20 Haw. 693 | Haw. | 1911
OPINION OP THE COURT BY
A circuit judge of the first circuit has certified hi this court the following statement of facts and question of law: “Mellie E. Hustace, one of the defendants herein, having contracted with a contractor for the erection of a building on said defendant’s premises and the said contractor having purchased materials from the plaintiffs herein, as material-men, which said materials were employed in the construction of said building; and said materials not being paid for .and the plaintiffs, within the statutory time after the completion of said building, having duly perfected their lien as said material-men, upon said building and premises, pursuant to R. L. Chapter 140, is the plaintiffs’ right to such statutory lien defeated by virtue of certain specific provisions contained in the contract between said defendant and the original contractor, of which plaintiffs had no actual notice or knowledge, the said contractual provisions being as follows: (a) ‘No sub-contractor or other person furnishing material or labor to the contractor will be recog
Argument has been presented upon the question whether the above recited provisions of the contract sufficiently indicate an intention on the part of the owner and the original contractor to render unavailable to sub-contractors and other persons furnishing material the remedy by lien provided for by statute. In the view which we take of the case it will be unnecessary to consider this question. It will be assumed for the purposes of this opinion that the intention to bar sub-contractors and material-men is sufficiently expressed. It will be unnecessary also to refer to the second provision of the contract (that directing all purchases of material to be made from Allen & Robinson) any further than to say that if the first provision bars the claim of .lien the plaintiffs can not in any event recover and that if it does not then the second likewise does not, for that which the contractor and the owner can not accomplish directly can not be accomplished by them indirectly. The second provision is equivalent to a stipulation that no one but Allen & Robinson can under any circumstances have a lien. Has the first provision the effect of barring a lien in favor of the plaintiffs who at the time of furnishing the material had no knowledge of the existence of the stipulation?
Very few reported cases are to be -found upon the precise point now before us. The mechanics’ lien statutes in various jurisdictions are dissimilar in their terms. Each decision must be read in the light of the statute upon which it is based. But little aid is obtainable for these reasons from the adjudications in other jurisdictions. Statutes elsewhere differ as to the parties in whose favor the lien is created. In some the lien, to
The plaintiffs submit an elaborate argument in support of the constitutionality of the statute; but no claim of unconstitutionality has been presented by the defendant. On the contrary counsel for the defendant expressly say in their reply brief that they do not contest the constitutionality of the statute aiid that their claim as to the effect of the jtrovisions of the contract is advanced irrespective of the theory upon which lien statutes are to be supported. The argument relied upon for the defendant is that the contractor in purchasing materials acts as the agent of the owner by virtue of the contract entered into with the latter, that the material-man must be conclusively presumed to have notice of all of the terms of the contract, that a person dealing with an agent can not bind the principal in matters beyond the power conferred upon him by the contract of agency and that therefore the plaintiffs 'in this case must be deemed to have had notice of the provision against liens and are bound thereby. Some statutes granting liens to subcontractors and material-men have perhaps been supported upon this theory of agency and consent of the owner. That, how
Under our statute a lien does not arise in favor of a mere
The reserved question is answered in the negative.