91 Va. 88 | Va. | 1895
The demurrer and answers assailed the validity of the mechanics' lien on four several grounds: First, because it did not sufficiently describe the property; second, because the statement of the account was not as full as the law required; third, because the verification of the account was insufficient; and, fourth, because the notice given to the owner was defective.
Section 2475 of the Code declares what persons shall have a lien on any building or structure, and so much land therewith as shall be necessary for the convenient use and enjoyment of the premises, for performing labor about or furnishing materials for the construction, repair, or improvement of such building or structure.
By section 2476 it is provided that a general contractor, in order to perfect such lien, shall, where the building or structure *91 is within the corporate limits of the city of Richmond, file in the clerk's office of the Chancery Court of the said city "an account showing the amount and character of the work done or the materials furnished, the prices charged therefor, the payments made, if any and the balance due, verified by the oath of the claimant or his agent, with a statement attached declaring his intention to claim the benefit of said lien, and giving a brief description of the property on which he claims a lien."
And by section 2477 a sub-contractor, in order to perfect such lien, shall comply with the provisions of section 2476, which are as above quoted, so far as they are material to this controversy, and, in addition, give notice, in writing, to the owner of the property or his agent of the amount and character of his claim.
It is further provided by section 2478 that
"No inaccuracy in the account filed, or in the description of the property to be covered by the lien, shall invalidate the lien, if the property can be reasonably identified by the description given, and the account conform substantially to the requirements of the two preceding sections, and is not wilfully false."
1. As to the description given of the property. The object of requiring a description is to inform the owner upon which of his property the lien is claimed, and to give notice thereof to purchasers and creditors, so that they may identify the property, and protect themselves against the lien. "If the property can be reasonably identified by the description given," it is all that the law requires. It is here described as "that certain three-story building, No. —, situate and being in the city of Richmond, Va., on Grace street, between Shafer and Harrison streets, and the lot or piece of ground and curtilage appurtenant to the said building, fronting on said south line of Grace street 49 feet, and running back 156 feet, more or less, * * * of which Wirt E. Taylor is the owner or reputed owner." The description ought to be and is sufficient *92
to enable any one to identify the premises intended to be covered by the lien. It is full and accurate, and leaves no doubt as to the property meant. It has been held that a claim filed against "a three-story brick house, situate on the south side of Walnut street, between Eleventh and Twelfth streets, in the city of Philadelphia, of which Harker and Thorn were the owners, or reputed owners" (Harker v. Conrad,
2. As to the sufficiency of the account. It is contended that the account filed as the basis of the lien does not conform to the requirements of the law. The account is as follows:
*931891.
May 22. — To stonework done on Mr. Wirt E. Taylor's residence on Grace street, between Shafer and Harrison streets, in the city of Richmond, and materials furnished, as per agreement with John F. Bell, general contractor for said work, — — $2,350.00
Extras: 26 ft. 7 in. curbing, at 90 cts., — 23.92
21½ ft. tile at $1.00, — — 21.50
$2,395.42 Credit by cash, — — 1,175.00
Balance due, — — $1,220.42
It is insisted that the account should have set forth particularly and separately the quantity of the various materials furnished and used in the execution of the stone work, the number of days of labor required to perform the work, and the respective prices of the materials and labor; in short, that it was necessary, in order to perfect the lien, that there should have been an itemized statement of the materials and labor entering into this charge in the account. The evidence shows that the stone-work was contracted for as an entirety, and for a certain fixed sum. In such case it was not necessary, if possible, to furnish an itemized statement of the materials or labor. The account filed states what the work was, and the contract price. It could not set forth the specific quantity of the different materials, and the prices therefor, or the amount and price of the labor, as is insisted on, when there had been no agreement as to the materials or labor separately, either as to quantity or price. It. sets forth the only contract that was made, and in doing so "conforms substantially" to the requirements of the law. The reason for the strictness required in having the account show the amount and character of the work done or materials furnished, and the prices charged therefor, and the payments made, if any, is to prevent fraud and collusion, and to enable the owner to ascertain and verify the correctness of the demand, and to give definite information to purchasers and incumbrancers. Where the work is contracted for as an entirety for a specific amount, and this is so set out in the account filed, all the information is given that is needed or can be reasonably required. It is therefore our conclusion that the account filed in this case is sufficient. And this has been the course of decision of the courts of last resort of a number of the States having mechanics' lien laws similar to our own. Gunther v. Bennett,
The statute of Maryland requires that every such claim shall set forth, among other things, "the amount or sum claimed to be due, and the nature or kind of work, or the kind and amount of materials furnished, and the time when the materials were furnished or the work done." InGunther v. Bennett, supra, the court said: "The only objection taken to it [the bill of particulars] is that it does not set forth the amount of materials furnished. This court has frequently held that this requirement must be complied with. But where there is a contract, as here, both to do the work and furnish the materials for a certain sum, it is not required to do more than set out the contract price, and for the obvious reason that, under the contract itself, no amount has been fixed either for the work or materials separately."
Counsel for the appellants rely upon the case of Shackleford v.Beck,
3. As to the verification of the account. The statute requires that the account shall be verified by the oath of the claimant or his agent. It prescribes no particular form of verification. At the foot of the account filed in this case is appended the certificate of the notary that James Netherwood *96
personally appeared before him and "made oath to the correctness of the account." This is a sufficient verification under the statute. The case of McDonald v. Rosengarten,
4. As to the notice to the owner. It is proved that on the day the lien was perfected an exact copy of the account as filed in the clerk's office of the Chancery Court, and of the statement for the lien attached to the account, was served on Taylor, the owner. We have already shown that the account filed was a sufficient compliance with the statute, and it therefore follows, as a matter of course, that the notice given to the owner, as above stated, was sufficient.
It was insisted that the plaintiff was not entitled to enforce the lien for his full claim because of the delay in executing his work. When Bell secured the contract for building the house for Taylor he solicited Netherwood to contract for the stone work. The plan and specifications required that the stone to be used in the construction of the building should be obtained from the Alderson Brownstone Company. Netherwood had formerly met with much delay in getting stone from this company, *97 and he hesitated to make an estimate for the work. He was induced to do so by the following letter:
"Mr. James Netherwood:
"I have the contract on Taylor's house. Please make out a list of the stone at once, and hand it to Mr. Wilson or Mr. James D. Crump. Mr. West will bind them to furnish you the stone in a certain time, and you to write me a proposition to do the stone-work as per plan and specifications for so much, and agree not to delay the work any time after the stone is delivered to you. I leave the plans in your office. Please return them to me to-night. Yours truly,"JOHN F. BELL, 1009 W. Main street. "April 8th, 1890."
Messrs. Wilson and Crump were officers of the Alderson Brownstone Company, and Mr. West was the architect of the house to be built for Mr. Taylor, and furnished the plans and specifications. No time was specified within which Netherwood should complete his work. He only agreed not to delay it at any time after the stone was delivered to him. It is apparent from the evidence that there was great delay in completing the house so as to be occupied by Taylor, and considerable delay in doing the stone-work. We are satisfied, however, from the evidence, that the delay was not the fault of Netherwood. but caused by the delay in delivering to him the stone. He ordered it promptly from the company after receiving from Bell the contract for the work, and did not delay the work after the stone was delivered to him. There was not sufficient ground to abate the amount for which the lien was claimed, and the Chancery Court rightly so held.
It is also assigned as error that, while the bill was filed to enforce the lien against the house and lot of Taylor, the court entered a personal decree against Wirt E. Taylor and John F. Bell for the amount of the lien. The court, by its decree, established the lien for the amount for which it was perfected *98 under the statute, and entered the decree against Taylor and Bell, as stated. While it would have been more regular and proper to have decreed that the property be subjected, by a sale, to the payment of the lien, yet, inasmuch as all the parties were properly before the court, and the court ascertained that Bell, the general contractor, owed James Netherwood the amount claimed under the lien, and that Taylor owed Bell more than enough to satisfy the lien, neither of them is injured by the form of the decree, nor has any good cause for complaint. Taylor, in his answer, admits that he holds in his hands the amount of money claimed, to be paid to Bell or otherwise, as the court may direct. It would be a vain and useless act to subject the property to the payment of the lien when the owner already had the money in hand to pay it, and only waited for the court to decide to whom he should pay it. There was no occasion, therefore, for the court to direct that Taylor's property on which the lien was perfected should be sold, but only to decree to whom the money should be paid.
We are therefore of the opinion, that the decree of the Chancery Court, from which the appeal was taken, must be affirmed.
*575AFFIRMED.