinion

Taft, J.

This is a contest between subcontractors for a fund due from the city to Bearly for work done for the city in connection with the Franklin-street school-house.. The balance of funds in the hands of the city was $1,377, while the claims of subcontractors amounted to much more.

The first question, relating to priority among the cred[394]*394itors, turns upon the notice of their respective claims upon the city. The plaintiffs, Rankin & Co., were the first to leave at the office of the clerk of the board of education a statement and notice of their claim. They left their statement and notice at the office on the morning of the 18th of August, 1870. The clerk was himself out of the city, but there was a messenger or officer who kept the office open.

Dunn & Witt deposited their claim in the office at 5 p. m., August 22d.

The clerk returned to the office on the morning of August 22, 1870.

These claims were read to the board of education on the same day, that is, at the meeting in the evening of the 22d of August.

There are none others to compete with these in point of time, but the other parties contest on a different principle, to which we shall soon refer.

As between these parties, we think the plaintiffs are prior in time with the service of their notice. It seems to us that they presented their notice to the right place and to the right person. The notice of the claim of Rankin & Co. must have actually reached the clerk before that of Dunn & Witt, if we are to rely upon the probabilities arising on the evidence, as the clerk returned to the office on the morning of the day in the afternoon of which Dunn & Witt presented their account, the plaintiffs’ account having been presented four days before.

The contract itself provides, “ That if any of the subcontractors of said work shall, at any time during the progress of said work, give notice to said board that they have not received pay for their estimated portion of said work, according to the terms of their agreement with said B early, then in such case it shall be lawful for the clerk of said board, to settle directly with such subcontractors, their receipts for such dh’ect payments to be taken as absolute payment and satisfaction for so much of the contract price of said house.”

This clause in the contract recognizes the clerk as the [395]*395agent of the board for payment of the subcontractors as well as of the principal contractor, and as the medium of communication between them and the board. So far, then, as the question of notice is concerned, we find the plaintiffs first and Dunn & Witt next. The claim of the plaintiffs is for $3,313.23, and that of Dunn & Witt for $1,082, so that they absorb the entire balance of $1,377 in the hands of the city, unless the other subcontractors can show that they are entitled to the fund on some other principle than mere priority in the time of filing their claims; and if the plaintiffs are first entitled they take the whole and leave nothing even for Dunn & Witt. There are other claims like that of the plaintiffs, beside that of Dunn & Witt, but they must be postponed because they were later in the time of presenting their accounts.

It has been suggested that the subcontractors ought all to stand on an equality, upon the authority of Choteau v. Thompson, 2 Ohio St. 114, and that the decision of this court in McCullom v. Richardson, 2 Handy, 276, was not consistent with the ruling of the Supreme Court, but we do not feel the difficulty suggested. It seems to us that the distinction taken by Judge Gholson was sound — holding that although the liens taken by mechanics for work done in erecting the same building are equal as to priority, yet the subcontractors, who present their accounts against the contractor or builde#-, like attaching creditors, if prior in time, are better in right as between themselves. But Greenlees & Ransom Co. and Long claim that neither the plaintiffs nor Dunn & Witt are entitled to any part of this fund until they have been paid, because the claims of plaintiffs and of Dunn & Witt were for work done and materials furnished under the written contract with Bearly to build the school-house for the sum of $81,000, which had been paid when these claims of the plaintiffs and of Dunn & Witt were presented. They claim that this fund now remaining in the hands of the city was destined to pay for extra work which was not done under the said written contract.

[396]*396The claim is, and the evidence shows, that the bills of the plaintiffs and Dunn & Witt were all for work done under the original written contract, and not for extra work and materials. It is claimed that the bills of the other subcon- , tractors, Greenlees & Ransom Co. and Long, were for work extra the written contract and extra the $81,000. The principal item of this extra work consisted of the work and materials for a frame privy.

The second section of the mechanics’ lien act, S. & O. 834, provides that every person doing work or furnishing materials for a building erected under a contract between the owner and builder, whose bill has not been paid, may deliver to the owner an attested account, and thereupon the owner shall retain from the contractor an amount to meet the bill presented. The act contemplates that the work has been done by the subcontractor under an employment or contract with the builder!

The $1,377 which the city still owed is supposed to be for extra work and materials not specifically called for by the written contract, unless under the clause relating to extra work and changes. This clause was as follows: “Moreover, it is understood and agreed that if any changes in said plans and specifications and the work corresponding thereto are considered advisable or necessary the same may be done, and shall be executed by said Bearly at such price as may be agreed upon between him and the superintendent of building; but the same shall not be made without the consent of the building committee of said board, nor unless a memorandum of said changes and the price thereof be first made and signed by said Bearly and said superintendent.”

We think that the city might and did waive the formalities as to extras provided for in this contract, but did not thereby prevent them from being part of the job and falling under the general contract.

"What, then, was the nature of the extra work and materials done and furnished here for which the city owes Bearly.

The principal item was a frame privy, for which there was [397]*397a new specification separate from and subsequent to the original plans and specification, and not signed. It was a separate building, though part of the establishment, and substituted in place of a brick building which was to have' been erected in the same place. There were other items of extra work for which no written subsequent stipulation or specification is shown to have been made or signed.

Greenlees & Ransom Co. present a claim of $223.18, work and materials done and furnished for the frame privy, and of $100.50 for otter extra work and materials not included in the original contract nor by additional and supplementary written stipulations, making their entire claim $323.68.

Edwin Long presented a similar claim of $35 for painting the extra privy, other extra work $29.70 — making in all $64.70.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rankin-co-v-city-of-cincinnati-ohsuperctcinci-1871.