Winslow Bros. v. McCully Stone Mason Co.

69 S.W. 304, 169 Mo. 236, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 270
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 18, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 69 S.W. 304 (Winslow Bros. v. McCully Stone Mason Co.) 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
Winslow Bros. v. McCully Stone Mason Co., 69 S.W. 304, 169 Mo. 236, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 270 (Mo. 1902).

Opinion

MAESHALL, J.

— This is a subcontractor’s mechanic’s lien suit to establish a lien on a lot on the corner of Fifteenth and Olive streets, in St. Louis. There was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, and the defendants appealed.

Briefly stated the facts are these:

On April 16, 1898, the Van Eaalte Investment Company owned the said lot, on which there was a partially erected building, that is, the foundations and the walls up to1 the second story were built. This company had a capital stock of fifty thousand dollars, which was held as follows: Simon Van Eaalte and Julius Van Eaalte, two hundred and forty nine shares each, and Morris Van Eaalte, two shares. The property was yielding no revenue, and the company was anxious to complete the improvements. Accordingly, Simon Van Eaalte consulted McCullv as to what character of building could be constructed that would be most profitable. After [240]*240deciding upon the character of "the proposed building and having the plans drawn therefor, instead’ of having the building put up directly in the name of the Van Raalte Investment Company, they caused a new company to be organized, called the Emma Building Company, for the sole purpose, as Simon Van Raalte told McOully, and as all the facts and circumstances unerringly show, to put up the proposed building. The Emma Building Company was organized April 15, 1898, with a capital stock of $125,000, alleged to be full-paid. The stockholders were: Simon Van Raalte, four hundred shares; Julius Van Raalte, three hundred shares; James E. Davis, three hundred and fifty shares; Bennett Wassermann, one hundred shares; and Jacob Lampert, one hundred shares. Davis, Wassermann and Lampert, the minority stockholders, were elected the three directors, and although the Van Raaltes owned more than a majority of the stock of the company, neither of them was elected a director. But the company authorized Simon to act for it in all things and he did so, transacting all its business. On April 16, 1898, the Van Raalte Investment Company leased the lot to the Emma Building Company for a term of ninety-nine years, at an annual rental of $12,000, together with all taxes and assessments, the lessor reserving a lien on the buildings and improvements to secure the rent, and the lessee being required to keep the buildings insured for the benefit of the lessor,, and if the buildings were destroyed the insurance money to be used in repairing or rebuilding. The lease further provided that at the end thereof the lessee should surrender to the lessor “the said demised premises, with their appurtenances, and the building and erections thereon situated.” On the same day, by a separate writing, the Van Raalte company sold and assigned to the Emma Building Company the partially constructed building then on the property for $65,000. Thereafter on September 12, 1898, the McCully Stone Mason [241]*241Company entered into a contract with the Emma Building Company to construct the building that McCully and Van Raalte had been consulting about, according to certain plans, for $60,789.50. The McCully company then contracted with the plaintiff to furnish the ironwork necessary to carry out the contract, which they did, and there is an admitted balance due the plaintiff company of $4,605.55 and interest on account thereof, for which that company is seeking by this action to establish a mechanic’s lien against the whole estate, leasehold and fee, in the land. Thus matters went on until about May 1, 1899, when the work was stopped, the Van Raaltes claim because the McCully company was unable to proceed. On May 1, 1899, the Van Raalte Investment Company forfeited the lease to the Emma Building Company, and immediately made a similar lease to' the same company, except that the rent was reduced from $12,000 a year to. $10,500 a year. On May 11, 1899, the Van Raalte Investment Company sold and conveyed the land, with the improvements thereon, to Thomas LI. West and Wm. L. Huse, for $220,000, subject however .to the second leas© to the Emma Building Company, the grantors giving bond to protect the grantee from all liens and incumbrances.

Thereafter on October,!, 1899, Thomas H. West and Wm. L. Huse forfeited the second lease to the Emma Building Company for non-payment of the installment of rent that fell due on August 1, 1899, and being the second installment of rent under the new lease. The McCully Stone M.ason Company, the Emmia Building Company, the Van Raalte Investment Company, and West and LIuse' are the parties defendant, but only the Van Raalte Investment Company and West and Huse have appealed. The judgment was for $4,801.50. It was personal as to the McCully company, it -was against the leasehold in the land and all the right, title [242]*242■and interest of the Emma Building Company, and it was also against the fee simple title now owned by West and Huse. The appellants only question the correctness of the judgment as it affects the fee simple title.

I.

The sole legal question involved in this appeal, is whether the facts stated make out a prima facie case for the plaintiff to go to the jury upon, of a right in-the plaintiff to a mechanic’s lien against the fee simple title to the land.

Appellants do not deny that the personal judgment against the MeCully company, and the mechanic’s lien against the leasehold interest of the Emma Building Company, are proper and justified by the evidence. If it be true that the unfinished building was sold by the Van Ráalte company to the Emma, company, for $65,000, before any work was done by MeCully under his contract with the Emma company, then it would seem quite immaterial to the plaintiff, from a financial point of view, whether the lien attached to anything more than the leasehold interest or not, for the plaintiff’s judgment is for only forty-eight hundred dollars, while the improvements are worth much mlore than that. It may be, though it is not shown by this record, however, that there are other liens with which the plaintiff might have to prorate, and that the aggregate of all the liens would exceed the value of the improvements and the leasehold estate. At any rate, the legal question is properly presented and must be decided.

It is true, as appellants contend, that a right to a mechanic’s lien is conferred by our statutes only upon such persons as sustain a contractual relation, direct or sub modo, with the owner of the land or the interest in the land sought to be charged. But it is also as true of mechanic’s contracts as it is of ordinary contracts, that the owner need not necessarily contract in person, but may bind himself just as [243]*243■effectively if lie acts through an agent. In fact, the statute (sec. 4203, R. S. 1899) gives a lien where the work is done ■or materials are*fumished “by virtue of any contract with the owner, or proprietor, or his agent, trustee or subcontractor,” thereby recognizing that an owner can bind himself through an agent. It is also true that such agency may be ■express, or implied from the conduct and acquiescence of the owner and from all the circumstances, which estop him from denying the agency. [20 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law (2 Ed.), pp. 314, 317; Hull v. Jones, 69 Mo. 587.] The doctrine of an undisclosed principal also applies as well to mechanic’s contracts as to any other kind of contracts. On several occasions (Briggs v. Munchon, 56 Mo. l. c. 472; Weber v. Collins, 139 Mo. l. c. 508; Higgins v. Dellinger, 22 Mo. 399; Kelly v. Thuey, 102 Mo. 528), this court has quoted with approval the rule laid down, by Baron Pabke in Higgins v. Senior, Mees. & W.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.W. 304, 169 Mo. 236, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winslow-bros-v-mccully-stone-mason-co-mo-1902.