Stubbs v. Capital Paint & Glass Co.

131 So. 806, 160 Miss. 832, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 122
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1931
DocketNo. 28799.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 131 So. 806 (Stubbs v. Capital Paint & Glass Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stubbs v. Capital Paint & Glass Co., 131 So. 806, 160 Miss. 832, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 122 (Mich. 1931).

Opinions

The Planters' Lumber Company, one of the appellees herein, filed two suits in the circuit court of Leake county, Mississippi, one being against B.E. Stubbs and his wife, Mrs. B.E. Stubbs, seeking to establish a lien on a residence owned by the said Mrs. B.E. Stubbs for the payment of five hundred twenty-nine dollars and twenty-four cents, the purchase price of certain material furnished by the said Planters' Lumber Company, which was used in the construction of said residence, and the other suit being against B.E. Stubbs and his sons, B.F. Stubbs and B.H. Stubbs, seeking to establish a lien on certain store and cafe buildings owned by the said B.F. and B.H. Stubbs, for the payment of four hundred seven dollars and seventy cents, the purchase price of certain material furnished by the said Planters' Lumber Company, and used in the construction of said building. In the suit last above mentioned, the Capital Paint Glass Company intervened, and filed its petition seeking to establish its lien on said store and cafe buildings for the payment of four hundred forty-one dollars and eighty-nine cents, the purchase price of certain material furnished and labor performed by it which went into the construction of said building. These suits were consolidated and heard together, and separate final judgments were rendered in each case against B.E. Stubbs personally, and also impressing a lien on these buildings for the respective amounts claimed against each building. From the judgments so entered, Mrs. B.E. Stubbs, the owner of said residence, and B.F. and B.H. Stubbs, the owners of the store and cafe buildings, *Page 840 prosecuted separate appeals, but the causes are before us on one record, which includes the entire proceedings in each of them.

The petition filed in the cause against B.E. Stubbs and his wife, Mrs. B.E. Stubbs, alleges that the residence constructed was located on a lot owned by the said Mrs. B.E. Stubbs, and, on account of the limitation contained in section 2260, Code 1930, it sought to establish a lien on the building only. The petition alleges, in substance and effect, that the residence is located in the town of Walnut Grove on a lot owned by the appellant Mrs. B.E. Stubbs; that B.E. Stubbs, the husband of the appellant, in his own name, and on his behalf and credit, but with the knowledge and consent of Mrs. Stubbs, purchased from the Planters' Lumber Company certain lumber and building material at and for the aggregate price of five hundred twenty-nine dollars and twenty-four cents; that the said lumber and material were used in the construction and erection of the aforesaid residence; and that the said B.E. Stubbs had failed and refused to pay the appellee for the material so furnished. The petition and exhibits thereto, and the proof offered at the trial, show that the material here involved was only a part of the material necessary for the construction of the residence, and that, with the exception of this material, the entire residence was constructed by the appellant Mrs. Stubbs on her own account and with her own means.

The petition filed against B.E. Stubbs and B.H. and B.F. Stubbs likewise sought to establish a lien only on the store and cafe buildings owned by the said B.F. and B.H. Stubbs, alleging, in substance, that the said buildings were located in the town of Walnut Grove on lots owned by the said B.F. and B.H. Stubbs; that the appellee sold and delivered to B.E. Stubbs, at the instance of B.H. Stubbs, one of the owners of the said lots, who represented himself as being the manager *Page 841 of B.E. Stubbs, certain lumber and building material for use in the construction of said buildings; that such lumber and material was used in the construction and erection of said store and cafe buildings; that the said B.E. Stubbs promised and agreed to pay for said lumber and material, the aggregate price thereof being four hundred seven dollars and seventy cents, but that he failed and refused to do so. The prayer of the petition was for a personal judgment for said sum against B.E. Stubbs, and for the enforcement of a lien on said building for the payment of such judgment.

To this petition B.F. Stubbs and B.H. Stubbs each filed a plea of the general issue, while B.E. Stubbs filed a plea suggesting that the court was without jurisdiction to proceed further as against him, for the reason that he had been duly adjudged a bankrupt by the United States District Court for the Jackson Division of the Southern District of Mississippi.

In this cause, the court made and submitted to the jury the following issue of fact: "Was the material sued for sold and delivered to B.E. Stubbs at the instance and with the knowledge and consent of Howard Stubbs, one of the owners of said lots, for use in the repair, alteration or construction of the building situated on the land described in plaintiff's petition." Upon the proof offered on this issue, the jury returned a verdict in the following language: "We, the jury, find for the plaintiff the sum of four hundred seven dollars and seventy cents and find that said materials were purchased from Planters' Lumber Company by Howard Stubbs in the name of B.E. Stubbs, or were so purchased for use in said buildings, with the knowledge and consent of said Howard Stubbs." Upon this verdict the court entered a judgment against B.E. Stubbs for the amount sued for, and fixed a materialman's lien on the said store and cafe buildings, and ordered them to be sold for the satisfaction and discharge of said *Page 842 judgment; a special execution for the sale of the said building being directed to issue.

The petition filed by the intervener, Capital Paint Glass Company, also sought to establish a lien on the store and cafe buildings only, and alleged that the petitioner sold, delivered, and furnished, certain plate glass, building material, and labor to B.E. Stubbs at and for the price of four hundred forty-one dollars and eighty-nine cents, for which the said B.E. Stubbs agreed and promised to pay, but had failed and refused to do so, that the said B.E. Stubbs used this building material in the construction and erection of certain brick store and cafe buildings located on lots owned by B.F. and B.H. Stubbs, and that the labor performed was performed in the construction of said buildings, and prayed for a personal judgment against B.E. Stubbs and for the enforcement of a lien on said building to satisfy such judgment.

Upon the appeal of Mrs. B.E. Stubbs from the judgment fixing a lien on the residence owned and erected by her, this cause is controlled by the majority opinion rendered in the recent case of Chears Floor Screen Co. v. Mrs. Daisy Gidden et al. (Miss.),131 So. 426, decided December 15, 1930. The facts in the two cases are substantially the same. In the case at bar, the petition charged, and the proof showed, that the particular material here involved was furnished by the appellant under a contract with and on the credit of appellant's husband, B.E. Stubbs, but the proof likewise shows without conflict that, with this exception, the entire residence building was constructed by the appellant on her own account and with her own means. Under these facts, as section 2260, Code 1930, was construed in the Gidden case, supra, there was no lien on the building for this material which was furnished at the instance and on the credit of a person not the owner of the land and building. There is here no contention that the owner *Page 843 gave her written consent for her husband, B.F.

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Stubbs v. Capital Paint & Glass Co.
131 So. 806 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 So. 806, 160 Miss. 832, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stubbs-v-capital-paint-glass-co-miss-1931.