Schaffer v. Smith

113 N.W.2d 668, 1962 N.D. LEXIS 59
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1962
Docket7927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 113 N.W.2d 668 (Schaffer v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schaffer v. Smith, 113 N.W.2d 668, 1962 N.D. LEXIS 59 (N.D. 1962).

Opinion

CLIFFORD SCHNELLER, District Judge.

The above action is one to quiet title to the following described real estate situated in Burleigh County, North Dakota, to-wit:

The East 55 feet of the West 125.73 feet of the North 242 feet of Block 7 of Lincoln Addition to the City of Bismarck.

The complaint is in statutory form.

The defendants who are appellants here, W. T. Jennings Lumber Co., a corporation, Bismarck Lumber Company, a corporation, and a partnership variously described as Hessinger Plumbing & Heating Co. and Fred Hessinger Plumbing & Heating Co., interposed answers, in which they allege in substance that they are lien-holders by virtue of having filed mechanics’ liens against the above described real estate for materials furnished, and, in the case of Hessinger Plumbing & Heating Co., for materials and labor furnished and performed, in the erection and construction of a dwelling upon such property.

This action was consolidated for trial with other actions that involved substantially the same question of law and fact.

The trial court found for the plaintiffs herein and against the appellants and ordered that the mechanics’ liens filed by appellants against the said described property were null and void.

The issues involved require a recitation of the facts, and as such facts are in the main undisputed they are as follows: R & H Construction Co. was a corporation originally chartered in South Dakota on February 3, 1953. In November, 1953, this corporation was authorized to do business in North Dakota. It was a family corporation consisting of Raymond H. Hillestad and his wife Wanda Hillestad, with another outstanding share the ownership not being mentioned in the evidence. The main activity of the corporation was to construct low-cost housing units on a fairly large scale at Bismarck. To interest the buying public in low-cost homes, the Corporation erected a model home and had a basic plan drawn of the type of home that was to be constructed. This basic plan was placed in the hands of real estate agents and brokers in Bismarck with the understanding that the real estate firms would attempt to interest prospective home owners in building homes to be constructed by the Corporation. Just *670 what the commission of the real estate brokers on a sale would be is not disclosed by the evidence, but from the down-payment to be paid by the purchaser the real estate broker deducted his commission and turned over the balance to the Corporation. Vacant lots were made available upon which the homes could be constructed, or the prospective purchasers could purchase their own lots. The plaintiffs were contacted by Hettick Real Estate Agency of Bismarck and shown the model home and the basic plans around which a home could be constructed, with some alterations permitted. Plaintiffs became interested and made a down-payment to Plettick Real Estate Agency of $750, evidenced by two payments totaling that amount, and signed a contract with R & H Construction Co. to construct a home upon the basic plan with some individual alterations being made by the plaintiffs, for a total agreed price of $10,750. The plaintiff Pauline Schaffer had a brother living in South Bismarck whose home was next to a vacant lot owned by Paul Willmann. Plaintiffs desired to construct their home on this vacant lot, and to that end sometime in August or early September of 1955 they contacted Mr. Will-mann, who agreed to sell them the lot for $1,000. The plaintiffs had previously made arrangements with Consumer Sales Co., a corporation, to make a loan on the home to be constructed for $10,000. Under the arrangements made with Consumer Sales Co. the mortgage money was never turned over to plaintiffs, but was to be paid out to R & H Construction Co., in three stages: the first stage being when the house was enclosed and the electrical, plumbing, heating and ventilating equipment was roughed in, prior to insulating and plastering; the second stage was when the insulating and plastering was completed and the house completely closed in; the third stage was when the house was finally completed and accepted. The mortgage given by plaintiffs to Consumer Sales Co. was dated October 11, 1955, recorded October 17, 1955, and assigned by Consumer Sales Co. to Fidelity Loan Company, a corporation, on October 13, 1955. On or about October 12, 1955, Mr. Quentin S. Gonser, President of Consumer Sales Co., at the request of an officer of Fidelity Loan Company, contacted Paul Willmann, paid him $1,000 from the mortgage money and received a deed from him as the grantor to the plaintiffs as grantees of the above described real estate. The deed was dated October 12, 1955, and recorded October 17, 1955. R & H Construction Co. commenced the construction of the home sometime in September of 1955, purchased materials that went into the construction of the home from the appellants herein, W. T. Jennings Lumber Co. and Bismarck Lumber Co. In the forepart of November, 1955, Hessinger Plumbing & Heating Co., under some arrangements with R & H Construction Co., commenced supplying materials and performing labor for the installation of plumbing and heating equipment in the home. The appellants W. T. Jennings Lumber Co. and Bismarck Lumber Co. also furnished materials to R & H Construction Co. for numerous other homes which the Construction Company was erecting for other purchasers in Bismarck. Hessinger Plumbing & Heating Co. was furnishing plumbing and heating equipment and materials and labor for installation in seven other homes besides that of plaintiffs being constructed by R & H Construction Co. Plaintiffs moved into their home on February 15, 1956, and had continued to occupy it up to the time of the trial. The appellants herein were never paid the whole of their charges by R & H Construction Co. and in February and March of 1956 they filed mechanics’ liens against said property. The mechanics’ liens of W. T. Jennings Lumber Co. and Bismarck Lumber Co. were solely for material furnished going into the construction of the plaintiffs’ home. Hessinger Plumbing & Heating Co. filed a purported mechanics’ lien claiming a lien on said property for both materials and labor furnished. In the meantime R & H Construction Co. had become insolvent, and its officers and owners, Raymond PI. Hillestad and Wanda *671 Hillestad, his wife, left Bismarck and moved to the State of California.

The mechanics’ lien laws of the State of North Dakota in force at the times in question, so far as material, are found in the 1943 Revised Code of North Dakota, and provide as follows:

“35-1201. Definitions. In this chapter, unless the context or subject matter otherwise requires:
“1. Materials shall include machinery and fixtures;
“2. Improvement shall include construction or repair of any work of internal improvement, and erection, alteration, and repair of any buildings or other structures;
“3. Structures shall include fences, sidewalks, pavings, wells, grades, drains, aiid excavations;
“4. Owner shall mean and include every person for whose immediate use and benefit any building, erection, or improvement is made, having the capacity to contract, including guardians of minors or other persons; and

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Related

Matter of Estate of Murphy
554 N.W.2d 432 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1996)
Rolla Community Hospital, Inc. v. Dunseith Community Nursing Home, Inc.
354 N.W.2d 643 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1984)
Trinity Builders, Inc. v. Schaff
199 N.W.2d 914 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1972)
Hessinger v. Sorenson
180 N.W.2d 910 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1970)
Quality Builders, Inc. v. Hahn
134 N.W.2d 577 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1965)
McKechnie v. Bismarck Lumber Co.
114 N.W.2d 709 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
113 N.W.2d 668, 1962 N.D. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schaffer-v-smith-nd-1962.