Trustees Caldwell Institute v. Young

63 Ky. 582, 2 Duv. 582, 1864 Ky. LEXIS 2
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 24, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 63 Ky. 582 (Trustees Caldwell Institute v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trustees Caldwell Institute v. Young, 63 Ky. 582, 2 Duv. 582, 1864 Ky. LEXIS 2 (Ky. Ct. App. 1864).

Opinion

JUDGE ROBERTSON

delivered the opinioh oe the court:

The trustees of the Caldwell Female Institute, chartered for female education on a large scale in Danville, had bought about six acres of ground in that town, and had partially completed a large four-story edifice for fulfilling the benevolent purpose of the charter, when, on the 29th of December, 1859, they made a written agreement with A. E. Sloan, containing substantially the following stipulations, together with some others not now material:

1. That Sloan should be the moral superintendent and literary principal of the institute, and be entitled to all the pecuniary profits.

2. That as a more capacious and magnificent structure was deemed by him, with their concurrence, needful for a “ first-class school,” he might erect a large additional building, with other appurtenant houses, in the rear of the house to be finished by them, and might furnish and equip the whole in his own way.

3. That he should be entitled to the use of the grounds and all the improvements, “ rent free,” for fifteen years.

4. That, to aid him in fulfilling his contract, they would loan him, at an interest not exceeding ten per cent., the sum of $10,000, payable in five years.

5. That, at the close of the term of fifteen years, they would pay him one third of the costs of his improvements, which third should not exceed $10,000.

6. That they should have a lien on the building he should erect,” and also on “the furniture and fixtures” he should supply to the whole establishment.

Early in the succeeding spring Sloan commenced the erection of a very large “ ell,” to be attached to the front building then finished by the trustees; and in November, 1860, he had finished that addition, also four stories high, equipped it with elaborate apparatus for supplying it with water, gas, and [584]*584heat, and furnished it in an expensive and elegant style, all costing over $30,000.

Most of the mechanics ánd material men, who, under contracts with him, had contributed to these improvements, claiming statutory liens on the entire edifice, front and rear, filed in the Boyle circuit court petitions for enforcing their claims by a sale of the property. Some few of them had also helped to erect the front building.

The circuit judge decided that all the buildings were subject to the claims of all the petitioners who had filed their accounts and asserted liens in the manner and within the time, prescribed by the mechanics’ lien law of 1839, and that their liens were superior to all other incumbra,nces.

This appeal is from that decree.

In revising the case, this court will consider only two general questions — 1. Do appellees hold legal liens, and if so, to what extent? and, 2. Are those liens paramount to any or all other incumbrances?

1. The first section of an act of 1839 (Scss. Acts, 93), which was, by a subsequent statute, applied to Danville, provides that mechanics, who shall do work on any house, and material men, who shall furnish materials for its construction or repair, shall have liens for their respective claims to compensation on “ the interest of their employers in the ground and the house so built or repaired; and, to make any such initial lien available, the fifth section requires the claimant to file an account of his claim, and an assertion of his lien, in the county court office, within six months after the completion of the building or repairing, or after finishing work on it or furnishing materials therefor A So far as that has been done in this dase, the claimants have valid liens on the interest of the employer. The employer may have an appreciable interest in a house without being the owner of it, and the lien operates on that interest and not on that of the owner, unless the employment was at the instance of the latter and on his credit. But when it was at the- request and on the -credit alone of any other employer, his interest alone is sub[585]*585ject to the lien; and this, as the statute literally imports, and has been judicially construed to intend, is the “employer” contemplated by the first section. (Fetter, &c., vs. Wilson, &c., 12 B. Mon., 90.)

It is not denied that the trustees, as owners, were the employers in the building of the front house, and the lien of their employees applied to their interest in that house. But Sloan, and not the corporation, seems to have been the employer in the erection and completion of the “ell” and its appurtenances. These immep.se enlargements and their equipments were evidently assented to by the trustees on his recommendation and for his immediate advantage, and were expected, probably, to be, for fifteen years, and perhaps much longer, more beneficial to him than to them; and for a valuable consideration, paid to him by the corporation, he had undertaken to accomplish the whole of that job. He made no contract with any mechanics or material men in any other than his own individual capacity and name, nor apparently on the credit or responsibility of the institution. And it would be unreasonable to presume that the trustees, after paying him for the entire work, and binding him to do it on his oWn credit, or with his own means, thus or otherwise obtained, could have intended to be liable for any portion of the costs. Nor is there any proof that any of the employees considered them the employers, or looked to them for payment, except for contributions to the front building; and even if they did, the delusion was their own fault; they might have ascertained the true state of the case. It was their duty to know it, and, therefore, they must be presumed to have known it. (Same case, p. 92.)

We feel bound, therefore, to hold, that, in the construction and equipment of the “ ell” and its appurtenances, Sloan was actually the employer, and, legally, the only one. The liens of the petitioners, who contributed to those improvements, are, therefore, confined to Sloan’s interest. That interest, consisting, as it does, of his lease for fifteen years, and his $10,000, to be paid by the trustees at the end of that term, is [586]*586appreciable and vendible. It is certainly of considerable value, ascertainable by a proximate calculation; and it is vendible, because the purchaser could not change the destination to which the use of the building has been dedicated, and would only have a right to the rents which Sloan, if he should continue to occupy it in his present capacity, or his successor in the same capacity, would have to pay to the new landlord. By this only rightful effect of the sale, the control and curation of the trustees could not be qualified or disturbed, nor would the institution itself.be necessarily or probably jcopardied. The only necessary or probable effect would be a curtailment of Mr. Sloan’s profits, by having to pay for his occupancy instead of enjoying it, as now, free from rent; and the reduction of his fortune, also, to the extent of $10,-000, for the ultimate payment of which he holds a resulting lien on the improvements which he made, and which to his employees passed by an equitable subrogation, coeval and coextensive with their liens.

We may add, on this subject of the liens of the mechanics, that they commenced with the commencement of their work, continued to enlarge pari passu

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Bluebook (online)
63 Ky. 582, 2 Duv. 582, 1864 Ky. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-caldwell-institute-v-young-kyctapp-1864.