Schulenburg v. Hayden

48 S.W. 472, 146 Mo. 583, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 8, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 48 S.W. 472 (Schulenburg v. Hayden) 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
Schulenburg v. Hayden, 48 S.W. 472, 146 Mo. 583, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 54 (Mo. 1898).

Opinion

Maks hall, J.

This is an action in replevin to recover possession of a house.

On February 13, 1890, Louis J. Silva, owned lots 38 and 39, in city block 4546, in St. Louis, on which there was a two story , hip-roof dwelling house, and on that day he gave a deed of trust, covering the land and the house, to Donovan, as trustee for Geraldin, to secure a loan of $5,000. On February 25, 1890, Silva gave a second deed of trust, covering both the land and the house, to Donovan as trustee for Geraldin, to secure a loan of $1,000. On January 19, 1892, Silva gave a deed of trust conveying the land and house to Rutledge, as trustee for Bradford, to secure a loan of $5,000. All of these deeds of trust were properly [588]*588recorded. About July, 1893, the house was so injured by fire, as that the roof, the third floor (in the hip-roof), the rear portion of the second floor, all but the northeast corner and center of the first floor, the east wall, the rear wall to the second story joist, the partitions in the center of the first floor and all those on the second floor, except in the north east room, were destroyed. The west wall and most of the front wall were left standing intact. Before the fire the house was worth about $6,000. What remained after the fire was worth about $2,000 and the house was uninhabitable. After the fire Silva made contracts with various contractors to reconstruct the house, among them with Charles Reader, for mantels and grates, for the price of $445. The plan of the house was changed so as to include a new room, with bay window to the east, the house was enlarged, a kitchen added, the interior arrangements altered, a room and bath room added on the second floor, the roof carried up so as to make two rooms in the third story, instead of an unfinished attic, as it formerly was, new windows cut in the east wall, etc. etc., so that the house, as reconstructed, was worth $10,000. On the twenty-fourth of October, 1893, Silva gave a deed of trust covering the land and house, to Overall, as trustee for the Rainwater-Bradford Hat Co., to secure an indebtedness of $5,000.

The work of reconstruction was begun about July 15, 1893. On the eleventh of November, 1893, Reader filed a mechanic’s lien against the land and house for the work done and materials furnished by him between August 29 and October 14, 1893. On the twenty-third of November, 1893, the land and house covered by the third deed of trust dated January 19,1892, to Rutledge, trustee for Bradford, was regularly foreclosed, and Andrew J. Naughton became the purchaser. On the twenty-ninth of November, 1893, Reader brought suit to [589]*589enforce the mechanic’s lien, making Silva, Donovan, Giraldin, Overall, Rainwater-Bradford Hat Co., Rutledge, Bradford, Naughton andEllerbe, assignee of the Rainwater-Bradford Hat Co., parties defendant. On January 13, 1894, Naughton, the purchaser at the trustee’s sale, conveyed the property to the Bellmont Improvement and Property Company, of which he was the president, for a consideration of one dollar. On the thirteenth of February, 1895, Reader obtained judgment on his mechanic’s lien against Silva, and as a special lien on the land and house. At the same February term, 1895 to wit, on the eighteenth day of March, 1895, Reader filed a motion to modify the judgment so as to make it apply to the house alone, omitting the land, and on the thirtieth of March, 1895, during the February term, the court made the modification. The execution was returned nulla bona, as to Silva, but was levied on the house, and the plaintiffs herein became the purchasers of the house, at the sheriff’s sale, on the fourteenth of June, 1895, at the price of $800. Naughton’s grantee, the Bellmont Improvement and Property Company, refused to allow the plaintiffs to remove the house, and this suit, in replevin for the possession of the house, was instituted. At the trial in the circuit court, and at the close of plaintiffs’ case, the court sustained a demurrer to the evidence, plaintiffs took a nonsuit with leave, a motion to set the same aside was filed, which, being overruled, plaintiffs appealed to this court.

I. The pivotal question thus presented, is whether the Bradford deed of trust, dated January 19, 1892, covering the land and house or the mechanic’s lien, for work and materials, done and furnished after July 15, 1893, and covering only the house, had priority. Upon the true solution of this proposition depends the result whether the purchaser at the sale under the deed of [590]*590trust or the purchaser at the sale under the mechanic’s lien acquired the better title to the house. It is conceded that plaintiffs have no title to the land.

Our statutes, section 6706, give a mechanic a lien on the land upon which any building, erection or other improvement is situated, “to the extent and only to the extent of all the right, title and interest owned therein by the owner or proprietor of such building, erection or other improvement, for whose immediate use or benefit the labor was done or things were fufnished.”

Section 6707 prescribes as follows: “The lien for the things aforesaid, or work, shall attach to the buildings, erections or improvements for which they were furnished or the work was done, in preference to any prior lien or incumbrance or mortgage upon the land upon which said buildings, erections, improvements or machinery have been erected or put; and any person enforcing such lien may have such building, erection or improvement sold under execution, and the purchaser may remove the same within a reasonable time thereafter.”

Section 6711 gives the mechanic’s lien priority over all other liens, created by contract, placed on the land or house after the commencement of the buildings, etc.

Section 6713, allows all parties to the contract, “and all other persons interested in the matter in controversy or in the property charged with the lien,” to be made parties to the suit to enforce the lien, “but such as are not made parties shall not be bound by any such proceedings.”

In this case the work done and materials furnished was not “repairs,” in its legal sense, nor was it an original construction or erection of a new building. It was more properly speaking a reconstruction of a partially destroyed building. The Bradford mortgage covered the land and the original house (worth $6,000). [591]*591A portion oí the house, say two thirds in value, was destroyed by fire, but what remained was worth $2,000. The mortgagee’s security was diminished by the fire, $1,000, but his mortgage was still extant on the land and the ruins of the original house. It was duly recorded, and hence the contractor had notice of the lien on the land and the ruins of the house, when he made the contract and when he did the work and furnished the materials for reconstructing the house. The mortgagor was under no obligation to the mortgagee to reconstruct the building injured by the fire. The mortgagee was not a party to the contract to reconstruct, and could not be made liable personally or by the postponement of his mortgage lien, without his consent. The contractor therefore did the work upon the personal credit of the mortgagor and upon the faith of his equity of redemption in the land. “Under a different rule it would be in the power of the mortgagor to destroy the security by erecting costly improvements, the expense of which the estate improved would not be able to pay.

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Bluebook (online)
48 S.W. 472, 146 Mo. 583, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schulenburg-v-hayden-mo-1898.