Wilson v. Samuels

35 P. 148, 100 Cal. 514
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 26, 1893
DocketNo. 15333
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 35 P. 148 (Wilson v. Samuels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Samuels, 35 P. 148, 100 Cal. 514 (Cal. 1893).

Opinion

Searls, C.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in an action to foreclose a mechanic’s lien, and from an order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial.

Defendant Samuels was the owner of a lot of land in San Francisco. He entered into a written contract with W. A. Van Dervort, the other defendant, by the terms of which the latter was to construct for him certain buildings upon said lot. The contract was duly filed with the recorder of the city and county.

Plaintiff Wilson furnished materials and labor to the contractor for and in the construction of the buildings, for which there was due him $1,200. For this amount he filed a mechanic’s lien against the buildings at the proper time and in due form

There was due the contractor from Samuels, on account of the contract, $6,312.

Twelve other liens were filed for amounts aggregating $8,875.69, on account of materials furnished. Also liens for labor aggregating $310.50. There were therefore liens filed exclusive of the labor liens, and including that of plaintiff, amounting to $10,075.69. The contractor Van Dervort seems to have been insolvent.

Before the liens were filed the creditors met and [516]*516endeavored to adjust their claims so as to avoid the expense and necessity of filing liens, but failed in their efforts.

After the liens were filed the lienholders met again, learned the exact amount due from defendant Samuels on the contract, except that there was thought to be something due on account of extra work on the building, but the precise amount thereof, if anything, was not known. The amount of the several liens was also reported to the meeting.

Thereupon an agreement in writing was prepared and executed by all the lienholders, the plaintiff included, except Glosser and Gallagher, who refused to assent thereto.

The following is a copy of the agreement:

“ We, the undersigned creditors of W. A. Van Dervort, for work done and materials furnished in the erection of a certain structure for D. Samuels, situated on Greenwich street near Buchanan street, hereby agree that if said D. Samuels will pay, on or before the first of July, 1891, the money still due on said building, to wit: $-, the same may be paid as follows, to wit? 1. All the claims for labor, amounting to $310.50, shall be paid in full. 2. The remainder, $-, shall be distributed among all the other lien claimants in the proportion which each of -said claims bears to the whole amount of such other lien claims filed against said building, said proportion being — per cent of each of said claims.
“And, in consideration of said payment being made, we and each of us will, on receipt of our said proportionate shares, respectively assign our said liens to said D. Samuels, with the agreement that we and each of us will furnish the testimony necessary to prove and establish the validity of our respective lien in any litigation growing out of the refusal of one or more of the lien claimants to accept his said proportion; and that if said respective liens are not so proved by us, we will respectively refund the moneys so paid for such invalid liens. And the said W. A. Van Dervort hereby agrees to the pay-[517]*517meat of said money as above provided for, and hereby waives his own liens for any and all moneys so paid.
[signed] “ W. A. Van Dervort.
“San Francisco, June —, 1891.”
NAME OP CLAIMANT. AMOUNT OF LIEN.
C. E. Doty & Go...................$1,545 65
Keenan Withington............... 30 40
J. H. Wilson...................... 1,200 00
L. E. Clawson & Co................ 122 00
E. Platz.......................... 507 00
A. I. Sanborn................ 200 00
Latson Hardware Company......... 93 00
C. D. McGown & Co............... 244 93
Fulda Bros....................... 79 79
Huntington, Hopkins & Co. per W.
F. S........................... 518 19

As before stated, the parties did not know the amount due on account of extra work, and hence the blanks in the agreement.

The clause in reference to proving amount due and validity of liens was inserted to meet the case in the event that some of the lienholders refused to accept the arrangement, and in order that such dissenters might not receive more than their pro rata share.

Defendant Samuels was made acquainted with the agreement, and thereupon through D. H. Bibb paid off all the lien claimants their pro rata share of the $6,312 due the contractor, except the plaintiff, who refused to accept less than the full amount due him. Glosser and Gallagher, who refused to sign the agreement, finally accepted their pro rata share with the others.

Before the first day of July, 1891, $720 was tendered to plaintiff and refused by him, and after this suit was brought said sum was paid into court for him. This was slightly in excess of the pro rata share due him. The several liens so paid off pro rata were, with the consent of SanSuels, assigned to one Greenwald, who brought suit upon them, which action was pending at the date of the trial herein. W. A. Van Dervort, the contractor, [518]*518joined with Samuels as a defendant, made default, and Samuels alone is appellant here.

The position of respondent in support of the judgment is:

1. The agreement is not a composition agreement, and is not binding as such.

2. The agreement is fatally inchoate and incomplete by reason of the existence of the blanks therein relative to the pro rata the claimants were to receive.

3. The agreement, by its very terms, was to be obligatory only upon those who accepted the pro rata.

4. That at the very most the agreement was only an accord which could be disregarded at any time before satisfaction, and therefore the respondent was at liberty to'enforce his claim for the full amount.

In briefly noticing these propositions, it may be said of the first that a composition is an agreement made upon a sufficient consideration, between an insolvent or embarrassed debtor and his creditors, or a considerable proportion of them, whereby the latter, for the sake of immediate or sooner payment, agree to accept a dividend less than the whole amount of their claims, to be distributed pro rata, in discharge and satisfaction of the whole.

Considered in the light of this definition, the agree-merit herein set out is not technically a composition agreement, for the reason that it is not one for the payment by the debtor of any sum or thing, and for the further reason that it does not purport and was not intended as a release of the debtor.

It does not follow, however, from these reasons, that the agreement was inoperative or void.

The defendant, Van Dervort, as a contractor, was indebted to his creditors on account of materials furnished and labor performed in a sum in excess of $10,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 P. 148, 100 Cal. 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-samuels-cal-1893.