Sherbondy v. Tulsa Boiler & MacHinery Co.

1924 OK 571, 226 P. 564, 99 Okla. 214, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 863
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 20, 1924
Docket11755
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 1924 OK 571 (Sherbondy v. Tulsa Boiler & MacHinery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherbondy v. Tulsa Boiler & MacHinery Co., 1924 OK 571, 226 P. 564, 99 Okla. 214, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 863 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

JARMAN, C.

This action was commenced in the district court of Pawnee county by the Tulsa Boiler & Machinery Company, as plaintiff, against the Federal Refining Company, W. E. Sherbondy, the Acme Refining & Pipe Line Company, and A. W. Henn, defendants, for personal judgment against the Federal Refining Company, and to foreclose a materialman’s lien upon certain land on which the Federal Refining Company had built a refinery. The cause was submitted to the court without a jury; resulting in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant Federal Refining Company in' the amount asked for, and a decree foreclosing a materialman’s lien on said property for the amount of said judgment, from which judgment the defendants W. E. Sherbondy, Acme Refining & Pipe Line Company, and A. W. Henn bring error.

On or about March 26. 1917, the plaintiff, Tulsa Boiler & Machinery Company, entered into a verbal contract with the Federal Refining Company, the owner of a certain tract of land at Jennings, Okla., to furnish all the material that it could furnish, to the Federal Refining Company in constructing, or building, a refinery on said land. In compliance with this agreement, the plaintiff furnished to the defendant, Federal Refining Company, material for the construction of said refinery to the amount of $7,087.73, on which there was a payment iqade of $2,-800. The first material furnished by the plaintiff was on March 26, 1917, and the last item furnished was ou September 13, 1917. and. op November 23, 1917, less than four months from the date of the furnishing of the last material, the plaintiff filed a lien statement, for the amount of the material furnished, ■ in the office of the court clerk of Pawneé county. On July 19, 1917, the Federal Refining Company sold and conveyed the real estate in question to W. E. Sher-bondy, and at that time the refinery was being built, and the Federal Refining Company agreed to complete the ref-inery at its cost and expense. On July 23,' 1917, Sherbondy sold and conveyed said real estate to the Acme Refining & Pipe Line Company, and on August 21, 1918, the Acme Refining & Pipe Line Company sold and conveyed said property to A. W. Henn.

The case was submitted, and the lien was awarded on said property for the material furnished, and the lien was foreclosed on the theory that the material was furnished under the oral contract of March 26¡, 1917, by the plaintiff with the Federal Refining Company, the then owner of said property.

The first proposition, urged by the defendants, is: “The evidence shows that the materials were not furnished under the contract entitling plaintiff to the lien decreed.”

The defendants call attention* to the fact that section 7461, Comp. Stat. 1921, require that the material shall be furnished under a valid contract with the owner of the tract of land in order to procure a lien for the amount of the material furnished. Defendants contend that the transaction between the plaintiff and the owner of the land. Federal Refining Company, wherein the plaintiff agreed to furnish all of the material it could, did not constitute a valid and binding contract, and therefore the plaintiff did not have a lien on said land.

The defendants insist that said contract is void for want of mutuality, and because it is too vague and indefinite. It is true, where a contract is so vague and indefinite that the intention of the parties cannot be ascertained therefrom, or where there is a want of mutuality, an action for damages for breach of said contract cannot lie, nor can specific performance of said contract be required, yet when such contract has been fully performeed by one of the parties, and the opposite party accepts the benefits of said contract, it becomes binding on such party, and it relates back and takes effect as of the date of the contract. 13 Corpus Juris, p. 334, sec. 181; Yockey v. Yockey (Kan.) 148 Pac. 665; Little Butte Mining Company v. Girand (Ariz.) 123 Pac. 309: McDougall v. McDonald (Wash.) 150 Pac. 638. So, when the plaintiff fully performed its part of the contract by furnishing the material which it agreed to furnish, and it *216 was accepted, it cannot be said tbat the contract is void for vagueness and indefiniteness, because those elements have been supplied by the performance; neither can it be said that the contract is void for want of mutuality, because that element was supplied by the defendants ratifying the contract, and accepting the benefits of it.

The defendants overlooked the fact that the contract under consideration is an executed contract and not an executory one.

The defendants contend that, since this contract could not have been enforced by reason of its vagueness and indefiniteness and lack of mutuality, it merely amounted to an arrangement for a line of credit for the material, and that each order for material, and the supplying thereof, constituted a separate contract. The rule is settled in this jurisdiction that' where, as in tjtiis case, material is furnished to be used for the same general purpose, as for the construction of a building, though the material be ordered at different times, yet if the separate parts form an entire whole, and are so connected as to show that the parties regarded the separate items of material furnished at different times, as being a part of the entire account, and not constituting sei>-arate accounts, the furnishing of said material in this manner will be considered as a single contract. Joplin Sash & Door Works v. Oklahoma Presbyterian College, 36 Okla. 547, 129 Pac. 40.

The next proposition urged by the defendants is: “A lien cannot be predicated upon the oral arrangement, because it was superseded by an agreement in writing.”

The record shows that after the oral contract was made and a portion of the material furnished, the Federal Refining Company signed a writing evidencing the understanding had with reference to the furnishing of the material by the plaintiff. The defendants contend that this written instrument supersedes the oral agreement, and that the lien of plaintiff would have to be predicated on the written instrument, and, since such written instrument was not produced in evidence, no lien could be decreed.

It must be borne in mind that this is not an action to enforce thg oral contract; the only question here is whether the material was furnished under a contract with the owner of the land, and it is immaterial that the contract was originally oral and subsequently reduced to writing. The reducing of the oral contract to writing does not lessen the fact that there was a contract with the owner, under which the material was furnished, and this is all that is necessary.

Defendants next contend that where the owner of property conveys the same, and the seller contracts to do certain work and furnish certain materials, a third person furnishing materials will stand in the relation of a subcontractor.

The record shows that after the contract was entered into by the plaintiff with the Federal Refining Company for the furnishing of material, the Federal sold the property to Sherbondy, and that the Federal was to then complete the refinery for Sher-bondy. The defendants take the position that when the plaintiff furnished the material to the Federal to build the refinery for Sherbondy, it did so as a subcontractor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 571, 226 P. 564, 99 Okla. 214, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherbondy-v-tulsa-boiler-machinery-co-okla-1924.