Rodgers v. Jorgensen

67 N.W.2d 770, 159 Neb. 485, 1954 Neb. LEXIS 145
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1954
Docket33556
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 67 N.W.2d 770 (Rodgers v. Jorgensen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rodgers v. Jorgensen, 67 N.W.2d 770, 159 Neb. 485, 1954 Neb. LEXIS 145 (Neb. 1954).

Opinion

Wenke,, J.

This is an action instituted in the district court for Douglas County by William V. Rodgers for the purpose of foreclosing a mechanic’s lien on the home property of Edward C. F. and Cora C. Jorgensen, husband and wife, located at 5818' Florence Boulevard, in Omaha, Nebraska. The trial court found the Jorgensens were not indebted to the plaintiff and, because thereof, dismissed the petition. Plaintiff filed a motion for new trial and, from the overruling thereof, perfected this appeal.

The Rivett Lumber & Coal Company, also referred to as the Rivett Lumber Company, admittedly, at the request of appellant, furnished most of the materials that were used in repairing and remodeling the Jorgensens’ home. There was a balance due on this account. The company filed a mechanic’s lien on the Jorgensens’ property for this balance and made a claim in this proceeding therefor, including a charge of $4.50 paid for filing its lien. The trial court found there was due on this claim the sum of $771.92. There is no dispute as to this amount, which the Jorgensens have paid. We shall, for convenience, hereinafter refer to the Jorgensens as appellees.

*487 The appellees’ home was apparently completely remodeled and extensively repaired by appellant, who furnished all labor and materials for that purpose. In regard thereto appellant alleged: “* * * for which repairing and remodeling plaintiff agreed to furnish all materials and necessary labor at a total cost to him, plus a 10% profit making no additional profit on his own labor for which he was to receive his regular wages.”

In this regard appellees alleged they: “* * * employed Plaintiff by oral contract to repair and remodel defendants’ home on the above described property; to furnish all labor and all materials in the repairing and remodeling of said premises for the agreed price of $2000.00 and to have said repairs and remodeling completed within three weeks from said date.”

Appellant suggests that since we have held mechanic’s lien statutes should be liberally construed so as to effectuate their objects and purposes, and thus protect claimants thereunder, that we should here permit appellant to recover the fair and reasonable value of the labor and materials he furnished and supplied in remodeling and repairing appellees’ home. He states this in his brief as follows: “If, on a trial de novo, this Court should find that the evidence does not establish any clear and convincing express contract between the parties as to a compensation agreed upon but rather establishes that the minds of the parties never expressly met as to the specific compensation to be paid, then we submit that the law would imply a contract for the reasonable value of all labor and materials which Rodgers furnished that went into the improving, remodeling and repairing of the Jorgensen house.”

Such right to recover would be on quantum meruit and based upon an implied promise to pay the reasonable value of the labor and materials furnished.' See Umberger v. Sankey, 154 Neb. 881, 50 N. W. 2d 346.

It is true that: “An action on a quantum meruit may be joined in a petition with an action on an express *488 contract, and a verdict and judgment will satisfy the liability as to both claims where they have their origin in the same transaction.” Stout v. Omaha, L. & B. Ry. Co., 97 Neb. 816, 151 N. W. 295. See, also, Umberger v. Sankey, supra.

In this regard we said in Umberger v. Sankey, supra: “In the case before us the law implies a promise to pay when the materials and labor were requested. It was not necessary to plead the promise to pay which the law implies. The pleading of such a promise was therefore not essential and was, at most, harmless. It added nothing but a fiction to' the pleading and can afford no basis for a claim of a fatal variance between the pleading and proof.”

And, “A prayer for general relief in an equity action is as broad as the pleadings and the equitable powers of the court.” Gibson v. Koutsky-Brennan-Vana Co., 143 Neb. 326, 9 N. W. 2d 298. See, also, Halligan v. Elander, 147 Neb. 709, 25 N. W. 2d 13.

However, “A party may at any and all times invoke the language of his opponent’s pleading, on which a case is being tried, on a particular issue, and in doing this he is neither required nor allowed to offer such pleading in evidence in the ordinary manner.” Gibson v. Koutsky-Brennan-Vana Co., supra.

As stated in Bonacci v. Cerra, 134 Neb. 476, 279 N. W. 173, quoting from 2 Wigmore, Evidence (2d ed.), § 1064, p. 536: “ ‘The pleadings in a cause are, for the purposes of use in that suit, not mere ordinary admissions, * * * but judicial admissions * :|: * i. e., they are not a means of evidence, but a waiver of all controversy (so far as the opponent may desire to take advantage of them) and therefore a limitation of the issues. Neither party may dispute beyond these limits. Thus, any reference that may be made to them, where the one party desires to avail himself of. the other’s pleading, is not a process of using evidence, but an invocation of the right to confine the issues * * *.’ ”

*489 By his pleadings we find appellant here limited his right to recover to the oral contract pleaded, which appellees have denied, and thereby placed upon himself the burden of proof to establish such contract.

On appeal we shall consider the record de novo. The principle applicable is stated in York Brick & Tile Co. v. Ude Motor Co., 123 Neb. 154, 242 N. W. 361, as follows: “ ‘In all appeals from the district court to the supreme court in suits in equity, wherein review of some or all of the findings of fact of the district court is asked by the appellant, it shall be the duty of the supreme court to retry the issue or issues of fact involved in the finding or findings of fact complained of on the evidence preserved in the bill of exceptions, and upon trial de novo of such question or questions of fact, reach an independent conclusion as to what finding or findings are required under the pleadings and all the evidence, without reference to the conclusion reached in the district court or the fact that there may be some evidence in support thereof.’ Comp. St. 1929, sec. 20-1925.”

However, as stated in O’Brien v. Fricke, 148 Neb. 369, 27 N. W. 2d 403: “Actions in equity, on appeal to this court, are triable de novo in conformity with section 25-1925, R. S. 1943, subject, however, to the condition that when the evidence on material questions of fact is in irreconcilable conflict this court will, in determining the weight of the evidence, consider the fact that the trial court observed the witnesses and their manner of testifying and must have accepted one version of the facts rather than the opposite.” See, also, Rettinger v. Pierpont, 145 Neb. 161, 15 N. W. 2d 393.

The evidence shows that on three different occasions in the latter part of July or the first few days of August 1952 appellant talked with the appellees, or one of them, about the remodeling and repairing of their home. These conversations took place at the appellees’ home. Appellant testified that on the second of these visits Jorgensen told him to go ahead with some cement work' *490

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Bluebook (online)
67 N.W.2d 770, 159 Neb. 485, 1954 Neb. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodgers-v-jorgensen-neb-1954.