Stanley J. Gottschalk Construction Co. v. Carlson

253 Ill. App. 520, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 62
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 26, 1929
DocketGen. No. 33,215
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 253 Ill. App. 520 (Stanley J. Gottschalk Construction Co. v. Carlson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanley J. Gottschalk Construction Co. v. Carlson, 253 Ill. App. 520, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 62 (Ill. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Holdom

delivered the opinion of the court.

On October 11,1927, the petitioner, Stanley J. Gottsehalk Construction Company, filed its petition against the defendants, Victor C. Carlson- et al., for a mechanic’s lien upon certain property known as the Indian Wood Subdivision. The rights of the parties, as contended by petitioner, arose out of two contracts, one in writing and the other by parol. One, referred to as the sidewalk contract, was evidenced in writing, set forth in the petition, and the other resting in parol was called the paving contract. Issues were joined on the petition and there was a reference to a master to hear the .proofs and report his conclusions of fact and law to the court. There was a full hearing before the master, before whom all parties to the cause presented their proofs. The master found both facts and law in favor of defendants and recommended that a decree be entered dismissing petitioner’s petition for want of equity. Objections were filed by petitioner to the master’s report, who on hearing overruled the same, they being afterwards filed before the chancellor as exceptions to the report, which exceptions, after a hearing thereon, were overruled and a decree entered approving and confirming the master’s report dismissing the petition for want of equity, and a judgment entered against petitioner for all taxable costs. There was an interveniner petition and other claims filed by defendants, other than the Carlsons, all of whom were heard before the master and their several claims disposed of adversely to them in the master’s report and in the final decree. Petitioner only brings the record here for our review, which will be confined to the contentions made by petitioner and the Carlson defendants as no one other than petitioner is complaining or making any objection before this court to the decree in this appeal.

The findings of the master material to the issues before us for review are that petitioner is not entitled to a mechanic’s lien, as prayed, for the amount claimed for the reason that the work done and materials furnished were not dpne arid furnished in a good, substantial, workmanlike manner, and were not in accordance with contracts, agreements, specifications or drawings, and that petitioner refused to and did not furnish a contractor’s sworn statement, as required by statute, but that it abandoned and refused to go ahead with the work; that petitioner negligently damaged seventeen trees belonging to defendant Carlson growing on the premises and that bark on three of said trees was damaged and injured, as a result of which said trees have died; that the fair, usual, reasonable and customary value of said trees was the sum of $1,200; that the bark on the remaining fourteen of said trees was damaged, which damage, if not repaired, will" result in the loss and death of said trees; that the fair, usual, reasonable and customary charge made at the time and place of the damage for the repairing thereof was in the sum of $600, and that defendants are entitled to off-set said sums against the said sums, if any, due petitioner; that the sidewalk laid by petitioner was not constructed in accordance with specifications, nor in a-good and workmanlike manner, but was defectively constructed, pointing out specifically such defects, and that by reason thereof defendants will be compelled to remove the same, and that petitioner is not entitled to recover of defendants the amount claimed by it .on account of the laying of said walks or any part thereof; that petitioner did not perform its contracts or either of them, and on September 20, 1926, wrongfully and without good cause suspended operations on said premises under said contracts and insisted that defendant Carlson pay petitioner the amount then claimed by it' before, it would proceed with the work; that on September 10, 1926, Carlson paid on account of the amount claimed by petitioner $2,500, and that petitioner in consideration of said payment and for the purpose of procuring the same represented to Carlson that all workmen and materialmen had been paid in full to that date; that such representations were untrue and that on the 13th of September, 1926, defendant Carlson was informed that Matteson Lumber & Coal Company claimed $2,329.80; and thereupon defendant Carlson refused to make further payments to petitioner unless and until it furnished to him contractor’s statements, and did on the 18th of September thereafter demand of said petitioner that such statement be furnished, which petitioner refused to do, but insisted that payment be made to it without said statement; that defendant Carlson insisted on said statement being given and refused to make payment direct to petitioner unless petitioner would furnish waivers of lien from existing subcontractors. Thereupon petitioner tendered to defendant Carlson its checks purporting to be payable to the said subcontractors and demanded that defendant Carlson take the checks and mail them to the subcontractors and in exchange pay to petitioner the full amount of its claim, which Carlson refused to do; that as a result of which petitioner on September 20, 1926, suspended operations, until such time as such payment should be made to it; that at no time on or prior to September 20, 1926, did petitioner ever tender or furnish to defendant Carlson, or to anyone in his behalf, a contractor’s statement; that on September 23, 1926, as of which time petitioner continued to fail to fur.nish the contractor’s statement, defendant Carlson on account of such suspension of said work declared the contracts breached and notified petitioner to do no further work, but to remove its equipment from the premises.

The master. concludes, as a proposition of law, that defendant Carlson was entitled to such contractor’s statement, as a condition precedent to making payment to petitioner so that he might be informed as to the identity of the subcontractors and the amounts unpaid to them, if any; and that upon being so informed he was entitled as a condition precedent to payment of the money direct to petitioner to insist that there be furnished waivers of liens from the subcontractors, whose money it requested be directly paid to the petitioner ; that under the circumstances petitioner was not justified in suspending operations and that so doing constituted a breach of the contracts.

The master found that on the 20th and 23rd days of September, 1926, in addition to the claim of the Matteson Lumber & Coal Company of $2,329.80, there was due the following:

Chicago Gravel Co. for sand................$ 207.96

Brownell Improvement Co. for stone........ 1158.39

Advance Oil Co. for gas and oil............. 411.56

Chicago Riverdale Lumber Co. for lumber---- 80.58

Frans en Bros., for hauling................. 137.63

Philip Carey Co. for expansion joints........ 281.31

Kalman Steel Co. for reinforced steel........ 580.57

Making a total sum due and unpaid of......$5187.80

The master further reported that the balance claimed to be due by petitioner could not be recovered in the mechanic’s lien proceeding, and that its lien prayed should be denied and the bill dismissed for want of equity upon a hearing, “in so far as this lien proceeding is concerned and that petitioner’s remedy, if any he has, should be at law for suit to be recovered upon a quantum meruit

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253 Ill. App. 520, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanley-j-gottschalk-construction-co-v-carlson-illappct-1929.