Plaintiff appeals from the trial court’s determination that it is not entitled to a mechanic’s lien. Plaintiff furnished materials to a contractor who erected a building on property owned by Cascade Development Corporation (Cascade), in Camden County. The materials were furnished on December 21, 1976. On March 15, 1977, a notice of intention to file a mechanic’s lien was filed by plaintiff in the recorder of deeds office in Camden County, and on April 6, 1977, the notice was served on Cascade’s president in Camden County. This notice claimed an indebtedness of $828.51. On April 4, 1977, an amended notice of intention to file a mechanic’s lien was mailed to Cascade’s registered agent by *270 certified mail and filed on April 6, 1977, in the recorder of deed’s office in Camden County. There was no showing of actual receipt of the amended notice by the registered agent. The amended notice claimed a balance due of $3,153.96. A cashier’s check dated April 2, 1977, for $828.51 was sent to plaintiff from the contractor and plaintiff cashed it in August of 1977. A mechanic’s lien statement was filed in the circuit clerk’s office on April 20, 1977. Plaintiff received a judgment against the contractor for $2,325.45 but was denied a lien on Cascade’s property. The trial court determined that there was improper service of the amended notice.
Section 429.100, RSMo.1969, provides that one other than an original contractor must give ten days notice before filing a mechanic’s lien to the owner “that he holds a claim against such building or improvement, setting forth the amount and from whom the same is due”. The notice may be served by an officer authorized to serve process or by any person who would be a competent witness. This statute implies that the notice must be in writing and the cases so hold.
Schulenburg v. Bascom,
There are other principles that we follow in considering whether plaintiff sufficiently complied with the notice provisions. The mechanic’s lien law is remedial in nature and its purpose is to give security to mechanics and materialmen for labor and materials furnished in improving the owner’s property and it should be construed as favorable to those persons as its terms will permit.
R. L. Sweet Lumber Company v. E. L. Lane, Inc.,
The amended notice was not served in accordance with the statutory requirements of § 429.100 and actual receipt of it was not shown. Plaintiff’s attorney testified that he mailed this notice to Cascade’s registered agent, but no return receipt or other proof that the agent received it was offered. The presumption of delivery would not be sufficient to show receipt as the statutory method of service of notice must be followed unless “it clearly appears that the owner actually received the written notice”.
Hertel Electric Company
v.
Gabriel,
supra,
Plaintiff contends that the court could not determine that the service of the amended notice was insufficient because that issue was raised by Cascade in a motion for summary judgment which was denied, and that this issue was therefore res judicata. For this contention plaintiff cites only
State ex rel. L. J. Mueller Furnace Co. v. Buckner,
Denial of summary judgment does not prevent the court from thereafter ruling differently. The denial of a summary judgment is an interlocutory order without res judicata effect.
State ex rel. Speer
v.
Grimm,
In addition, in response to Cascade’s motion, plaintiff filed an affidavit stating that plaintiff’s amended notice was recorded in the Camden County recorder of deeds office on April 6, 1977, and plaintiff’s “memorandum” in opposition to the motion argued that “there are several genuine issues as to material facts which remain to be resolved in the case. The amended notice was properly filed with the recorder of deeds and any questions concerning the non-residence of the defendants should properly be resolved at the trial.” The trial court did not state a reason for denying the motion but likely did so because there might be material questions of fact, such as actual notice or nonresidence in Camden County, which could dispense with the manner of service provided in § 429.100. Of course, summary judgment should not be rendered whenever there is doubt as to a material issue of fact.
Regional Investment Company v. Willis,
We believe that the trial court properly determined that plaintiff, as a matter of law, failed to properly serve its amended notice which precludes plaintiff from establishing a lien pursuant to that notice.
Plaintiff also claims that the amount in the notice was immaterial and it should receive a lien for $2,325.45 based on its original notice because Cascade was not prejudiced thereby as the contractor was paid in full before service of the first notice. Lack of prejudice to the owner does not relieve plaintiff from being in substantial compliance with the mechanic’s lien statutes. Proper notice is a condition precedent to plaintiff’s establishment of a lien.
Hertel Electric Company v. Gabriel,
supra,
Plaintiff contends that it was at least entitled to a mechanic’s lien for $828.51 in accordance with its original notice. Its service was not disputed. That notice claimed $828.51 for the material. There was evidence that after Cascade’s president became aware of the original notice, he made efforts which may have contributed to the contractor paying that amount. There were three invoices for materials sold, all dated the same day, numbered 22995, 22996 and 22997, for $995.81, $1329.64 and $828.51, respectively. Plaintiff contends that it can apply the payment to the other invoices and should receive a lien for the amount of the $828.51 invoice. However, plaintiff’s evidence shows that it applied the payment to that invoice. Its vice president and accountant testified that one of the invoices was paid. That could only be the invoice for $828.51, the one that plaintiff was basing its lien claim on in the *272 original notice. As the claim stated in the original notice was paid, the trial court correctly did not grant a lien for that amount.
The judgment is affirmed.
