Court Opinion

ID: 8655681
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-24 21:15:41.940617+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:56:42.130905
License: Public Domain

BRICK, -C. J.
The respondent, William S. Smoot, for himself and as-the-assignee of other lien claimants, commenced this action to foreclose certain mechanics’ liens. Bay'A. Boss filed a cross-complaint, but, for the purposes of this opinion, he will be treated the same as though he were an assignee of the ret-spondent Smoot. The district court found the issues in favor of the lien claimants and ordered that the premises against which the liens were claimed bei sold.
The controlling facts, stated as briefly as possible, are: That Checketts & Bradeson, as copartners, and hereafter *214called contractors, in April, 1908, entered into a contract with, the Inter-Mountain Fair Association, a corporation, hereafter styled association, whereby said contractors agreed1 to furnish the labor and material to construct and complete certain buildings, and also to remjove :and repair certain other buildings and structures for said association, for the agreed price of $2,839, payable on and before the completion of the buildings and structures aforesaid. Said contractors became financially embarrassed, and some time in the latter part of July, 1908, before completing the buildings and structures aforesaid, abandoned their contract. Prior to said abandonment, said contractors had, however, contracted-debts and obligations for material used in and for labor performed upon said buildings and structures. The controversy .in this case is limited to the claims for labor performed as aforesaid.
One of the principal questions presented for determination arose out of the following circumstances, namely:
1 A short time after the contractors had abandoned their contract, a number of the laborers who had been employed by said contractors, and who, under such employment, had performed labor upon the buildings and structures aforesaid, met with some of the officers of the association and demanded payment for their labor, and, in case payment were not made, they threatened to file liens under the statutes of this state against said buildings and structures. After some discussion, the association paid the claimants about one-third of what was due them for labor, and took from each of them a receipt in the following form: “Ogden, Utah, July 31, 1908. Received of Inter-Mountain Fair Association-■ dollars, in full of all claims against the above association for labor.” The amount that was paid to each claimant was inserted in his receipt, and each one signed a separate form. In its answer, the 'association pleaded the foregoing payment ¡as an accord, satisfaction, and settlement of all claims. The claimants, however, denied such compromise or settlement. Upon that issue the court found that, when the foregoing payments were made and the re-*215eeipts executed and delivered, “there was in fact no agreement that either of said parties would release the said defendant (association), or the defendants Checketts & Brade-son (the contractors) from liability to them, and, further, that there was no dispute at- the time of said payments as to the amounts then due and owing to the said plaintiff” or his assignors, including Ross. The court further found that there was no consideration to support the alleged accord and Satisfaction, and further found that the payments made as aforesaid were made out of money that was due and owing by said association to said contractors. The court further found that, although said contractors had abandoned said contract, notwithstanding that fact “there was sufficient money remaining in its (the association’s) hands -of the contract price of the work to be performed under said contract after the payment for the completion of said work to pay the plaintiff and his assignors” together with all other claims for material. Upon these facts the court found, as a conclusion of law, that there was neither a compromise settlement nor an accord and satisfaction of said claims.
It is now insisted by the attorney for the association that the court erred in its findings as aforesaid. From the facts as found, which, in our judgment, are sustained by the evidence, the payments relied on by the association do not constitute an accord and satisfaction, nor did the transaction between the claimants and the officers of the association amount to a compromise and settlement of unliquidated or disputed claims. There was no' dispute whatever between the officers of the association and the labor claimants with respect to the amount that was due to any one of them from the contractors. Neither was there any question with regard to whether the claimants, as a matter of law, were entitled to file liens against the buildings and structures of the association for the full amount of their claims. The mere fact that, under such circumstances, the claimants executed receipts in full when they had in fact received only about one-third of the amounts then due them from the contractors for labor is of slight, if any, importance. As to whether the receipt of a less sum *216will discharge a greater one does not depend npon the form of the receipt that is given.
2 When it is claimed that the payment by the debtor of a sum of money less than is due and owing to the creditor is a payment in full discharge of the entire amount due, a-receipt acknowledging full payment standing alone is not controlling. If such a payment is based upon a sufficient independent consideration, or upon a compromise of a disputed or an unliquidated claim, and under such circumstances the lesser sum is received as payment in discharge of the larger one, the payment is binding upon the creditor. (Barnum, v. Green, 13 Colo. App. 258, 259, 57 Pac. 757; Johnson v. Simmons, 76 Minn. 34, 78 N. W. 863; Canadian Fed. Co. v. McShane, 80 Neb. 551, 114 N. W. 594, 14 L. R A. (N. S.) 443, 127 Am. St. Rep. 791; Farmers’ & Mechanics’ Life Ass’n v. Caine, 224 Ill. 599, 79 N. E. 956; Prudential Ins. Co. v. Cottongham, 103 Md. 319, 63 Atl. 359; Ness v. Minnesota & Colo. Co., 87 Minn. 413, 92 N. W. 333.)
In the foregoing eases, the dictrine of what constitutes a sufficient consideration for the discharge of a debt then due by the payment of an amount less than the whole debt is fully illustrated. Under the authority of every one of the cases referred to above, with many others which might be.' cited, the payment in the case at bar did not amount to either a compromise of a disputed claim or an accord and satisfaction.
3 Nor is the contention of counsel for the association tenable that the payments made were in the nature of a composition agreement with creditors, and hence are binding upon the lien claimants, as constituting a part of the creditors of. the contractors. It is undoubtedly the law that, where all or a part of the creditors of a particular debtor agree among themselves that each will receive from the debtor, or out of his property or funds, a certain amount or per cent, of the creditor’s claim in full payment or discharge of his entire claim, such an agreement is binding upon all the creditors who are parties to the same. In order that such an agreement be binding, however, there must *217■be an agreement or understanding to the effect just stated by the creditors among or between themselves. In other words, there must be mutuality among the creditors in order to bind any of them. In the cases of Gage v. De Courcey, 68 N. H. 579, 41 Atl. 183; Bartlett v. Woodworth-Mason Co., 69 N. H. 316, 41 Atl. 264, and Sage v. Valentine, 23 Minn. 102, the principles now under consideration are clearly illustrated and applied. The facts in the case at bar do not bring it within the principles aforesaid.
4 Counsel, however, insist that, under the facts, the case at bar falls within the doctrine that where one not the debtor, and who is not under :any legal or moral obligation to pay the debt, does pay a sum less than the whole debt, and the creditor agrees and does receive the lesser sum in discharge of the greater one, the creditor is bound and cannot thereafter sustain an action for the remainder. This doctrine is clearly stated by Mr. Justice Collins in the case of Clark v. Abbott, 53 Minn. 88, 55 N. W. 542, 39 Am. St. Rep. 577. It is also applied in the case of Gordon v. Moore, 44 Ark. 349, 51 Am. Rep. 606. The foregoing doctrine has and can have no application as between material and laboring men and the owner of buildings and structures under our mechanics’ lien statute. The owner of the building and the material or laboring men are not strangers within the purview of the foregoing doctrine. Under our statute (C. L. 1907, sec. 1374), the association had no authority to make any payments before such payments were due in accordance with the terms of the contract, and, if it made any payments, they, under the statute, had to be treated “as if not made,” so far as the rights of the respondent and his assignors are concerned. The statute is applicable although, as in this case, the contractor “may thereafter abandon his contract.”
As we have seen, the contract price was not payable unless and until the structures contracted to be erected were completed. We have also called attention to the fact that Check-etts & Bradeson, the contractors, never completed their contract, but abandoned the structures, before completing them. The provisions of section 1374, supra, therefore became ap*218plicable, and bence the court was right, as a matter of law, when it found that the association had a sufficient amount of the contract price in its hands- to pay the respondent and his assignors, because, under the statute, any payments that the association may have made under the undisputed facts- were by the statute “deemed as if not made,” so- far as the rights of lien claimants were concerned.
5 What has been said also answers- the- claim that the association p-aid out money in excess of the contract price. If this was done, it was contrary to the spirit of our lien laws, and cannot be urged as a reason why respondent and his assignors should not receive pay for the labor they performed. So long as the right to- liens existed, the association had no right whatever to- prefer any claimant above another, and, if it did so before the time for filing liens had elapsed, it cannot complain because the law compels it to treat all claimants alike. Moreover, it appears in this case that the association was permitted to pay a part of the contract price in a medium other than money.
6 This could only be done so as to affect the respondent and his assignors if the provisions of section 1375 were complied with by the association. The burden of showing that fact as against these claimants was upon the associa-tio-n, and there is nothing in the record to show that said section was complied with. This is important -only for the purpose of showing that'the excessive payments that are claimed: by the association are entirely immaterial in this case under the facts as found by the court.
It is further asserted that the court erred in allowing attorney’s fees. Comp. Laws 1907, see. 1400, expressly provides that, in actions to foreclose mechanic’s liens, the successful party shall be entitled to- recover an attorney’s fee to be fixed by the court not to1 exceed twenty five dollars. The amount allowed by the court not being in excess of the amount permitted by statute, and no other error being claimed in this regard, the assignment must be overruled.
*2197 *218From the record it is made to appear that one Hupp was employed by the contractors, and that he performed labor *219upon the building and structures in question; that he did not himself make oath to his claim and file the same, but that, before the notice of lien was filed, he had assigned his claim for labor to the cross-complainant Ross. Ross, after the assignment to him, duly made oath to the claim and filed the same as required by our statute. Counsel for the association vigorously assails the ruling of the trial court in allowing and enforcing the lien thus claimed by Ross. Counsel concedes that the original claimant, after perfecting his lien under the statute, might assign the same, and that his assignee may enforce it, but it is contended that the mere claim — that is, a mere inchoate right to a lien — is not assignable. In other words, counsel contends that the original claimant must perfect the lien under the statute, and that his assignee cannot perfect the lien. A number of cases are cited which sustain counsel’s contention. In 27 Cyc. 255, the law upon the subject, and which is to the contrary of counsel’s citations, is stated in the following language:
“In some jurisdictions it is held that an inchoate mechanic’s lien may he assigned so as to invest the assignee with the right to perfect and enforce the same.”
In support of the foregoing statement, cases are cited from Alabama, Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Rhode Island, and South Dakota. See, also, Roisot on Mechanics’ Liens, sec. 10; Phillips on Mechanics’ Liens, secs. 54, 54a, 55.
We are aware that the Supreme Court of California, in Mills v. La Verne Land C.O., 97 Cal. 254, 32 Pac. 169, 33 Am. St. Rep. 168, has arrived at a contrary conclusion to that stated in Cyc. The ease, however, is, to some extent at least, based upon a California statute. From an examination of the cases cited by the Supreme Court of California, it develops that some of the decisions relied on by the California Supreme Court have since then been modified, if not overruled. Iowa in early cases held with California, and in ai later decision (Peatman v. Centerville Light, etc. Co., 105 *220Iowa, 1, 74 N. W. 689, 67 Am. St. Rep. 276), tbat court supports the text quoted from Cyc., supra. The question is also fully discussed by the Supreme Court of Minnesota in Kinney v. Duluth Ore Co., 58 Minn. 455, 60 N. W. 23, 49 Am. St. Rep. 528. It is there held that even in the absence of a statute, in view of the general provisions of the Code with respect to permitting assignments, and in view of the liberal provisions of the lien statute and its purpose, the inchoate right to a lien is assignable. Our statute (Comp. Laws 1907, see. 1396), however, specifically authorizes the assignment of liens and gives the assignee the right to enforce the same in his own name. We think, when that section is considered in connection with all of the other provisions of our lien law, that a reasonable construction requires us to hold that the court committed no error in 'allowing and enforcing the lien in question. We are of the opinion that, under our statute, the right to perfect a lien is clearly assignable.
It is further asserted that the district court erred in allowing a lien for labor for which the statute does not authorize a lien. The record1 discloses that one of the assignors performed a few days’ labor for which there may be some doubt whether the statute gives a lien or not. In view, however, that the construction of the statute in this regard is of grave importance to all lien claimants, and thaft counsel for neither side has thoroughly discussed the question nor cited any authorities, and for the further reason that the amount involved is small and that, in view of the finding of the court, the association is not injured by the court’s ruling, we have less hesitancy than we otherwise would have in refraining from passing upon the question at this time.
8 The contention that the findings are not sustained by the evidence cannot prevail. This contention can only prevail in cases where it is clear from the evidence that the court’s findings aire wrong. Such is not the case here. On most points the evidence is, to say the least, in sharp conflict, and, where such is not the case, it is not clear that the findings are not right. In cases where the evidence is conflicting, we are just as likely to be wrong as *221to be right by attempting to interfere with the court’s findings of fact at long range. In view of tbe whole record, we are of the opinion that interference in this case is not justified. In this connection it should also be remembered that, although the association did pay more than the contract price, yet it paid no more than the labor and material were worth. It therefore paid only for what it actually obtained. If it was damaged in anyway by reason of the excessive payments, it, under the circumstances, should look to the contractors, who alone are responsible for the predicament in which it was placed. By this we do not mean that the owner of the building or structure can be required to pay more than the contract price in case he complies with the provisions of the statute, but if he does not comply with them, and is required to pay more, he has no legal right to oomjplain.
The assignment that one of the assignees had been paid by the contractors must likewise fail. The agreement between the contractors and the assignor amounted to no more than an agreement that the assignor should be paid' in a particular manner. The agreement, however, was not fulfilled by the contractors, and the assignor received no pay for his labor. This left the question precisely the same as though the assignor had been promised payment in cash by the contractors, but they did not redeem their promise.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs to respondent.
McOABTY, J., concurs.