Texas Builders' Supply Co. v. Beaumont Const. Co.

150 S.W. 770
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 23, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 150 S.W. 770 (Texas Builders' Supply Co. v. Beaumont Const. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Builders' Supply Co. v. Beaumont Const. Co., 150 S.W. 770 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This suit was brought by appellant against the appellee construction company, Fred Gann, receiver for said company, and J. B. Langham, to recover the sum of $179.56, the alleged value of floor tiling furnished by appellant for repairing the floor in a building owned by Langham and situated on a lot owned by him in the city of Beaumont, and to foreclose an alleged materialman’s lien on said building and lot. The petition alleges, in substance, that on March 22, 1907, James Edwards, manager of the Caswell-Preston Drug Company, which company was a tenant of the defendant Langham, occupying a building on a lot owned by said defendant at the corner of Pearl and Bowie streets in the city of Beaumont, came to appellant’s place of business and selected tiling for the floor of the storeroom in said building occupied by said drug company, and ordered it to be delivered at said store; that appellant on the same day delivered the tiling at said store and at the same time sent to G. W. Junker, the agent of defendant Langham, the following notice and itemized statement or bill for said tiling:

“Mar. 22/07.
“Guy W. Junker, Agent, City: Notice. Owners of property for whom this material [771]*771is furnished, will be held responsible for payment of same until a copy of receipted bill is rendered.
70214 sq. ft. floor tiling at 25$.$175 56
20 letters at 20$.. 4 00
$179 56
“Furnished for floor Caswell-Preston Drug Co. [Same being under the signature of plaintiff.]”

That in reply to the said notice the said Guy W. Junker, on March 26th, wrote to plaintiff as follows: “Beaumont, Texas, March 26th, 1907. Texas Builders’ Supply Co., City — Dear Sirs: I return you herewith invoice for tiling furnished in the Caswell-Preston Drug Company; beg to say that we have a contract with Mr. Reynolds for this floor complete including tiling, and your bill should be sent to him; we will pay for the job when completed according to the agreement. If it is your desire, however, to give us notice that you have furnished the tiling, will accept that, but this does not signify that this agency is indebted to you in any way. Yours very truly, Guy W. Junker.” That thereafter the plaintiff conversed with the said Guy W. Junker, who stated that if plaintiff would obtain from Reynolds, manager of defendant company, an approval of the said bill and order to pay same, he (the said- Guy W. Junker), as representative of defendant Langham, would pay the amount of said bill out of the contract price to be paid to the said Reynolds as manager of the said construction company; that thereafter, and on or about the 1st of April, 1907, the plaintiff procured from the said Reynolds a written approval of the said bill, and handed the same to the said Guy W. Junker. That thereafter- the said Beaumont Construction Company or its manager, Reynolds, proceeded to lay the said tiling, and did lay the same in cement as part of the flooring of the said building, and same is now attached to said building as part of its flooring; that after the notice aforesaid of plaintiff’s claim to the said Guy W. Junker, and after the approval of the said bill, the said Guy W. Junker, as agent for defendant Langham, paid to the said Beaumont Construction Company about $450 without the consent of plaintiff, and in prejudice of the plaintiff’s rights;. that, in response to repeated demands of plaintiff, the said Guy W. Junker, on April 17, 1907, answered plaintiff by letter as follows: “April 17th, 1907. Texas Bunders Supply Co., City — Gentlemen: Your favor of April 16th inclosing bill for tiling for floor of the Caswell-Preston Drug Company received. I beg to say that this floor has never been properly finished. I am waiting for Mr. Reynolds to complete the same, when I will pay to you the amount of your bill. As soon as same is done I will notify you. Yours very truly, Guy W. Junker.” That said work has long since been completed and accepted by defendants, and the tiling aforesaid is now in constant use by defendant Langham and his tenants; that thereafter, on or about the 1st day of January, 1908, plaintiff demanded of the said J. B. Langham payment of its said bill, but the said J. B. Langham refused and failed, and has ever since refused and failed, to pay the same, or any part thereof, and the said Beaumont Construction Company and its said receiver, although often requested, have wholly failed and refused to pay the said claim of plaintiff or any part thereof. There are further allegations of an agreed arbitration of the claim and the failure of appellee Langham to comply with the decision of the arbitrator.

The prayer of the petition is for recovery of the value of the tiling against all of the defendants and for foreclosure of a material-man’s lien upon the property described in the petition.

The trial court sustained a general demurrer and three special exceptions interposed by appellee Langham to plaintiff’s petition, and, plaintiff declining to amend, his suit against said defendant was dismissed. Plaintiff was allowed to take a nonsuit as to the defendant Gann, who had not been served with citation and was beyond the reach of process of the court. Judgment by default was rendered against the defendant Beaumont Construction Company for the amount of plaintiff’s claim. This appeal is prosecuted from the judgment sustaining the general demurrer and special exceptions of defendant Langham to plaintiff’s petition.

[1] If the general demurrer was improperly sustained, the judgment should be reversed regardless of whether or not the court erred in sustaining the special exceptions, because an amendment curing defects, which could only be reached by special exceptions, would not benefit the plaintiff if the petition so amended failed to state a cause of action, and, by sustaining the general demurrer, the court, in effect, held that the petition would be insufficient if amended to méet the special exceptions. Porter v. Burkett, 65 Tex. 387; Everett v. Henry, 67 Tex. 405, 3 S. W. 566; Stark v. Guffey Co., 80 S. W. 1081.

[2] We think the court erred in sustaining the general demurrer. Giving the allegations of the petition every reasonable intendment, we think the facts alleged are sufficient to show that appellant acquired a lien upon the lot and building described in the petition for the value of the tiling furnished by it for the repair of said building. The allegation that the tiling was ordered by James Edwards, appellee’s tenant, is followed by the allegation that appellee was furnished with an itemized bill at the time the goods were delivered and through his agent accepted notice that the tiling was furnished for repair of his building, which the agent admitted [772]*772was being repaired under a contract witb. tbe defendant Beaumont Construction Company. It is further alleged that tbe tiling was used by said contractor in repairing tbe building.

It is of no consequence that tbe tiling was selected and ordered by tbe tenant of tbe building. It was received by tbe contractor and placed in the building under bis contract witb appellee, and appellee was duly notified, at tbe time tbe material was delivered, that it was furnished by appellant for tbe repair of bis building, and knew that it was to be so used by tbe Beaumont Construction Company under its contract witb him for tbe repair of tbe building.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
150 S.W. 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-builders-supply-co-v-beaumont-const-co-texapp-1912.