Menefee v. Beverforden

BROADDUS, J.

On March 29, 1890, defendant Beverforden, entered into a written contract with plaintiff Menefee to furnish all the material, with certain exceptions, and to construct a certain building to be known as the Liberty Female College situate in the city of Liberty, Clay county, Missouri; that the plaintiff, in ‘order to secure a compliance with the said contract, required defendant Beverforden to give bond with security; the .defendant entered into the bond in suit with the other defendants herein, by which they bound themselves in the sum of $28,456 for a faithful performance of said contract, and, also, among other things, that defendant Beverforden would refund to plaintiff all moneys that plaintiff might be compelled to pay in discharging any lien on the premises on which said building was to be erected, made obligatory in consequence of said Beverforden’s default, in case any such claim should arise after full payment by plaintiff to him under said contract.

The petition alleges that defendant Beverforden failed to comply with said contract, in that he did not pay for all the material that was necessarily used in the construction of said building, viz.: that English, Morse & Company furnished to one of his subcontractors, work and material which was declared a lien on said' building by a judgment rendered March 29, 1891, for the sum of $855.59, which the plaintiff was compelled to *108and did pay. It is for this lien against plaintiff’s building which the plaintiff seeks to recover.

The defense to this claim of plaintiff is: first, a denial that there is any such judgment as alleged in plaintiff’s petition, but a claim that a judgment was rendered against one Wm. H. Fleming for said sum, and that it was for work and material furnished, not only on the building in controversy, but for three other separate buildings known, respectively, as, the power house, servants house, and out house — all of which were constructed under separate contracts entered into between plaintiff and defendant Beverforden, and that the material for these were all mingled in the one lien in said judgment, which was not against any particular building, but upon the lot or premises upon which they were all erected. In said suit the plaintiff, defendant Beverforden, and Fleming, the subcontractor, were all made parties.

The defendant also interposed a counterclaim. The whole matter was submitted to a referee, whoj after hearing a great amount of testimony covering the entire business, including all the buildings, submitted a statement of the account between the parties, and found that the plaintiff was entitled to a judgment against the defendants for the sum of $301.78, which sum the-referee finds represents the amount of work and material that went into the building erected under the contract in suit, and which the plaintiff was compelled to pay.

The defendants on the trial before the referee objected to the introduction of said judgment lien for the following reasons, to-wit: first, because it established a lien not only for material for the building in controversy, but also for material for other- buildings not erected under the contract in suit; second, because the judgment described in the petition was rendered on the twenty-ninth day of March, 1891, while the one offered in evidence was rendered on the twenty-ninth day of March, 1892; third, that the lien established by the *109judgment is not against the building, but upon the premises upon which it was erected. These objections were overruled and the judgment received'in evidence.

The defendant, Beverforden, who was a party to said judgment, is concluded by the same to the extent of its legal effect. He was'a proper party under section 6713, Revised Statutes 1889, and if a lien was established by said judgment against plaintiff’s property, which he was obligated under his contract for the erection of said building to pay, then such matter as to him, as well as to the plaintiff, was res adjudicatei, and we can see no good reason why it was not competent to admit such judgment, and then proceed, as was done, to ascertain what was chargeable under the contract for the erection of the building in controversy.

The defendants’ second objection was waived by the defendants in their answer, which, in effect, admits said judgment and describes it by its true date. There is nothing in said third objection. Section 6705, Revised Statutes 1889, provides that the lien may not only be enforced against the building, but also against the premises upon which it is erected.

The defendants have many exceptions to the report of the referee, which were not called to the attention of .the court in their motion for a new trial, and which, consequently, can not be considered by this court. In their motion for a new trial the defendant’s principal contention seems to be relative to the matters already discussed. Aside from complaint against findings on matters of fact, which we can not disturb because such findings appear to have been sustained by ample testimony, the defendants complain of the action of the referee, which was called to the attention of the court, in admitting the record in the case of Zahner v. Beverforden, because it was not properly described in the petition. This record is not alluded to in the petition, and objection to it for that reason, therefore, falls to the ground.

*110The defendants’ motion for new trial contains many things asserted as facts, which appear npon investigation to be conclusions. It is well to remark that there is nothing in the record to indicate upon what theory the judge who passed upon the motion to set aside the finding of the referee, acted, as he was not called .upon to state his finding in writing.

The defendants’ statement of their case and their argument, are so mixed up with theories and conclusions, and sarcastic criticisms upon the referee and the judge, it is almost impossible to tell what points defendants intend to make in this court, and what their contention was in the trial court, but with much pains and some misgivings as to the result, we have endeavored to separate the grain from the chaff, and to pass upon those matters which seem to be important and controlling in the record. There was a former report made by the referee, which was set aside and the cause re-referred. An examination of the final statement and finding of the said referee discloses that he acted with great thoroughness and impartiality, and that his conclusions are the result of a very high order of intelligence and learning in the law, and that himself and work are not justly subject to the scathing criticism received at the hands of the defendants ’ counsel, who appears to be a master in that line. Although there is a large volume of testimony in the case, tire issues were not'Complicated. The plaintiff relied for recovery on his being compelled to pay a certain lien, which had been put into a judgment. The defendants set up a counterclaim, and denied the legal effect of said judgment. The referee seems to have carefully ascertained what work and material went into the building in controversy that was included in said judgment, allowed all of defendants’ counterclaims that were sufficiently established by the testimony, and made his finding accordingly.

This finding, we think, was substantially correct, *111and for th.e right party, and ought not to be disturbed on account of any mere technicality, for it is not certain a better result can be obtained by a new reference. The cause is affirmed.

All concur.