70 Ind. App. 226 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1918
This is an appeal from a judgment in appellee’s favor for $324.79 and for the foreclosure of a mechanic’s lien. The issues'of fact are presented by an amended complaint and an answer in three paragraphs, the first of which is a general denial.
The trial court overruled a demurrer to the complaint, sustained a demurrer to the third paragraph of answer, and overruled a motion for new trial. Each
In support of its contention that error is presented by the ruling on the demurrer to the complaint, it is contended in effect that such complaint is bad because of the absence of a showing that the terms of the contract between appellant and the principal contractor were complied with; that this is so because appellee, a subcontractor, is bound by the terms of the principal contract.
It is also insisted that such complaint is bad because of the absence of any averment showing that anything is due the principal contractor on his contract.
As pertinent to the question involved in the last contention, it may be said that authority can be found that apparently gives support to appellant’s contention. It should be noted, however, in this connection that what may appear to be conflict in the decisions affecting said question, in the main, results from the difference in the system of mechanic’s lien laws in the different jurisdictions' from which the decisions emanate. In New York and other jurisdictions which follow what is sometimes called the “New York System,” no one except the principal contractor acquires an absolute lien on the real estate upon which the improvement is made, and the rights of the subcontractor, laborer and materialman are acquired by a kind of equitable subrogation secured by written or record notice to the owner of their unpaid claims, and the lien thus acquired imposes upon the owner the duty of retaining such funds as are in his hands belonging to the contractor at the time of such notice. In such jurisdictions the subcontractor, laborer and
The averments of the complaint pertinent to the. question involved in appellant’s first contention, supra, are as follows: “The said National Stoker Company contracted with this plaintiff for it to make the steel' and iron parts of said stoker in accordance with its said contract with the defendant and to deliver and assemble the same in the boiler house of .the defendant on the real estate herein described. That said plaintiff specially manufactured the steel and iron parts of said stokers in accordance with the plans and specifications of the original contract and of its subcontract with the National Stoker Company
The averments of appellant’s third paragraph of answer are in substance as follows: It admits ownership of the real estate involved, and that it entered into a contract with the National Stoker Company, whereby it agreed to furnisli the material and perform the labor necessary to the construction and installation of <an improved coal burning device or stoker, in appellant’s boiler building. It is then alleged in effect that appellee at all times knew the terms of said agreement and the use to which said stoker device was to be applied; that prior to the execution of the principal contract the appellee represented to appellant that it was well acquainted with said devise and knew that it would perform the work represented by said stoker company, and appellee guaranteed that such stoker would in all things comply with the purposes for which it was to be installed, and thereby induced appellant to enter into said principal contract; that, at the time of the making of the principal contract, appellee was a partner of such principal contractor, and had then entered into a contract with it whereby it was to share in the profits of said sale to appellant, and at' the time of the execution of the principal contract appellee was in fact a party therein, and that such principal contract was in fact a contract between appellant and appellee; that appellee and the stoker company furnished and installed said stoker in appellant’s plant, and appel
This conclusion makes it unnecessary to discuss or determine the questions presented by the ruling on the motion for new trial.