141 Mass. 273 | Mass. | 1886
The petitioner was employed as a carpenter and foreman, during the year 1883, by one Sheldon, who had contracts for building houses for the respondent and for several other persons. The petitioner worked upon the different houses, and payments were made to him by Sheldon, from time to time, on account of his work generally; but no account was kept of his work on the different houses, and no application of any payment was made for labor on any specific house. About January 1, 1884, Sheldon failed, and the petitioner’s last work upon the respondent’s house was on January 5. There was then due to him from Sheldon $192. He was to be paid three dollars a day, and he filed his certificate of lien and account of the amount due him for work on the respondent’s house for sixty-four days’ work, amounting to $192. In fact, he had worked upon the house more than sixty-four days, but only one day after November, and only fourteen days in November; during all the rest of November and December he was doing other work for Sheldon. As the payments by Sheldon to the petitioner were all on general account, and not appropriated, they would be applied to the earlier items, and would show that the petitioner was. paid for all the labor he had performed except the last sixty-four days. For so much of that as was upon the respondent’s house he would have a lien upon it, but not for such as was upon the houses of others, and not for work on the respondent’s house which had been paid for.
The respondent contends that the lien was dissolved by the failure to file a sufficient statement of account of the amount due. The account is general, for sixty-four days’ labor from July 31 to January 5, at three dollars a day. The first objection is, that the days on which labor was performed are not specified. The statute requires a “ statement of a just and true account of the amount due, with all just credits given.” The true amount, and not the items that make it up, is the material thing to be shown, and the items are not important for the purposes of the certificate, as they are in making or creating proof of the account. We cannot hold that, for this cause, the statement is insufficient.
Another ground upon which it is argued that the statement is insufficient is, that it includes about forty days’ labor on the respondent’s house which had been paid for. This appears to be true, and it would be fatal but for the provision of the statute that the validity of the lien shall not be affected by any inaccuracy in stating the amount due, unless it appears that the person filing the statement has wilfully and knowingly claimed more than is his due. The petitioner apparently claimed the right to apply the payments made to him by Sheldon to the amount due for labor on other houses than the respondent’s, and to leave the whole amount unpaid a charge on the respondent’s house. That the facts stated in the exceptions show that he had not the right to do so is not conclusive in law that he wilfully and knowingly claimed more than his due; and the statements in the exceptions that the court did not find that the petitioner wilfully and knowingly claimed more than was due, and that the certificate was a just and true account of his labor performed on the respondent’s house, with all just credits given, are conclusive that the validity of the lien cannot be affected by the excessive amount claimed.
The respondent, in her original answer, sets up that one Boston had filed a petition in the Superior Court for a lien upon the same property, and that this petitioner had been duly notified of the filing of that petition. At a subsequent term the respondent, by leave of court, filed a supplemental answer, that the respondent, on June 19, 1885, after the filing of her former answer, recovered judgment in the suit of Boston that the petition be dismissed. The petition of Boston was filed on February 4, returnable at the March term. This petitioner did not appear in that suit, but filed his petition on March 24.
So far as the pendency of the former suit was matter in abatement, the decision of the court below would be final; but the pendency of the suit is not alleged in the answer, and is not
The statute provides (Pub. Sts. c. 191, § 9,) that, “ unless a suit for enforcing the lien is commenced within ninety days after the person desiring to avail himself thereof ceases to labor on or to furnish labor or materials for the building or structure, the lien shall be dissolved.” Sections 16-18 provide for notice of the filing of the petition to the owner of the building and the debtor, and to all other creditors who have a lien of the same kind upon the same estate. Section 19 provides that every creditor having a lien under the statute upon the property may appear and prove his claim.
The argument for the petitioner is, that the statute gives to each creditor the right to bring a suit to preserve and enforce his lien. The argument for the respondent is, that the statute provides for but one final decree and sale of the property, under which the proceeds are to be distributed among all the creditors, and as, by inference, this must be upon the suit first commenced, it excludes the authority to commence another suit in which a final decree cannot be entered.
The statute provides, when a suit is commenced, for notice to all lien creditors, either personal or by publication; that all such creditors may appear and prove their claims, and that each may contest the claim of every other, and provides for trial by jury ; that the court shall “ ascertain and determine the amount due to each creditor who has a lien under this chapter upon the property in question; ” that claims due, but not payable, shall be
It is argued from these provisions, that there can be but one sale, and but one decree of sale; that the right of a creditor, who has properly commenced his suit, to prosecute it to a final decree, cannot be defeated by the subsequent suit of another creditor; that the statute intends that all lien creditors shall have the right to come in and take the benefit of the original suit; and that, if such creditor does not come in, he can have no benefit from the decree and sale in such suit, and consequently none from his lien. If all this is assumed, the question is whether all lien creditors are so far parties to the first suit commenced to enforce a lien that they will be bound by a judgment for the respondent in that suit.
The effect of a decree for the petitioner for a sale of the prop-. erty in a former suit is not in question; nor the right of a respondent to have a suit abated on account of the pendency of a former suit; nor the authority of thé court to order a consolidation of actions, or a continuance of a suit until it shall be determined whether a former suit will ripen into a decree for the petitioner, and a sale which can be pleaded against the further prosecution of the suit. The question is, whether a lien creditor,
The terms of the statute seem to give to each creditor a right to bring a- suit to preserve, as well as to enforce, his individual lien. The inception of the lien, its preservation, and its enforcement, are all of individual liens. “Any person” shall have a lien. “ The lien shall be dissolved, unless the person desiring to avail himself thereof ” shall file a statement, &c.; “ unless a suit for enforcing the lien is commenced within ninety days after the person desiring to avail himself thereof cease to labor,” &c. Any number of persons having similar liens “ may join in the same petition for their respective liens; and the same proceedings shall be had in regard to the rights of each petitioner, and the respondent may defend as to each petitioner, as if he had severally petitioned for his individual lien.” These provisions clearly give the right to each creditor to bring a suit for the enforcement of his lien, and to prevent it from being dissolved. But this right is obviously insufficient to give him the benefit of his lien when there are several creditors, because there cannot be several sales of the property, and there is no provision for applying the proceeds to other liens than those held by the parties to the suit in which the sale is ordered. For this reason, the subsequent provisions of the statute, which we have already considered, authorize and invite all creditors to become parties to, and share in the benefits of, the first suit which is commenced by any creditor, and take away, in general, the necessity and the inducement to commence separate suits, but it would do violence to the language of the statute, to hold that they take away the right to commence separate suits. The statute intends that each creditor shall have the right to preserve his lien by commencing a suit upon it within the ninety days. It provides that his lien shall be dissolved unless a suit is commenced to enforce it within that period. The subsequent provision, which gives him the right to come in, after the ninety days, in a suit commenced by another within that time, ought not to be construed to take from him the right to protect his own lien by commencing a suit; and there seems no reason why, if one creditor, who has commenced
If it be objected that all the creditors are notified to appear in each suit, the answer is, that they need not come in and prove their debts except in the first suit. As long as that is kept alive, the parties to it cannot suffer from a subsequent suit, and any creditor who appears in it can prosecute it. By commencing a subsequent separate suit, instead of appearing in the first, the creditor can injure no one but himself. It makes no difference to the owner of the property whether the claim of a particular creditor is contested in one suit or another; and creditors who appear in the former suit can defend their rights under it against the subsequent one. The provision of the statute that costs are in the discretion of the court is a sufficient protection from a legal "injury to any party.
For the sole reason that the amount of damages assessed was too large, the entry must be
Exceptions sustained.