254 Pa. 436 | Pa. | 1916
Opinion by
In December, 1911, the City of York, to the use of A. B. Kraft, entered a municipal claim for paving a sidewalk in front of property owned by the defendant; a scire facias issued and an affidavit of defense was filed; trial was had, and the verdict favored the use-plaintiff!; from a judgment in accordance therewith the defendant appealed to the Superior Court, which tribunal awarded a new trial; on petition of the plaintiff, we allowed the present appeal.
The right to recover was questioned in the Common Pleas on the ground that the use-plaintiff had failed to serve notice of his intention to file a municipal claim, as required by the Act of 1901, infra. This point had not been made in the affidavit of defense, but was raised for the first time at trial; with reference thereto the court below states, “There had never been any effort made to strike off or quash the lien, nor had any demurrer been filed, and we are of opinion that filing the affidavit of defense and going to trial waived the right to subsequently raise the question of the validity of the lien;” and, on this theory, a recovery was sustained. In reversing, the Superior Court said: “The ninth section of the Act .of. June 4, 1901, P. L. 361 (No. 228), provides in regard to municipal claims: ‘Where claims are to be filed to use, the claimant, at least one month before the claim is filed, shall serve a written notice of his intention to file it unless the amount due is paid. Service of such notice may be made personally on the owner where-ever found; but, if he cannot be served in the county where the property is situated, such notice may be served on his agent or the party in possession of the property, and if there be no agent or party in possession, it may be posted on the most public part of the property.’ The eleventh section of said act specifies the several items which must appear in the lien. The notice required in the
The point of law involved is so well and correctly disposed of in the excerpt just quoted from the opinion of the learned Superior Court that nothing we might add thereto would further enlighten the subject; but at argument in this court, in answer to a question from the
We have read the numerous authorities cited to us, but none of them rules this case. As said by the present Chief Justice in McVey v. Kaufmann, 223 Pa. 125, 129, “Those who would enjoy the benefits of the Mechanics’ Lien Act can do so only by complying with its requirements” ; see also Bernheisel v. Smothers, 5 Pa. Superior Ct. 113, 115, where it is stated: “A plaintiff cannot have a verdict unless his proofs satisfy every requirement of the act.” Here the question is not, as in most of the cases cited, whether the defendant should be held to have waived certain'averments ordinarily required to be present in a claim, but, rather, should he be held to have waived the performance of a substantive act essential to the plaintiff’s right of recovery, simply because, in his affidavit of defense, he failed specifically to aver the nonperformance of that act, when the affidavit filed contained sufficient averments to prevent a summary judgment, and there was no rule in the court below or in the statute confining a defendant to the defenses specifically set up in his affidavit. On this subject, as already indicated, we agree with the Superior Court that the question involved must be answered in the negative.
All assignments .relating to the point discussed in this opinion are overruled, and the others are dismissed; but the judgment of the Superior Court is modified by striking therefrom the grant of a venire facias de novo, and judgment is here entered for the defendant.