Opinion
Civ. No. 2700.
April 11, 1919.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of the City and County of San Francisco. Jas. M. Troutt, Judge. Reversed in part; affirmed in part.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
Pringle Robbins and Arthur H. Redington for Appellants.
H. K. Eells and Maxwell McNutt for Respondents.
The appeal is from a decree of foreclosure of three contractors' liens against the leasehold interest of appellants in certain premises in San Francisco. The claims of lien sued upon are based upon work performed in the making of alterations and repairs to a portion of the building on said premises, occupied by one J. O. Long as a sublessee of appellants. Mr. Long died on March 31, 1914, while said alterations and repairs were in progress. Upon his death the workmen were withdrawn and all work stopped. The lien claims here involved cover work which was all performed prior to the death of Mr. Long, at his instance and request. [1] Appellants claim that two of these liens were filed prematurely because the contracts upon which they are based had not been completed prior to such filing. The court found that each of the said contracts was completed on March 31, 1914. It is asserted that this finding is unsupported by the evidence, for the reason that the entire alterations and repairs contemplated in the arrangement between Mr. Long and said two respective claimants were not finished at that time. It appears from the evidence that Mr. Long purposed somewhat extensive alterations in the interior arrangements of a market, oyster-stand, and barber-shop which occupied the portion of the building of which he was the lessee; that preparatory to these general alterations he desired to change the location of the barber-shop and oyster-stand, and employed the plaintiffs to perform the plumbing, electrical wiring, and painting necessary for that purpose; that there was no definite price agreed upon nor plan adopted for all these preliminary changes, but that the work was laid out from day to day as it progressed, and plaintiffs followed the instructions given to them from time to time by Mr. Long, or his superintending contractor, as to the manner of its performance. Both of the plaintiffs, to whose claims the objection now under consideration is made, testified that all the work which Mr. Long had requested had been performed prior to his death. This evidence is sufficient to sustain the findings of the trial court that the contracts of these plaintiffs had been completed on March 31, 1914. [2] It further appears that the employees of both plaintiffs were working on the premises at the time of the death, and that all the changes contemplated in the preliminary work had not then been made, but were completed at a later date. In view of the nature of the arrangement between Mr. Long and plaintiffs, it cannot be said that there remained any uncompleted contract between them at the date of the former's death. The evidence last referred to is not necessarily inconsistent with full performance of whatever contracts of the character above indicated were made. [3] The lien of Castagnino Bros. was upon a claim under a contract for painting, which the court found was fully performed on March 31, 1914. The only evidence in the record as to the time of completion of this contract is the testimony of one of the claimants that the work was finished on March 6, 1914. This finding is, therefore, not supported by the evidence. [4] The notice of lien by these claimants was filed for record on May 11, 1914, more than sixty days after the completion of their contract, as fixed by their own testimony. Respondent seeks to sustain this lien on the ground that the owners filed no notice of completion under the provisions of section 1187 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and that, therefore, the claimants had ninety days within which to file their lien. The record is entirely silent as to the filing, or want of filing, of this notice. We have held in the case of Greely v. Noble, post, p. 628, [ 181 P. 666], that the burden of alleging and proving the failure of the owner to file this notice is upon the plaintiffs. Having failed to so allege and prove, their lien was too late and should not have been allowed.
[5] It is further claimed that the record does not disclose when the appellants acquired knowledge of the making of the improvements from which the lien claims arose, and that they never obtained any knowledge of the scope and extent of such improvements. No evidence was introduced upon this matter. Its determination rests, therefore, upon the pleadings. The answer of appellants contains the following allegations: "Answering paragraph 11 of said first cause of action these defendants admit that the defendants S. J. Pringle and E. C. Pringle had knowledge that certain alterations and repairs were to be made in said building, but deny that said S. J. Pringle and E. C. Pringle had full knowledge of the alterations and repairs in said complaint set forth, and in this particular said defendants S. J. Pringle and E. C. Pringle allege that said J. O. Long informed them that he desired to make certain alterations and repairs and that these defendants then requested that a full plan of the repairs be submitted to them for their approval, and that said J. O. Long failed to submit said plan showing said alterations and repairs, and these defendants allege that while they knew that said J. O. Long had commenced work in said building, that they did not know just what the scope of the said work was." The knowledge admitted by the foregoing allegations was sufficient, in our opinion, to require the filing of the notice prescribed by section 1192 of the Code of Civil Procedure as a condition of relieving appellants' property from liability for the cost of the work performed at the request of Mr. Long. Such knowledge need only be sufficient to put a prudent man on inquiry. ( Gentle v. Britton, 158 Cal. 328, 332, [ 111 P. 9].) Where it is shown that the owners had knowledge of the improvements, the giving of the notice of nonliability under the above section becomes a matter of defense to be pleaded and proved by defendants. ( West Coast Lumber Co. v. Newkirk, 80 Cal. 275, 277, [22 P. 231]; Boscus v. Bohlig, 173 Cal. 687, 691, [ 162 P. 100].) The appellants did not meet this burden.
The judgment is reversed in so far as it decrees a lien in favor of the plaintiffs Henry F. Castagnino and Emanuel Castagnino, as copartners doing business under the firm name and style of Castagnino Bros. In all other respects the judgment is affirmed.
Langdon, P. J., and Brittain, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on May 9, 1919, and the following opinion then rendered thereon:
The appellants in this action have filed a petition for rehearing, claiming that the court has misinterpreted the contracts of the lien claimants Perazzi and Decker Electrical Construction Company, as set forth in their respective claims of lien; and, further, that, under the interpretation of the contracts adopted by the court, the lien claimants were not original contractors and, therefore, their liens, not having been filed within thirty days, were invalid. Appellants also request a modification of the former opinion as to the prorating of the costs on appeal. In this latter request the respondents have joined in a separate petition, urging, however, a different basis of division of costs.
It appears from the notices of lien filed by said Perazzi and Decker Electrical Construction Company that each of said claimants alleged a contract consisting of two items; first, the performance of certain work in changing the location of the barber-shop, for which in each case a definite contract price was agreed upon; and, secondly, for the performance of certain other work, with regard to which no definite price was agreed upon, but each of the claimants was to be paid the reasonable value thereof. The evidence disclosed that all of the work upon the barber-shop had been performed prior to the death of Mr. Long. The remaining work under each contract was in the process of performance at the time of Mr. Long's death. It is with reference to that work that the construction of the contracts set forth in the former opinion is applicable. There was a definite contract between each of the lien claimants and Mr. Long, as alleged in their respective claims of lien and as established by their testimony. A part of each contract was for the performance of certain work at a definite price, all of which had been performed before Mr. Long's death. The extent and nature of the balance of the work under the contracts was dependent upon instructions to be given from day to day by Mr. Long or his agent. The possibility of the continuance of such instructions from that source was terminated by the death of Mr. Long. While, therefore, the lien claimants were original contractors, we are satisfied that there were no uncompleted contracts at the time of the death of Mr. Long, in the sense that the finding of the trial court of completion on March 31, 1914, was not supported by the evidence. Being original contractors, the liens which were filed fifty-five days after the date of completion were in time.
In the former opinion it is held that two of the liens involved in these consolidated cases were valid and one was invalid. It is urged by both parties to the appeal that under such circumstances the costs of the appeal should be prorated between them. This contention is well founded and is supported by precedent in similar cases.
It is, therefore, ordered that appellants' petition for a rehearing be, and the same is hereby, denied; that the opinion heretofore filed herein be, and the same is hereby, modified by adding at the close thereof the following: "And it is further ordered that appellants recover such proportion of their costs on appeal as the amount of the lien of Henry F. Castagnino and Emanuel Castagnino, as copartners doing business under the name of Castagnino Bros., bears to the total amount of the three liens involved in the appeal; and that the respondents recover such proportion of their costs on appeal as the total amount of the two liens of H. J. Perazzi and Decker Electrical Construction Company bears to the total amount of the three liens involved in the appeal."
Langdon, P. J., and Brittain, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on June 9, 1919.
All the Justices concurred.