We first turn our attention to the question as to whether the trial court correctly sustained the general and special demurrers to the plaintiff’s petition. The defendant Hill contеnds that there must be sufficient allegations in the petition to show there existed between the contractor and the owner of the property improved a specific type of contract or general account which would constitute all of the sales set out in the plaintiff’s Exhibit “A” as one single transaction. The petition alleges that the petitioner furnished ■ the building material as *851 shown by the exhibit to the petition to the contractor pursuant to an agreement between the contractor and the defendant Hill, and that the building materials were furnished for use on the property of Hill.
(a) The claim of lien is properly filed if it is recorded within three months of the date of the last item furnished. Thus, “Wherе material furnished by a materialman for the improvement of real estate is charged on open account, a lien for it recorded by the materialmali within three mоnths from the furnishing of the last item of material charged upon the open account is recorded within three months from the completion of the contract . . .”
Pippin v. Omens,
(b) The defendant urges that language used by the Supreme Court compels the sustaining of the general demurrer to the petition in the present case. This language, found in the сase of
Marshall v. Peacock,
For these reasons we do not find it to> be necessary that the materialman allege in his petition the amount the owner had agreed to pay the contractor for the materials furnished.
(c) The second ground of demurrer, that the petition failed to allege a contract between the materialman and the owner; is obviously without merit, and so is the contention in the demurrer that the mаterialman has to make demand for payment upon the owner prior to seeking to enforce his lien. The relevant statutes do not require such a demand. Furthermore, the statutes governing the establishment of materialmen’s liens are expressed in considerable detail, and the absence of any enunciated requirement in the statutes that а demand be made against the property owner is, we feel, conclusive upon this issue.
The trial court did not err in overruling these general and special demurrers to the рetition.
The first special ground of the amended motion for new trial contends the materialman’s lien as recorded in the records of the Superior Court of Fulton County Was illegally
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admitted, because the material on seven of the invoices was delivered more than three months prior to the filing of the materialman’s lien. Under the rulings in
Pippin v. Owens,
The second sрecial ground urges that the evidence does not show that the plaintiff materialman sold the merchandise to the contractors in reliance upon the existencе of any contract between them and the defendant property owner. We do not find anything in the statute or the decisions which requires that the materialman, in selling the materiаls, act in reliance upon the contract between the contractors and the property owner. But even if this were required, the petition alleges the existence of a contract and that the materials were delivered pursuant to it. This, in any event, would be a sufficient allegation to comply with Code Ann. §§ 67-2001-2.
The third and fifth special grounds contend that the judgment in favor of the materialman was illegal and void because some of the items sold were defective. The record reveals there is some dispute as to this and that approximately $25 would be required to repair the air conditioning unit. This ground is without merit. The defendant’s contract was with the contractor who installed the unit, and his remedy for any improper installation, damage, or defects in the items installed would be against the contractor and not against the plaintiff materialman, with whom the defendant admittedly had no contractual relationship.
Also included in the fifth special ground of the amended motion for new trial is a contention that the court erred in failing to enter judgment in favor of the defendant owner of the property because he had paid cash for the materials purchased from the contractor. This ground is also without merit. The fаct that the contractor has been paid for the material, without more, is no defense against the subsequent claims of laborers or materialmen. Thus, “In a suit by a materialmаn to foreclose his lien for material furnished a contractor for the improvement of the real estate of another, the latter may defend by showing that he has paid the full contract price to the con
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tractor, and that the money has been applied by the contractor to the settlement of debts incurred in the performаnce of his contract, which would have been liens upon the property improved.
The burden is upon the property owner to show that the money which was paid to the contractor was applied only to liens which could be asserted against the property. Prince v. Neal-Millard Co.,
Judgment affirmed.
