Walker v. MacOn Creamery Co.

146 So. 442, 165 Miss. 121, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 284
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1933
DocketMo. 30474.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 146 So. 442 (Walker v. MacOn Creamery 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
Walker v. MacOn Creamery Co., 146 So. 442, 165 Miss. 121, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 284 (Mich. 1933).

Opinion

*125 Ethfidge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee filed a proceeding in the circuit court of Noxubee county to enforce a materialman’s lien under section 2258', Code 1930, upon a residence and the lot upon which it was situated, erected by Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Walker, setting forth that it furnished the material for the erection of said dwelling house, and attaching to its declaration an itemized statement of the materials so furnished, showing a balance due of five hundred fifty-one dollars and forty-three cents. It was alleged that the money for the material became due on June 25, 1931, and that on the 30th day of June, 1931, W. A. Walker and wife executed three promissory notes for one hundred eighty-three dollars and eighty-one cents each, due and payable September 30, October 30. and November 30, 1931, respectively; said notes providing for ten per cent, attorney’s fees if pla,ced in the hands of an attorney for collection.

The Bank of Macon was made a party defendant, and] it appears that on the 26th day of May, 1931. W. A. Walker and Annie C. Walker, who is the same as Mrs. W. A. Walker, executed a note and deed of trust to the Bank of Macon for three thousand, three hundred dollars conveying the land and house erected, or being erected, as the consideration therefor. This note secured by this deed of trust became due and payable on January 1, 1932.

The Bank of Macon, in its answer, set up that it furnished said money for the purpose of building said house, *126 and that the money was to be used for no other purpose, and that it was understood and1 represented by the borrowers that the money would be sufficient, under the estimates furnished, to fully cover the expense of erecting said building. It further set up that it was an incumbrancer for value without notice, and that it had'a superior lien to that of the appellee, the Macon Creamery Company.

It appears from the testimony of W. A. Walker that, at the time he borrowed said money, the estimates he had, showed that it would he sufficient to erect said building, hut that, in fact, the erection of the building cost' more than that amount, and that without applying ta the Bank of Macon, or giving it any notice thereof, he purchased additional materials from the appellee, the creamery company, and delivered to it a note for one hundred dollars of a named party, and also certain rent notes amounting to' three hundred dollars payable in monthly installments of twenty-five dollars each, which were to he applied on the debt duo by him to the creamery company, and that he was entitled to a credit of four hundred dollars upon the amount sued for, on his understanding of the transaction.

The appellee, the creamery company, admitted the receipt of the one hundred dollar note and that Walker was entitled to credit for it, hut denied that it received ■three hundred dollars in rent notes for credit on the amount due, claiming that it received them only as collateral or additional security to its claim against Walker.

The proof does not show that a contract was made with the creamery company to'furnish a given amount, or all, of the material, but only that material was ordered from time to time between May 9 and June 25, 1931, and that the material was delivered at various times. There was no written contract, or no showing in the original contract, that Walker and his wife were to pay any attorney’s fees. But after the final delivery of the material, *127 then the notes executed provided for attorney’s fees in case they were placed in the hands of an attorney for collection.

It appears that the rent notes given by third parties to Walker, and delivered by Walker to the Macon Creamery Company, were delivered subsequent to the execution of the notes sued on.

At the conclusion of all the testimony, the court granted a motion to strike out the evidence, and a peremptory instruction for the Macon Creamery Company, rendering a judgment for the full amount with attorney’s fees, less a credit of the one hundred dollars admitted by the creamery company to have been paid, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

There is no showing that any contract was recorded in favor of the Macon Creamery Company, nor is there any testimony that the Bank of Macon had notice that said creamery company furnished, or was under contract to furnish, material or labor for the erection of the residence. The only evidence upon this question is that the cashier of the Bank of Macon who made the loan knew that the building was being erected at the time the loan Avas obtained, but he testified that he had no knowledge that the creamery company, the appellee, had any claim, or that it was furnishing material for the erection of the residence.

Section 2258, Code 1930, giAnng a lien for labor and material furnished, in the concluding paragraph recites that: “Such lien shall take effect as to purchasers or encumbrances for a valuable consideration without notice thereof, only from the time of commencing suit to enforce the lien, or from the time of filing the contract under which the lien arose, in the office of the clerk of the chancery court.”

The court below seems to have proceeded upon the idea that notice that the building was in course of construction was sufficient notice to advise the bank of the *128 rights of the creamery company, plaintiff in the court below, appellee here. We think the court was in error in this view. It was distinctly understood hv the Bank of Macon to pay off amounts due for labor and material. It was incumbent upon the creamery company either to file its contract for record, or to institute proceedings to enforce its lien, or to give notice in some manner to the person affected of its rights in that regard.

The evidence further shows that one thousand, seven hundred dollars of the money received from the hank went to the creamery company. We think, therefore, it was error to hold that the creamery company’s claim was superior to that of the hank. The deed of trust given to the hank was duly placed of record, and the creamery company was thereby given notice of the bank’s lien. The money received by the creamery company was furnished by the hank to Walter to he applied in the discharge of outstanding claims against the building that existed prior to the giving of the deed of trust.'

We think that, instead of giving judgment for the creamery company as against the hank, the court below should have given judgment in favor of the hank, or establishing a superiority of its claim over that of the creamery company. We also think it was error for the court to have given a lien, by its judgment, on the building erected for attorney’s fees. The statute gives a lien for material and labor, and this debt had, according to the allegations of the petition, already matured before the notes providing for attorney’s fees were executed, and the lien could not be extended so as to include additional charges to constitute a lien. It, of course, was a personál obligation of Mr. and Mrs. Walker, hut was not a lien upon their home.

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Bluebook (online)
146 So. 442, 165 Miss. 121, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-macon-creamery-co-miss-1933.