Walsh-Anderson Company v. Keller

362 P.2d 533, 139 Mont. 210, 1961 Mont. LEXIS 35
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1961
Docket10192
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 362 P.2d 533 (Walsh-Anderson Company v. Keller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walsh-Anderson Company v. Keller, 362 P.2d 533, 139 Mont. 210, 1961 Mont. LEXIS 35 (Mo. 1961).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment for the plaintiff rendered by the district court of the eighth judicial district sitting without a jury. This case is a consolidated lien foreclosure action brought by the plaintiff, Walsh Anderson Co., to foreclose mechanics ’ liens on two separate parcels of real property owned by the defendants, Robert L. Keller and his wife Peggy Keller. Certain other parties who held liens on these same parcels of property were joined as defendants. The plaintiff obtained judgment by default against the Kellers and they are not parties to this appeal.

This appeal has been brought by the defendant, Harriet Storm, hereinafter referred to as Storm, who has valid mortgage liens on both parcels of property and by the defendant, Walter E. Tynes Co., Inc., hereinafter referred to as Tynes which attached both parcels of property in an action against the Kellers in which it later obtained judgment. Both the defendants Storm and Tynes cross-complained for foreclosure of their separate liens on the property involved. The legal *212 descriptions and street addresses of the parcels of property are not important to a consideration of the issues of this ease and they will be referred to as property “A” and property “B” respectively.

The district court judgment resulted in the following priority of liens on these parcels of property: On property “A” the plaintiff had first priority for the amount of $8,264.20 and the defendant Storm had second priority for the amount of $16,749.57. On property “B” the plaintiff had first priority for the amount of $6,993.88 and the defendant Storm had second priority for the amount of $17,250.79. The defendant Tynes was allowed third priority on each of the parcels of property for the amount of $9,312.48. The proceeds from the sheriff’s sale resulted in only enough to satisfy the plaintiff’s liens in full and part of the defendant Storm’s liens. The defendants Storm and Tynes have appealed from the judgment.

Keller was a contractor who was in the business of building the homes involved in the instant case on a speculative basis. He had no buyers at the time he started construction, and was unable to sell the homes' and pay his various creditors.

The liens of the various parties arose in the following manner. Keller bought the lots on wliich the homes were to be constructed and entered into an agreement with the plaintiff whereby the plaintiff furnished materials on an open account as they were needed for the construction involved until the homes were sold. This agreement was not in writing. The plaintiff furnished such building materials on an open account beginning June 25, 1957, for property “A” and August 5, 1957, for property “B”. The last items in each of the accounts were furnished on July 29, 1958, and the plaintiff filed mechanics’ liens with the county clerk on each of the parcels of property on September 12, 1958.

The defendant Storm held mortgages on each of the parcels of property which mortgages had been devised to her by her deceased husband. The mortgage on property “A” was re *213 corded on August 5, 1957, and that on property “B” was recorded on September 25, 1957.

It was stipulated by all the parties to the action that the defendant Tynes had attached the parcels of property on September 9, 1958, in a suit in which it later obtained judgment. The other facts involved will be discussed as they become pertinent to the issues in the case.

The specifications of error of the defendants Storm and Tynes raise three questions for our consideration.

The first question is whether the plaintiff’s mechanics’ liens are valid. This involves sections 45-501 and 45-502, R.C.M. 1947. Sections 45-501 provides for a lien to a lumberman on any building for which he has furnished materials upon complying with the provisions of the chapter. Section 45-502 provides:

“Every person wishing to avail himself of the benefits of this chapter must file with the county clerk of the county in which the property or premises mentioned in the preceding section is situated, and within ninety days after the material or machinery aforesaid has been furnished, or the work or labor performed, a just and true account of the amount due him, after allowing all credits, and containing a correct description of the property to be charged with such lien, verified by affidavit, but any error or mistake in the account or description does not affect the validity of the lien, if the property can be identified by the description; which paper containing the account, description, and affidavit is deemed the lien, and when there is am open account between the parties for labor, material, or machinery, such lien may be filed within ninety days after the date of the last item in such account, and include all items and charges contained therein, for material or machinery furnished for, or work performed on, the property on which the lien is claimed.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The defendants Storm and Tynes contest the last items listed in each of the alleged open accounts as items that will not *214 continue the time for filing the liens. The last items in each of the accounts were two 4x8 one-quarter inch plywood sheets, each costing $3.68, and each having been delivered on July 29, 1958. These are the only items which were delivered within ninety days of the time the liens were filed and must therefore be included in the open accounts for the plaintiff’s liens to he valid.

These plywood sheets were built into planters which were placed between the living room and the kitchen in each of the homes. The planters were not included in the plans and specifications but were apparently built because of suggestions to Keller that they would enhance the salability of the homes. The district court found, as fact, that the planters were put into the homes in good faith to enhance their salability with no intent to defraud the defendxmits Storm and Tynes or to extend the time for filing the plaintiff’s mechanics’ liens. This finding was supported by substantial evidence in the record in the form of testimony by Keller and the president of the plaintiff corporation.

The defendants Storm and Tynes contend that the delivery of the plywood sheets was not sufficient to extend the time for filing the plaintiff’s liens since they were items which were not included in the original contract for furnishing materials as contemplated by the plaintiff and Keller and they were sold and delivered after the homes were substantially completed.

As we have previously noted section 45-502 provides in part that when there is an open account for the furnishing of materials and a lien is filed within ninety days of the last item of such account, the lien will include all charges for materials furnished for the construction of the property on which the lien is claimed. There is nothing in this statute referring to a substantial completion test but only a reference to an open account. Whether there was such an open account as to in- *215 elude the two plywood sheets depends on the agreement between plaintiff and Keller.

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Bluebook (online)
362 P.2d 533, 139 Mont. 210, 1961 Mont. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walsh-anderson-company-v-keller-mont-1961.