84 Ga. 311 | Ga. | 1890
Mrs. Pou, the plaintiff* in error, furnished materials to a contractor of the defendant in error, for the erection of a certain building upon a lot belonging to the defendant in error in the town of Madison. She recorded her lien against the contractor, and served a notice thereof upon a certain person who is alleged to have been the agent in Madison of the defendant in error. Afterwards she brought her action against the defendant in error and the contractor, to recover the value of the materials thus furnished to the contractor, and to enforce her lien against the premises of defendant thus improved by the materials furnished to the contractor. The declaration was demurred to by the defendant in error on the ground that proper notice had not been given to it by the plaintiff* in error, the notice having been served merely upon an agent, or a pei’son called an agent, of the defendant in error. The court sustained the demurrer and dismissed the action as to defendant in error.
The act of 1873 (Acts 1873, p. 44), as embraced in code, §1979, provides that “All mechanics of every sort,
Under this section of the code, before any lien can attach upon real estate for material furnished a contractor for the improvement thereof, written notice must be given to the true owner. In this case notice was given to an agent, and not to the owner. In our opinion this was not the notice contemplated by the statute. And it seems to us that it would make no difference where the owner resided at the time. Where it is sought to make the owner’s property liable for the debt of another person, the notice must be given to the pwner; and the owner in this case was a corporation, whose principal place of business was not in the county where the agent resided at the time the notice was
Judgment affirmed.