124 A. 838 | Conn. | 1924
Lead Opinion
It is conceded that under § 4744, the reservation of title in the contract of conditional sale was valid as against the receivers, though the contract was not acknowledged or recorded. It is also conceded that the petitioner never had any right or remedy by way of mechanic's lien, because his claim was not for services rendered or materials furnished in the construction of the building. The right to a mechanic's lien is purely statutory and does not include a claim based on installing electric-light fixtures in the building.Rose v. Persse Brooks Paper Works,
On the other hand, it is true that the recitals of the certificate of mechanic's lien executed and filed by the petitioner, when regarded as verbal acts evidencing intention, necessarily evidence an intent to affirm the sale and to treat the title to the articles in question as vested in the vendee, or in the receivers who stand in the shoes of the vendee; and the claim of the receivers is that the formal communication of such an intent is, of itself, enough to preclude the petitioner from thereafter reversing his position and asserting title in himself by reclamation proceedings, notwithstanding the concession that the petitioner's attempt to assert a mechanic's lien was in legal effect a nullity. The receivers cite no authority to this effect. All cases they rely on are cases where the conditional vendor had a legal right to one or more inconsistent remedies, and, having attempted to assert one, was held to his election. The Connecticut case was one where the conditional vendor not only filed a claim in insolvency proceedings but received a dividend, and it was held that he was thereby precluded from afterward resorting to an action of replevin. Crompton v. Beach,
Looking at the matter from another point of view, it is apparent that the measure of consistency required of a litigant in any jurisdiction must depend a good deal on the character of its rules of procedure. The doctrine of election is inherited from the inexorable logic of the formulary procedure of the common law, which necessarily demanded consistency as an end in itself. Modern procedure, more or less liberally in character, sacrifices consistency so far as is necessary to the attainment of substantial justice. In this jurisdiction, for example, an unpaid vendor is permitted to join a cause of action for the contract price, based on the theory that the title to the goods has passed to the vendee, with a cause of action in trover, based on the theory that the title is in the vendor; without being required to elect between them at any stage of the trial.Craft Refrigerating Machine Co. v. Quinnipiac BrewingCo.,
In view of the general relaxation of the common law requirement of consistency in pleading, the Supreme Court of the United States has wisely observed that "at best this doctrine of election of remedies is a harsh, and now largely obsolete rule, the scope of which should not be extended, as it must be in order to reach the case at bar." Friederichsen v. Renard,
There is error, the judgment is set aside, and the cause remanded with direction to overrule the demurrer to the petitioner's remonstrance against the acceptance of the report of the committee.
In this opinion WHEELER, C.J., CURTIS and HAINES, JS., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
Both parties presented this controversy upon the theory that a mechanic's lien would not lie for the price of the lighting fixtures involved in it, and, had the majority of the court proceeded upon the basis of the case so made, I certainly would have no quarrel with them upon that score. But to adopt that theory as the law of this State, I can only regard as an unnecessary narrowing of a beneficent statute and as running counter to the decision and opinion in Balch v. Chaffee,