13 Del. 34 | Del. Super. Ct. | 1887
charged the jury:
In this case, several questions are to be considered.
1st. Whether the articles claimed for, that is those mentioned in what is called Schedule B, were furnished to the defendants upon the credit of the building called The Academy of Music, on Delaware Avenue near Tatnall Street in this city ? This is a question of fact for you to decide.
2nd. Whether they are such materials as are contemplated by, and intended to be embraced within, the Mechanics Lien Law of this State. That is a question of law about which you will be instructed.
3rd. Whether the payment of $1,100 made by Lewis P. Buck, one of the defendants, was ment by him to be applied to the plush items charged in the account ? That is a question of fact.
4th. Was this the understanding between the parties ? That is also a question of fact.
The next question to consider is this : Were the articles supplied such as are contemplated by the mechanic’s lien law ? That is purely a question of law, upon which I will proceed to give you the law as we understand it; and you must be guided in that respect by what we say to you upon that point. I feel it not improper to say that very soon after the mechanic’s lien laws were passed in the different States which created them, strong disposition was developed by the courts, which were called upon to interpret them, to give a more liberal interpretation, so great, indeed, as to divert their language from its obvious meaning, and make it express a great deal that certainly could not have been in the contemplation of those who employed it, or they would have been more profuse in their expressions. Most, if not all these laws, give the • right to lien where materials and work, or both, were to be fur™
Now, in view of this section, it is quite impossible for this Court, having regard to its dtity of interpretation, to refuse to yield to the claim of the plaintiff, that the articles included in this pro
Verdict for the plaintiff.