6 App. D.C. 247 | D.C. Cir. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the Court :
This is a suit instituted in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia by the appellants, Robert and James M. Leitch, as complainants, to enforce an alleged mechanics’ lien claimed by them upon the building and real estate of the appellee for materials furnished by them to a sub-contractor upon the building. The proceeding was by bill in equity, to which a demurrer was interposed by the appellee; and the demurrer being sustained by the court below, the bill was dismissed. From the decree of dismissal the present appeal has been prosecuted.
From the bill of complaint it appears that the defendant, The Central Dispensary and Emergency Hospital, a body corporate under the general incorporation laws of the District of Columbia, had contracted, on or about the 7th day of July, 1891, with one James R. Young, presumably a builder, for the erection by him of a hospital building for the use of the defendant on lot numbered 10, in square
Thereafter Lyon, the sub-contractor, entered into a contract with the complainants whereby the complainants agreed to furnish all the plumber’s material necessary for the steam heating and plumbing of said building at the regular market price therefor, which price, however, is not stated in the bill. Under this contract with Lyon, the complainants furnished to him plumber’s materials, which were actually used in the construction of the building, to the value of $3,684.84, no part of which, it is stated, has been paid.
The building was commenced on July 7, 1891, and completed July 28, 1892; and on September 28, 1892, which was within three months after the date of completion, the complainants filed in the office of the clerk of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia a notice of their intention to hold a mechanic’s lien on the building and lot of the defendant for the sum of $2,000, with interest from September 28, 1892 — which sum, it is alleged by the bill of complaint, “ was a clerical error,” “ the true amount being $3,684.84, as alleged.” But it is not explained how the error came to be made, or why it is designated as “a clerical error.” But in the view which we take of this case, this matter is unimportant.
Complainants claimed in their bill to be material men in the contemplation of the so-called mechanic’s lien law, and as such to be entitled to a lien for the amount of their claim;
The mechanics’ lien law, under which this question arises, is the act of Congress of July 2, 1884 (23 Stat. 64), which purports to be an amendment of the provisions of the Revised Statutes of the United States for the District of Columbia relating to the same subject. The first section of this act provides as follows :
“ That every building hereafter erected or repaired by the owner or his agent in the District of Columbia, and the lot or lots of ground of the owner upon which the same is being erected or repaired, shall be subject to a lien in favor of the contractor, sub-contractor, material man, journeyman and laborer, respectively, for the payment for work or materials contracted for or furnished for or about the erection, construction or repairing of such building, and also for any engine, machinery or other thing placed in said building or connected therewith so as to be a fixture : Provided, that the person claiming the lien shall file the notice prescribed in the second section of this act: Provided further, that the said lien shall not exceed or be enforced for a greater sum than the amount of the original contract for the erection or repair of said building or buildings.”
The question to be determined is, whether the complainants, the appellants here, were “ material men” in the sense of this act, such as that .they are entitled to claim a lien under its provisions.
That very question was determined by the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia in general term in the case of Monroe v. Hannan, 7 Mackey, 197, which was decided in the year 1889, and constituted an authoritative exposition of the law at the time of the inception of the claim of the complainants. That decision was adverse to the present contention of the appellants. But it is argued that this court is not bound by that decision, and that the decision itself is
i. While it has been repeatedly held, and undoubtedly it is the law, that the right to a mechanics’ lien under statutes like ours does not depend upon the existence of any contractual relation between the person claiming the lien and the owner of the property, yet it is equally true that no one except a contractor or a sub-contractor is entitled to such a lien. Privity of contract between the owner and the claimant is not required; but at the same time no one may make himself the creditor of another person against the will of that other person unless he can in some way connect himself with him by contract. There is such a connection in the present instance. The appellants are undoubtedly sub-contractors. They so state in their bill of complaint; and without such a statement they would have no standing in court. Material men are necessarily either contractors or sub-contractors ; for without a contract with the owner of the property, or the builder, or some previous contractor or sub-contractor, by which they can connect themselves with the building, it is impossible that they should have any right of lien upon the property.
The statute enumerates contractors, sub-co7itractors and 77iaterial 7nen as distinct and independent classes for whom the right of lien may exist; and it is therefore argued on behalf of the appellants that the rights of material men under the statute are not to be confounded with those of sub-contractors. And it is claimed that this distinction was not observed in the case of Monroe v. Hannan.
This distinction does not appear to us to be material. So far as it has any substantial existence in the law, it is only to differentiate those who merely furnish materials to a building from those who do the work or furnish both work and materials. The builder, the carpenter, the bricklayer
If the position of the appellants is correct, then the person who, in some remote region of the globe, extracts from the bowels of the earth the iron ore, which, after passing through the elaborate processes of the foundry and the machine shop, finds its way into the wholesale warehouses and thence into the retail stores, may claim a lien for it against the owner of a building in which it finds its ultimate use, if he can only trace the product of his labor through its many ramified operations and transformations into that ultimate use. And so the owner of a distant forest from which a tree is felled, which is cut up into lumber and then manufactured into doors and window sashes, may likewise have a lien upon the building in which those doors and window sashes are placed, if he can trace the product of his land to that final destination. We cannot think that a statute, which by its designation was apparently intended merely to protect the mechanics engaged in the construction of buildings, should have so far-reaching an operation.
Undoubtedly the statute was intended, as it purports to be, for the protection of the mechanics and laborers immediately connected with the construction of buildings, and to give them a remedy somewhat analogous to the right of lien given by the common law to mechanics to whom personal property is delivered for repair or manufacture, and who expends their labor upon it or contribute material for
Undoubtedly a material man, in the sense of the statute, is one who directly contributes materials for the construction of a building to the owner or builder thereof, with the well-recognized understanding that he is doing so on the faith and pledge of the building itself. It does not mean a person who, in some remote degree, in some remote way, and possibly in some remote place, contributes upon credit materials which ultimately find their way into the construction of the building. This would be in effect to give a right of lien to two or more different persons for the same specific material — an absurdity which we cannot suppose to have been contemplated by the body which made the law.
It is argued on behalf of the appellants, that no inconven-.
An incidental result of the argument on behalf of the complainants is that it would give the intermediate parties— any two intermediate parties, in fact — the power to destroy the lien by a settlement between themselves, without the knowledge or consent either of the owner of the property
What seems to us to be the dictate of reason in this matter, is abundantly supported by the great preponderance of authority in the construction of similar statutes in other jurisdictions. Wood v. Donaldson, 17 Wend. 550; Kirby v. McGarry, 16 Wis. 68; Harbeck v. Southwell, 18 Wis. 418; Duff v. Hoffman, 63 Pa. St. 193; Harlan v. Rand, 27 Pa. St. 574; Stephens v. Railroad Co., 29 Ohio St. 227; Schaar v. Ice Company, 149 Ill. 441; Ahern v. Evans, 66 Ill. 125; Rothberger v. Dupuy, 64 Ill. 452. Only two cases have been cited to us that hold a contrary doctrine; and these are the cases of Barker v. Buell, 35 Ind. 297, and Stewart & Co. v. M. P. Railroad Co., 28 Neb. 39, which likewise arose under statutes apparently not very different from our own. But we cannot assent to the reasoning or accept the conclusion reached in these cases, which must be regarded as standing alone in the great mass of adverse judicial decision.
We are of the opinion, therefore, that the material men intended to be protected by the statute are those only who occupy the position of contractors or sub-contractors, and who furnish materials for the construction of a building, either directly under contract with the owner, or directly or indirectly under immediate contract with the builder or principal contractor.' This was likewise the opinion of the court below; and the action of that court in sustaining the defendant’s demurrer must therefore be affirmed.
2. In view of the conclusion which we have reached
3. It is assigned as error by the complainants, although not insisted upon either in the brief or in the oral argument on their behalf, that the bill of complaint should not have been dismissed, but that leave should have been granted to amend the bill. This assignment might have become important, if the demurrer had been sustained on either one of the two grounds last mentioned. But the decision having been on the merits, and our concurrence in that decision being placed upon the same ground as in the court below, it is not apparent that it was possible to amend the bill so as to give the complainants a standing in court. Moreover, no leave to amend was asked for; and while it is usual to grant such leave when it is asked for, it is not usual to force it upon complainants who do not ask for it; and certainly the failure of the court to grant such leave cannot consistently with any known rules of pleading be held by us as error.
It is our conclusion that the decree of the court below was right, and that it should be affirmed, with costs. And it is so • ordered.