Willett v. Davis

193 P.2d 321, 30 Wash. 2d 622, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 414
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1948
DocketNo. 30462.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 193 P.2d 321 (Willett v. Davis) 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
Willett v. Davis, 193 P.2d 321, 30 Wash. 2d 622, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 414 (Wash. 1948).

Opinion

Hill, J.

Arthur H. Davis and Edith E. Davis, his wife, hereinafter referred to as the owners, had a store building to which they desired to construct an addition sixty feet by twenty-five feet in size and to install cold storage lockers therein. H. F. Willett and J. T. Babst, doing business under the trade name of Willett & Sons, hereinafter referred to as the contractors, agreed to do the work. The construction and installation of the cold storage lockers was to cost $4,250 on the basis of a lump-sum contract, and the cost of the addition to the building was to be on the basis of the cost of labor and materials plus fifteen per cent. The agreement between the parties was written on a form prepared by the contractors, and by it they agreed

“. . . to provide all the materials and perform all the work ... in accordance /with the specifications . . . , and to build and erect said store building addition in a good, substantial and workmanlike manner . . .
“ ... to construct said addition as economically as it is possible to do and still construct a good and substantial building.”

The owners agreed to pay

“ . . . the actual cost of the labor and materials performed and used in erection of said addition to building as shown by the books of the . . . [contractors], and in addition thereto, a commission at the rate of fifteen percent (15%) on the whole cost thereof as the profit of the . . . [contractors].”

(Whatever argument might have been made on the proposition that the contractors were entitled to a net profit of fifteen per cent has been waived by the contractors, who, by their lien and pleadings, have made it clear that the *625 fifteen per cent was a “supervision and construction charge.”)

The work was completed about December 31, 1946, and a “Notice of Claim for Lien” for labor performed and materials furnished, covering the real property on which the addition had been erected, was filed January 7, 1947, which claim was in the sum of $4,404.07, that being stated to be the unpaid balance on the contract for the construction of the addition to the building.

An action to foreclose the lien was commenced on February 3, 1947, it being alleged therein that surplus materials amounting to $41.54 had been returned to the contractors. Accordingly, judgment was asked in the sum of $4,362.53, together with attorneys’ fees of $450 and costs; and it was further asked that such judgment be decreed to be a lien against the real property and, as such, foreclosed.

The trial court, by its judgment and decree entered July 31, 1947, disallowed items totaling $2,180.50 which, with the fifteen per cent charged thereon, made a total disallowance of $2,507.58. The court subtracted this amount from $4,362.53 and gave the contractors a judgment for the difference, $1,854.95, together with interest thereon from January 7, 1947, the date of the filing of the lien.

After the filing of the complaint but before any other proceedings, the owners had made an offer in accordance with Rule of Practice 24, 18 Wn. (2d) 47-a, providing that judgment might be taken against them in the amount of $3,362.53, together with costs to the date of the offer. The offer not having been accepted, and judgment on the items of labor and materials having been recovered only in the sum of $1,854.95, the trial court allowed the contractors an attorneys’ fee of only $150, being for services prior to the offer of judgment, and their costs accrued only to that date, in the sum of $8.60. These amounts, together with $63.69 interest computed from the date of the filing of the lien, made a total of $2,077.24. The trial court also allowed the owners a judgment in the amount of $17.20, for their costs accruing subsequent to the offer of judgment, and by this *626 offset reduced the judgment to $2,060.04, which was declared to be a lien against the property, and the lien was ordered to be foreclosed.

The contractors appealed from the disallowance of items totaling $2,507.58 and from that part of the judgment which allows them an attorneys’ fee of only $150 and which limits their costs to $8.60, and from that part thereof which allows the owners the sum of $17.20 as costs. (They now concede that certain items were properly disallowed by the court.) The owners cross-appealed from that part of the judgment granting and foreclosing a lien and allowing interest from the date the lien was filed; they further appealed from the trial court’s refusal to grant them an attorney’s fee in the sum of $350.

We now come to a consideration of the controversial items as enumerated on p. 12 of the contractors’ brief:

A. Wages Paid to Two Men for their Services as Foremen and Supervisors, in the Sum of $719.68.

This item was disallowed on the theory that, since these men sawed no boards, hammered no nails, and handled no tools, their services did not constitute labor. Reliance is placed on Cavanaugh v. Art Hardware & Mfg. Co., 124 Wash. 243, 214 Pac. 152, and Lytle, Campbell & Co. v. Somers, Fitter & Todd Co., 276 Pa. 409, 120 Atl. 409, 27 A. L. R. 41.

The latter case is of little assistance to the owners, since the supervision item there disallowed was general supervision by the officers of the contracting company corresponding to the supervision-by the partners, Willett and Babst, in this case, which it is conceded should not have been allowed. Any foreman is in a certain sense a supervisor, but the Lytle case seems to draw a distinction between supervision on administrative and operative levels. The supervision by Mrachek and Craghead, the two men whose pay is here involved, was definitely on the operative level.

Nor is the Cavanaugh case of any assistance here, because, in relying upon it, the owners ignore the fact that this is a contractors’ lien and would have us construe only *627 Rem. Rev. Stat.* § 1129 [P.P.C. § 180-1], and disregard Rem. Rev. Stat., §§ 1139 and 1141 [P.P.C. §§ 180-21, -25], which refer to liens of contractors and subcontractors.

These three sections of our lien statute are set out and construed together in Chavelle v. Island Gun Club, 77 Wash. 304, 137 Pac. 511. So far as they are material, we will set them forth again:

§ 1129. “Every person performing labor upon or furnishing material to be used in the construction ... of any . . . building . . . has a lien upon the same for the labor performed or material furnished by each, respectively . . . ”
§ 1139. “The contractor shall bé entitled to recover upon the claim filed by him only such amount as may be due him according to the terms of his contract, after deducting all claims of other parties for labor performed and materials furnished; . . . ”
§ 1141. “In every case in which different liens are claimed against the same property, the court, in the judgment, must declare the rank of such lien or class of liens, which shall be in the following order: —
1. All persons performing labor;
2.

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Bluebook (online)
193 P.2d 321, 30 Wash. 2d 622, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willett-v-davis-wash-1948.