Williams v. Stroub

67 S.W. 875, 168 Mo. 346, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 188
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 19, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 67 S.W. 875 (Williams v. Stroub) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Stroub, 67 S.W. 875, 168 Mo. 346, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 188 (Mo. 1902).

Opinion

BURGESS, J.

— These actions are by different parties to enforce liens against certain storerooms, with rooms above them, one a mechanic’s lien, and the other a materialman’s lien. They were consolidated by an order of the court.

In Williams’s suit he claims a balance to be due him of $2,664.13. To this suit the defendant Anna O. Stroub filed a separate answer, in which it is alleged she made a contract with Williams to build the houses in accordance with certain plans and specifications, with certain grades of materials, and in a specified time, and that he did not do either. That the Long-Bell Lumber Company, by its name of Pacific Coast [350]*350Lumber Company, had as security joined said Williams in a penal bond in the sum of seven thousand dollars, conditioned that Williams would perform and carry out the contract made between him and said Anna O. Stroub. The answer further states that the “Long-Bell Lumber Company has filed- in the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Jackson county, Missouri, a statement of its .claim for material furnished- said Williams for the erection of said buildings and improvements ■ on the land of this defendant, for the purpose of establishing -a lien upon said buildings and land, for the amount of said materials, said amount being alleged to be fifteen hundred dollars and fifty cents,” and said Anna O. Stroub in said separate answer prayed the court to order, adjudge and decree that the said Long-Bell Lumber Company be made a party to this suit and be ordered to file herein its claim for materials furnished to and used in the construction of. said building for which it claims said lien upon the premises of this defendant.

' After the filing of the foregoing separate answer of said Anna O. Stroub, on December 3, 1896, the Long-Bell Lumber Company, by order of court, was made a party defendant to said suit, and it filed its answer and cross-petition in which it prayed judgment against Williams and a lien against the real estate in question, for $1,500.50, and also in addition a general judgment against Williams for the sum of $1,349.92, for money advanced him with which to erect the buildings in question.

On January 11, 1897, the Long-Bell Lumber Company brought suit against John C. Williams, Anna O. Stroub and others alleged to be interested in said real estate, to enforce its mechanic’s lien against the real estate in question for the amount of $1,500.50.

To this petition the defendant Anna O. Stroub filed her separate amended answer, alleging that she had made a contract with Williams to erect such buildings in a specified [351]*351manner, with á certain character of materials and in a fixed time under a penalty of three dollars per day for every day beyond such time that said buildings remained unfinished. Said answer also alleged that plaintiff, the Long-Bell Lumber Company, had joined defendant Williams as his surety in a bond of said defendant Anna O. Stroub in the penal sum of seven thousand dollars, conditioned that said Williams would fully perform the conditions of his agreement with said Anna O. Stroub, and then after alleging Williams’s failure to faithfully perform said contract as to manner of building and character of material used, prayed judgment against plaintiff and defendant Williams for $3,210. There was no prayer for judgment for the penalty of the bond pleaded in this answer, nor for an assessment of damages thereon. Nor was judgment rendered for the penalty of said bond. To this answer plaintiff filed its reply, being a general denial.

On trial of the eases the plaintiff Long-Bell Lumber Company introduced its notice served on defendant - Anna O. Stroub, owner of the property, and proved its service on October 3, 1896. Plaintiff also introduced its lien and account, to which defendant objected upon the ground that it was not in accordance with the notice plaintiff claims to have served upon the defendant, and upon the ground that the lien account is unintelligible and is not a "fair statement of the materials furnished or claimed to have been furnished by the Long-Bell Lumber Company; that it is not an itemized account as is contemplated and required by statute; and upon the further ground, that the account is not competent evidence for the purpose of showing when the indebtedness accrued.

The file-marks on said lien shows that it was filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Tackson 'County, on October 15, 1896.

The evidence showed that the Long-Bell Lumber Company sold the lumber and materials embraced in its account [352]*352and lien account to John C. Williams to be used in the buildings in question, that they were so used, that said Williams had contracted with Anna O. Stroub to build said buildings, that she was the owner of the real estate on which they stood, that the prices charged therefor were reasonable, that proper credits had been given the same, though it appeared to the court that a credit of about $359.50 by mistake had been applied to the personal account of Williams for money advanced him when it should have been applied to the account for lumber. The mistake, if a mistake was committed, was owing to the fact that at the end of each week Anna O. Stroub was in the habit of furnishing enough money to pay hands, and Williams would either cash with plaintiff these checks and pay the hands or would turn the same over to the plaintiff, the Long-Bell Lumber Company, and it would deposit the check and pay off the hands,- the court credited this check on the lien account, but did not find that the same was knowingly and intentionally not credited by plaintiff.

In the case of John C. Williams v. Anna O. Stroub et ah, the plaintiff introduced his lien filed with the clerk of the circuit court of Jackson county. To the introduction of said lien objection was made upon the ground that it was not an itemized account as required by the statute in order to establish a lien upon the property, for the reason there is nothing to fix the date of the items, and therefore incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial.

The evidence showed that Williams had put all of the materials mentioned in the account sued on and in the lien account, in the buildings in question and that all the lumber charged therein had been used in erecting the same and was reasonably worth what was charged.

The defendant Anna O. Stroub introduced in evidence the contract and specifications and also the bond executed to her by Williams and the Long-Bell Lumber Company under the name of its retail yard, Pacific Coast Lumber and Supply [353]*353Company. There was offered, on behalf of Anna O. Stroub, considerable testimony tending to show that the buildings were not constructed out of the character of materials, nor in the manner contemplated by the contract, and that the same were not completed in the time stipulated, though the plans offered in evidence showing how the houses should have been built have not been incorporated in the abstract of appellant, nor are they preserved in the bill of exceptions.

At the conclusion of the testimony offered by Anna O. Stroub, plaintiffs, Williams and Long-Bell Lumber Company, introduced evidence to show that the houses were built according to the agreement, plans and specifications.

The finding of the court was for plaintiff, the Long-Bell Lumber Company, holding it was entitled to a lien against the property in question for the sum of $1,156.55 and a judgment against John O.

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Bluebook (online)
67 S.W. 875, 168 Mo. 346, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-stroub-mo-1902.