12 Haw. 358 | Haw. | 1900
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
This is an action for $101 against defendant Lincoln, a contractor, personally and to enforce a materialman’s lien for this amount against a dwelling house and cottage owned by defendant Cooper. The jury found against Lincoln for the amount claimed and for the enforcement of the lien for $99.44,- — -a portion of the materials furnished,- valued at $1.56, having been shown not to have gone into the building. The case comes here on exceptions taken by defendant Cooper.
The exception chiefly relied on was taken to the refusal of the trial judge to allow defendant Cooper to show that the contract for the dwelling house was abandoned by the contractor and the building taken over by the defendant on the 26th of May and
The statute provides (Civ. L. Sec. 1742) that, “The lien shall continue for three months, and no longer, after the completion of the construction * * * of the building * * * unless the same shall have been satisfied, or proceedings commenced to collect the amount due thereon by enforcing the same” and (Sec. 1744) that, “The lien herein provided shall have force only from the date of filing.” The contract was abandoned May 26, the notice of lien filed August 26, and the action commenced August 30. It is evident that the lien, to be effective, must have been filed not later than three months after the completion of the building, but it was so filed even if the building must be deemed to have been completed, within the meaning of the statute, as defendant contends1, on May 26. Defendant seems to have assumed that the time limited by the statute was ninety days, in which case, of course, the lien would not have been filed in time, if the building was completed on May 26. But since the statute prescribes three months, and not ninety days, as the limit, the lien was filed in time. Bowler v. McIntyre, 9 Haw. 306. In re Martin, 4 Fed. Rep. 208. But since the lien was filed the last day allowed by the statute, if the building was completed on May 26, it would not continue in force thereafter unless the action were brought on the same day. It was not brought until four days later. Let us therefore consider whether the building was completed, within the meaning of the statute, on May 26, although, strictly speaking, this question is not before us.'
It is often a nice question to determine when a building is completed within the meaning of a statute of this kind. No hard and fast rule can be laid down. The practice in other jurisdictions has been to decide each case by itself fairly and equitably under its own peculiar circumstances: It is held that after a building is substantially completed the contractor cannot
Another exception relied on is that taken to the rejection of evidence that the contractor had been paid all that was due him at the time of the abandonment. It was decided in Allen & Robinson v. Redward, supra, that the lien of the contractor or material-man is not limited under our statute to the amount payable to the principal contractor. The cases cited contra were decided under statutes which expressly prescribed such a limit.
The remaining exceptions relied on are covered by the decision just filed in the case of Allen & Robinson against the same defendants.
The exceptions are overruled.