Stewart Lumber Co. v. Unique Home Builders, Inc.

294 P. 988, 160 Wash. 273, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 600
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1931
DocketNos. 22079, 22080. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 294 P. 988 (Stewart Lumber Co. v. Unique Home Builders, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart Lumber Co. v. Unique Home Builders, Inc., 294 P. 988, 160 Wash. 273, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 600 (Wash. 1931).

Opinion

Mitchell, C. J.

These are appeals by the Stewart Lumber Company, a corporation, from judgments in two actions, consolidated for trial and involving substantially the same facts and the same issues. The judgments denied foreclosure of materialmen’s liens claimed by the appellant. The Unique Home Builders, Inc., whose president and general manager was H. J. Armitage, as owner, built a group of thirteen houses, procuring the lumber, plastering material and hardware for the houses from the appellant.

The appellant, claiming that such material had not been fully paid for, filed notices of liens on July 9, 1927, for the balance alleged to be due. One of the liens, in the sum of $416.93 and interest and costs, was against the property known as 1022 E. 97th street, in or near Seattle; which property, at the timé of suit and trial, had been sold to, and was owned by, defendant Jennie E. Warner, who, prior to the filing of the lien notice, had purchased it from one B. T. Creen, who had acquired it from the Unique Home Builders, Inc. At the time of the trial, this property was subject to a first mortgage, held by the respondent .Continental Mortgage and Loan Company, which, it'was stipulated, was inferior to appellant’s notice-of .lien, if the latter was held to be a valid lien.

The other lien involved in these cases, in the sum of $389.22 and interest and costs, was against property *275 known as 1050 E. 97th. street, which property had been purchásed by respondent Anna M. Schroeder from the Unique Home Builders, Inc., prior to the filing of appellant’s notice of lien.

On April 30, 1927, the appellant, by John J. Gauss, gave to Unique Home Builders, Inc., a receipt for eight hundred and fifty dollars stating that the money received was “balance due in full for lumber, plaster and hardware” in five designated houses, including these two, Nos. 1022 and 1050. It appears that the money received was greater in amount than the amount due on these two houses, but not equal to the total amount due on all five of the houses mentioned in the receipt. In this respect, however, it may be mentioned that neither one of the respondents, purchasers of the two houses involved, knew, at the time of their respective purchases, the amount of material claimed to have been furnished by the appellant in the construction of any of the houses except the one the purchaser was buying.

There was considerable controversy concerning the receipt of April 30, 1927. It appears that, in a book of receipts kept by the appellant in its office, Mr. Gauss, on that same day, made out and signed a purported duplicate receipt to the Unique Home Builders, Inc., for the same amount as that contained in the receipt he had delivered to the Unique Home Builders, Inc.; but, in the copy in the office (which was on a printed form different from that delivered to the Unique Home Builders, Inc.), no statement was made as to how the money received had been, or was to be, applied. There is no claim, as we understand, that the receipt kept by the appellant in its office was ever called to the attention of either of the respondents. The one delivered to the Unique Home Builders, Inc., was the important one.

*276 On behalf of the appellant, some contention is made that John J. Ganss, who signed and gave the receipt, was only a collector, without power to bind the appellant by giving a receipt in full. On the contrary, respondents contend that Gauss was both collector and credit manager of the appellant, with power to give such a receipt. We do not understand that appellant contends Gauss was without power to give such a receipt, if it be that at that time he was credit manager for the appellant.

The questions of fact, therefore, are: Was Mr. Gauss credit manager of appellant on April 30, 1927, and did he sign the receipt? Mr. Armitage, who made the payment to Mr. Gauss, testified that he had been having business transactions right along with appellant and that, whenever there were dealings with regard to credits, Mr. Young, the general manager of the appellant, or anyone in the Stewart Lumber Company, always referred him to Mr. Gauss. He further testified that Mr. Gauss signed the receipt, as it appears in evidence, and gave it to him on the date it bears and that, at that time, he understood Mr. Gauss was credit manager of the appellant. Also Mr. J. W. Young, general manager of the appellant corporation, testified that the signature to the receipt delivered to the Unique Home Builders, Inc., was written by Mr. Gauss, with whose handwriting he was familiar, and that, on the date of the instrument, Mr. Gauss was credit manager of the appellant. This testimony, together with other facts and circumstances which need not be set out, fully satisfied the trial judge as to those facts, and with those findings we are entirely satisfied.

On the date of the receipt, the Unique Home Builders, Inc., was indebted to appellant on account of material furnished for houses other than those included in the receipt; and, also, as it appears, owed a balance *277 due on an old account incurred prior to the building of this group of houses; and, it appears, the credit represented by the amount of the receipt was, without the knowledge of the Unique Home Builders, Inc., placed on the old account by the appellant. The appellant was pressing the Unique Home Builders, Inc., for payments. It appears that its chances to make payment were to sell these houses and apply the amounts received on the account due the appellant, and that, for that purpose, collections were being made as fast as possible.

Mr. Green had purchased house No. 1022, on which he had already made some payments, and on which he was to make final payment in the sum of one thousand dollars on or about May 4, 1927; so that, on giving the receipt on April 30, 1927, Mr. Gauss took the Unique Home Builders, Inc., check post-dated May 4, 1927, understanding it would be met by the Green payment. Green did not pay until May 13, on which date he gave his check to the Unique Home Builders, Inc., in the sum of one thousand dollars, balance due by him on the purchase price of house No. 1022.

There was convincing testimony that, a few days before Mr. Green made the payment a Mr. Leighton, the new credit manager of the appellant, knowing the circumstances under which the eight hundred and fifty dollar post-dated check had been given, and knowing that it was to be met by the payment Mr. Green was to make to the Unique Home Builders, Inc., asked Mr. Green to make a deposit in the bank on which the postdated check was drawn for the purpose of meeting that check. Mr. Green told him he would make such deposit within a few days and specifically asked Mr. Leighton to clear his house, which Mr. Leighton promised he would do. As stated, Mr. Green thereafter made a deposit in the sum of one thousand dollars to *278 the credit of the Unique Home Builders, Inc., in its bank, out of which the post-dated check of eight hundred and fifty dollars, held by the appellant, was paid.

The judgment denying foreclosure of the lien on property No. 1022 was right, not only because of appellant’s outstanding receipt in full, but, also, as a just application of the doctrine of equitable estoppel. On this last proposition, the case is similar to Nelson & Castrup v. Culver,

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Bluebook (online)
294 P. 988, 160 Wash. 273, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-lumber-co-v-unique-home-builders-inc-wash-1931.