48 A. 944 | R.I. | 1901
The first three points presented in opposition to the claim of lien are that the petition does not particularly describe the building or improvement upon which the lien is claimed; nor set forth the particulars of the account; nor allege that notice was given to the owners, within thirty days after commencing the work, that the petitioner had commenced and should claim a lien therefor.
Even if this was so, a fault in the petition to the court is amendable. Spencer v. Doherty,
As to the first point, however, we think that the averments of the petition are sufficient. It describes the building by reference to the contract made by the owners with Charles Warner, to whom the petitioner furnished the materials. It is the building in process of erection by the contractor.
The second and third points stand together. Gen. Laws, cap. 206, § 5, as it stood before 1888 (Pub. Stat. cap. 177), gave a lien for work done and materials furnished, and in Hatch v.Faucher,
Thus far the statute, as construed, was plain. Section 5 applied to an original contractor with the owner, and section 6 to a sub-contractor.
Then Pub. Laws, cap. 696 (1888), amended section 5 by adding provisions applying to a lien for materials furnished, *590
"whether the owner purchased the materials or not," upon giving him the required notice. Thus two classes of liens were introduced into the section, one for work and materials furnished under contract with the owner, and the other for materials furnished either to the owner or to a contractor, and the statute was so construed in Gurney v. Walsham,
Hence in this case the petitioner is not entitled to a lien for labor, because the petition does not allege that he gave the notice required to be given by a sub-contractor within thirty days from the commencement of his work; but, as it does allege that he gave the notice required by section 5 within sixty days, it shows a case for materials furnished. The account filed with the petition, therefore, is faulty because it states only the contract price for plumbing furnished to the contractor, including both work and materials, in a lump sum, without specifying the amount due for materials, for which only, as the petition stands, he can claim a lien. It is said that the original notices are objectionable for this reason. While they may not be exact, it does not follow that the proceeding must be dismissed. As stated in Goff v. Hosmer,
Evidently "the account or demand" required by section 7 is not so full an account in details as that required by section 9, because the latter says "setting forth the particulars of his account or demand."
The notice is to inform both the owner and the public of the nature and extent of the account or demand for which the lien is sought, and it must be exact enough for that, but in the petition the particulars must be stated, as in actions on *591 book-account. In this case the petitioners stated in the notice a claim for materials and for labor, for plumbing and gas-fitting. Although they have no claim for labor, we do not think that making a claim for more than one can show that he is entitled to, so vitiates the proceeding as to render it void. It appeared in testimony that part of the materials were furnished more than sixty days before the notice of an intention to claim a lien. As to these items the petitioner is clearly barred by the statute.
The other objections are covered by what we have already stated, and by Goff v. Hosmer,
Motion to dismiss is denied.