delivered the opinion of the court.
The Powhatan Clay Manufacturing Company filed its bill in the Chancery Court of the city of Richmond, to which it made the Southern Railway Company, the Savings Bank of Richmond, Chesterman, and Powers & Bro., parties defendant.
The Southern Railway Company had entered into an agreement with Chesterman, as general contractor, to build for it a brick depot. On the 1st of October, 1899, Powers & Bro., as sub-contractors, agreed to do the brick-work on said building, and the Powhatan Clay Manufacturing Company agreed to furnish bricks, for which it claims there is a balance due to it of $1,115.78. The depot was completed in August, 1900, and on the 29th of September, 1900, the Powhatan Clay Manufacturing Company filed its claim in the clerk’s office of the Chancery Court of the city of Richmond against the building and so much land therewith as is necessary for its convenient use and enjoyment, an account showing the amount and character of the material furnished, the price charged, and the balance due, verified by affidavit, and claimed a lien under chapter 110 of the Code of Virginia of 1887, and the acts amendatory thereof. This statement is sufficient to bring out the question to he discussed in this opinion.
The Saving’s Bank, one of the defendants, demurred to the biQ because “it did not show when the amount covered by plaintiff’s alleged lien became due and payable, nor allege that the suit had been brought within the six-months’ period prescribed by statute for filing same.” The decree of the Chancery Court does not, in terms, pass upon the demurrer, and in such a case it is to be considered as having been overruled. Miller v. Black Bock Springs,
“Ho suit to enforce any lien perfected under the preceding-sections of this chapter shall be brought after six months from the time when the whole amount covered by such lien has become payable.”
The lien which the Powhatan Clay Manufacturing Company sought to enforce in this suit is the creature of statute. It had no existence at common law, and was called into being by the “preceding sections” referred to in the section just quoted.
It was held in Hubble v. Poff,
In McCartney v. Tyrer,
In Lambert v. Ensign Mfg. Co. (W. Va.),
In Hill v. Supervisors,
In Taylor v. Cranberry Iron & Coal Co.,
In Finnell v. Southern Kansas Ry Co. (C. C.), 33 Eed. 428, the court said: “There is also another class of cases, in which a cause of action which does not exist at common law is created by the laws of a State. Causes of action of that character only exist in the manner and form and for the length of time prescribed by the statutes of the State which created them.”
As illustrating various aspects of the same question, see Ashbey v. Ashbey,
We are of opinion that the demurrer to the bill should have been sustained.
Reversed.
