Watkins v. Glas

89 P. 840, 5 Cal. App. 68, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 217
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 23, 1907
DocketCiv. No. 281.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 89 P. 840 (Watkins v. Glas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watkins v. Glas, 89 P. 840, 5 Cal. App. 68, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 217 (Cal. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

HART, J.

The plaintiffs brought this action to recover from

the defendants the sum of $475 alleged to be due under an agreement for the erection of a party-wall. The plaintiffs, it is alleged, became the owners of the claim against the defendants under an assignment of the same to them by Wehrman & Meilikie, a corporation, incorporated and organized under the laws of California. Wehrman & Meilikie, in their corporate capacity, and the defendants were the owners, respectively, of adjoining lots in Block No. 40 of the town of Madera, in the county of Madera. Having in view the erection of brick structures, with a party-wall on the line of their respective properties, upon said lots, the said corporation and the defendants, on the ninth day of October, 1903, entered into an agreement in writing, by the terms of which said parties were to bear in equal proportion the actual cost of the erection of such party-wall. This agreement is made a part of the complaint and is inserted in haeo verba in the findings.

On the thirty-first day of October, 1903, the said Wehrman & Meilikie, corporation, entered into a written contract with plaintiffs, by the terms of which the latter agreed for and in consideration of the sum of nineteen hundred and three ($1903) dollars, to erect and complete within a certain designated period of time, on the land of said corporation mentioned in the said party-wall agreement, a one-story brick building, 25x80 feet in dimensions, with “a party-wall on *71 the easterly side thereof, and being the party-wall referred to in the agreement of October 9th, 1903, aforesaid, and to furnish all of the labor and materials necessary for the erection, construction and completion of said building, including said party-wall.” The complaint alleges that the said sum of $1903 for which plaintiffs agreed to erect said building, did not include the defendants’ one-half of the cost of the construction of the party-wall. The building, the erection of which was thus contracted for, was completed by the first day of February, 1904. Prior to the commencement of this action, the said corporation, Wehrman & Meilikie, in the language of the complaint, “by an instrument in writing, and under its corporate name and seal, and in pursuance of a resolution of its Board of Directors duly adopted and entered upon its minutes, authorizing the same, assigned and transferred to the plaintiffs its said account, claim and demand against the defendants, arising by reason of the construction of said party-wall as provided in said agreement of October 9th, 1903, together with all its rights to receive from said Frank Glas, Jr., and W. H. Glas, the one-half cost of said party-wall. ’ ’

The facts of the transaction are fully set out in the complaint. A general and special demurrer to the complaint was overruled. The point urged under the special demurrer, involving the question of the running of the statute of limitations against the action, seems not to have been well taken, and, in fact, is not urged here. The complaint is verified.

The answer specifically denies the averments of the complaint, except that it admits that “the easterly wall of the building, erected by Wehrman & Meilikie, and referred to in the complaint as ‘the party-wall,’ was erected partly upon the lands of defendants and partly upon the lands of Wehrman & Meilikie,” and then sets up a special defense, alleging that the party-wall was not so “constructed as to be useful and beneficial to the defendants equally with Wehrman & Meilikie, but, on the contrary, defendants allege that said party-wall, so-called, was not so constructed that the defendants could properly connect their’buildings therewith,” and then charges that “defendants’ building afterward joined thereto (the party-wall) was badly cracked and damaged to the loss and damage of defendants in the sum of $500,” etc. The defendants also set up, by way of a special plea in bar, a judg *72 ment alleged to have been made and entered on the seventh day of November, 1905, in their favor and against the plaintiffs, in an action in which these plaintiffs were plaintiffs and the defendants, Frank and W. H. Glas, and Wehrman & Meilikie, corporation, were defendants, “upon and on account of the same action set forth in plaintiffs’ complaint herein; that said judgment was rendered and entered after the trial of the action upon its merits. ’ ’ The same judgment is pleaded in abatement of this action, and in this- connection the answer alleges that said judgment is not final and the action, therefore, still pending, because -the “six months within which an appeal may be taken therefrom” have not expired.

The party-wall agreement, which is the basis of this action, or so much thereof as is material to the controversy, reads: “ . . . Now, therefore, in consideration of the premises it is agreed, that either the party of the first part (Wehrman & Meilikie) or the parties of the second part (defendants) may construct and complete the said party-wall, and it is agreed that if the party of the first part constructs and completes said party-wall, that the parties of the second part will, upon completion thereof, pay to the said party of the ■ first part, the one-half (%) of the actual cost of the erection and completion of said party wall, vice versa, it is agreed that if the parties of the second part erect and complete the said party-wall, the said party of -the first part will, upon completion thereof, pay to the parties of the second part, the one-half (%) of the actual cost of the erection and completion of said party-wall, and it is further agreed, that the westerly one-half of said party-wall shall be the property of the party of the first part, and that the easterly half of said party-wall shall be the property of the parties of the second part, and it is agreed that the value or actual cost of the erection and completion of said party-wall shall be fixed and determined by Julian Mourot, Architect of Modesto, California, and we agree to conform to and abide his decision and valuation of the same.”

It is stated in the complaint that “after the completion of said building and said party-wall, and on or about the first day of February, 1904, said Julian Mourot did, in pursuance of said agreement of October 9th, 1903, ascertain and determine that the one-half of the cost of the erection and construction of said party-wall, was the sum of $475,” and *73 that defendants on or about the same date were notified that that sum had been by Mourot ascertained to be one-half of the actual cost of the party-wall. The answer does not traverse this allegation, but merely denies that the-sum mentioned or any other sum is due or owing the plaintiffs on account of the construction of the party-wall.

Plaintiffs were given judgment, from which and from the order denying a motion for a new trial this appeal is taken.

Appellants contend that the complaint does not show that the corporation, or assignor of plaintiffs, had acquired any right from the defendants which they could assign.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 P. 840, 5 Cal. App. 68, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watkins-v-glas-calctapp-1907.