34 App. D.C. 49 | D.C. Cir. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the Court:
In the first assignment of error appellants object to the consideration by the trial court of the testimony “of Stephen A. Galloway and of Albert S. Bigelow, because their testimony was given ex parte without notice,—save to counsel for C. A. Schneider’s Sons, who was unavoidably absent,—and without opportunity to cross-examine, and further because it was irregularly and improperly taken under the guise of surrebuttal testimony, when in reality it was nothing short of a continuation of appellees’ direct defense evidence.”
The record shows that due notice was given to counsel then representing appellants, who in a letter to the examiner asked that his right to cross-examine be reserved. It does not appear that he subsequently asserted such right, or that he brought the matter to the attention of the trial court in any way. Having then offered no objection to the consideration of this testimony, it is too late for him to raise the question here. He should have raised the question below by motion to suppress.
The second and remaining assignment of error challenges the action of the court in refusing relief and dismissing the bill. This assignment brings into review the provisions of the Code respecting mechanics’ liens, and particularly the provisions entitling subcontractors, materialmen and laborers, upon performance of certain conditions, to such liens.
Sec. 1237 of the Code [31 Stat. at L. 1384, chap. 854] specifies that a contractor shall be entitled to a mechanics’ lien upon the building and lot of ground upon which the same is erected for the reasonable value of the work, and materials furnished by him for and about the erection, improvement, repair, or addition to such building, etc., “provided that the person claiming the lien shall file the notice” herein prescribed. Tn the following section it is provided that any such contractor “wishing to avail himself of the provision aforesaid, whether his claim be due or not, shall file in the office of the clerk of
Sec. 1239 provides that “any person directly employed by the original contractor, whether as subcontractor, materialman, or laborer, to furnish work or materials for the completion of the work contracted for as aforesaid, shall be entitled to a similar lien to that of 'the original contractor upon his filing a similar notice * * * subject, however, to the conditions set forth in the following sections:”
Sec. 1240 ordains that all liens in favor of parties employed by the contractor shall he subject to the terms and conditions of the original contract, except, such as shall relate to the waiver-of liens, and that if “said original contractor, hy reason .of any breach of the contract on his part, shall be entitled to recover less than the amount agreed upon in his contract, the liens of said parties so employed by him shall be enforceable only for said reduced amount, and if said original contractor shall be entitled to recover nothing said liens shall -not be enforceable at all.”
Sec. -1241 imposes upon the subcontractors, and other persons employed by the contractor, as aforesaid, the additional duty of serving notice upon the owner of the property upon which the lien is claimed, and provides that a failure to serve the additional notice will entitle the owner to make payments according to the terms-of his .contract.
Sec. 1242 imposes upon the owner the duty, “after notice shall he filed hy said party employed under the original contractor, and a copy thereof served upon the owner or his agent, as aforesaid,” of retaining, out of any subsequent payments be-, coming due to the contractor, a sufficient amount to satisfy any indebtedness due from said contractor to the said subcontractor.
Sec. 1243 entitles the subcontractor to know the terms of the contract between the owner and the contractor.
A mechanics’ lien has no existence outside the statute creating it. It was not recognized at common law, nor was it allowed in equity. It is founded upon the just and natural consideration that a party who has enhanced the value of property by contributing thereto labor and materials shall be entitled to a preferred claim on such property, to the extent of his contribution. While the statute creating such a lien is to be reasonably construed so as to effectuate, if possible, the legislative intent, we are not at liberty to excuse those who would claim its protection from the performance of precedent conditions. As was said by Mr. Justice Field in Davis v. Alvord, 94 U. S. 549, 24 L. ed. 285: “Whilst the statute giving liens to mechanics and laborers for their work and labor is to be liberally construed, so as to afford the security intended, it cannot be too strongly impressed upon them, that they must not only bring themselves by their notices, as was done in this case, clearly within- the provisions of the statute, but they must be prepared, if the priority of their lien be disputed, to- show a compliance with those provisions, and to fix with certainty the commencement and completion of their work.”
The provisions of the Code above set forth , are free from ambiguity. The conditions imposed are just and reasonable. The contractor is required only to file his notice with the clerk of the supreme court of the District. The reason why he is not required to give notice to the owner is obvious. Being a party to the contract the owner is presumed to be familiar with its terms, and the claims of the contractor thereunder. Sub
Under the terms of the statute, bad faith cannot be presumed from the mere fact of advance payments. Something more is necessary to support such an inference. If the evidence before us showed that there was no occasion for advance payments, and that they were made with knowledge on the part of the owner that the subcontractors were not being paid, a different case would be presented. In such a case bad faith might be presumed. In Lauer v. Dunn, 115 N. Y. 405, 22 N. E. 270, 80 per cent of the contract price was to be paid as the work progressed, and the remaining 20% was to be paid after its final completion.. The contract also entitled the owner to retain double the amount of
Tommasi v. Archibald, 114 App. Div. 838, 100 N. Y. Supp. 367, was a case where advance payments had been made by the owner to the contractor. The statute in respect to advance payments was very similar to the provisions of our Code respecting such payments. The court, speaking through Mr. Justice Jenks, said: “As I read the present statute, it does not prohibit payments made before they became due, but only such payments when made for the purpose of avoiding the provisions of the act. It is not enough that such payments may impair the effect of the statute, and thus pro tanto avoid it, but they must also have been made with the purpose to avoid it.”
In Schneidhorst v. Luecking, 26 Ohio St. 47, the facts were almost identical with the facts in this case, and it was held that the money advanced the contractor to enable him to go on with' the work did not constitute payments made to defeat the provisions of the mechanics’ lien law.
To sustain the conclusions of appellants in this case would be
The provision in the contract requiring a certificate of the architects to entitle the contractors to payment was for the protection of the owner, and a departure therefrom by the owner is but a circumstance to be taken into consideration, along with other facts and circumstances of the case, in determining the question of his good faith. Decree affirmed with costs..
Affirmed.