Whitney v. McKay

344 P.2d 497, 54 Wash. 2d 672, 1959 Wash. LEXIS 450
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 24, 1959
Docket34890
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 344 P.2d 497 (Whitney v. McKay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitney v. McKay, 344 P.2d 497, 54 Wash. 2d 672, 1959 Wash. LEXIS 450 (Wash. 1959).

Opinion

*674 Donworth, J.

This is a lien foreclosure action brought by a building contractor to recover the balance claimed to be due for the construction of a residence in the town of Othello which had been built pursuant to an oral contract.

Plaintiff, Lloyd Whitney, is a carpenter and mason who does building and construction work by contract. Defendants, Edward and Betty McKay, are farmers residing near Othello. Plaintiff and defendants had been friends for some time and, during the latter part of 1955, they discussed several proposals to have a home constructed for defendants in the town. Defendants’ original house plan was estimated by plaintiff to cost $15,000. Subsequently, defendants submitted a revised plan, which was estimated by plaintiff to cost $18,000. The parties then agreed orally that plaintiff would build a house in accordance with the revised plan on a cost-plus-ten per cent basis.

Work was commenced about the first of November, 1955. Soon after the excavation of the basement had started, a change in the plans was mutually made by both parties. It was agreed that the entire basement area should be excavated and a full basement constructed instead of the three-fourth basement called for in the original plans. This change necessitated the removal of approximately eighty additional cubic yards of earth, as well as making other substantial changes in the wiring and finishing of the basement. No price was agreed upon between the parties as to the additional cost of these changes, nor was any record kept by plaintiff of the extra labor and material necessitated thereby.

After the basement area had been excavated, the foundation walls erected, and the subflooring laid, cold weather and defendants’ lack of finances stopped the construction work.

Thereafter, both parties sought financing, which resulted in the Peoples National Bank of Washington setting up a construction fund of $20,000 in defendants’ name. This fund consisted of $2,000 in cash supplied by defendants, a $15,000 loan by the bank, secured by a mortgage on the property, and a $3,000 loan by the bank on a chattel mortgage on de *675 fendants’ tractor. The real-estate mortgage was recorded on April 12, 1956.

After construction had resumed in April, 1956, defendants decided to replace standard windows with thermopane units, ordered two additional fireplaces, one additional bathroom, replaced standard bathroom fixtures with colored and more expensive fixtures, added more than twenty feet of built-in kitchen cabinets, ordered built-in gun racks, desk, and dresser units, added an additional range circuit and other electrical circuits, ordered built-in oven, surface stove unit, a dishwasher, a basement vault room, rough-in plumbing for bar sink in the basement, added four feet to the attached garage, and made various other expensive modifications to such an extent that both parties began to disregard the original blue prints altogether.

Many of these changes were made by defendants without even consulting plaintiff. It appears that these various changes increased the cost of the house by about $10,000, although no record as to their cost was ever kept by plaintiff, nor did defendants ever request to be advised as to how much these changes would increase the cost of the house over the original estimate of $18,000. As a result, the $20,000 in the building fund was soon exhausted, leaving various bills for labor and material unpaid.

When the house was nearing completion, plaintiff presented to defendants his cost sheet showing more than $7,-000 in unpaid bills and offered to reduce his commission to $1,500 if defendants would pay it immediately. Payment not being made, plaintiff terminated work on the house in August, 1956, and, in October, 1956, he filed a lien claim against defendants’ property, stating that he commenced to perform labor and furnish material in November, 1955; that the total cost of the labor and materials was $29,169.90; that $20,000 had been paid upon the account, and that a balance of $9,169.90 remained due and owing with interest thereon at six per cent per annum from August 26, 1956. During the month of October, 1956, the various unpaid subcontractors also filed their lien claims.

*676 On January 7, 1957, plaintiff, pursuant to RCW 60.04.110, mailed to defendants a notice of demand that defendants pay the various subcontractors’ liens which were valid and thereby avoid costs of suit. The notice of demand was ignored by defendants.

Plaintiff then initiated this suit to foreclose his contractor’s lien, naming the other lien claimants (subcontractors) and Peoples National Bank as parties defendant.

Plaintiff alleged an oral contract with defendants wherein plaintiff was to construct a house for cost plus a ten per cent commission for his supervision and direction of the work and prayed that his lien for $9,169.90 be foreclosed. Plaintiff also furnished a bill of particulars giving a complete breakdown of the expenses incurred by plaintiff in the construction of the house.

The various subcontractor lien claimants answered the complaint and cross-complained for foreclosure of their respective lien claims, except Selden’s of Moses Lake, Inc., who was dismissed from the action upon the petition of plaintiff.

Defendants, by answer, denied that plaintiff had a cost-plus-ten per cent contract, and alleged that plaintiff agreed to build the house for cost plus ten per cent or a sum not to exceed $18,000, whichever was lower, and that certain extras had been ordered by defendants for which they had paid $2,000 in full satisfaction thereof. Defendants further alleged that plaintiff had not completed the house pursuant to the contract and cross-complained for the work which was not finished. Defendants denied the allegations contained in the cross-complaints of the various subcontractor lien claimants for the foreclosure of their respective liens.

The case was tried to the court, sitting without a jury. Following a trial which lasted five days, the court rendered a memorandum opinion, made findings of fact and conclusions of law, and rendered a decision wherein it found that plaintiff and defendants had entered into a cost-plus-ten per cent contract, and that the total cost was $26,238.01 for labor and materials, plus a $1,500 commission fee for supervision by plaintiff. Attorneys’ fees of plaintiff and of sub *677 contractors Horne, Gaylor, Barnett, and Hurliman were taxed against defendants, and lien foreclosure was allowed each of these subcontractors for the respective amounts of their claims. The lien claims of Othello Lumber Yard, Inc., and Bunch-Finnigan, Inc., were disallowed, but they were granted judgment against plaintiff personally with interest and costs.

Since there was no court reporter present at the trial, the testimony was not taken down and transcribed. No statement of facts was ever certified by the trial court. However, as an introduction to its memorandum opinion, the trial court prepared and filed a narrative account of what transpired at the trial, which is entitled “statement of facts.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
344 P.2d 497, 54 Wash. 2d 672, 1959 Wash. LEXIS 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitney-v-mckay-wash-1959.