14 S.E. 513 | N.C. | 1892
The plaintiff claims pay for a balance due on an account against the husband defendant for work and labor and material furnished to build a house on the land of the feme defendant, and he seeks to enforce his lien upon the land of the feme defendant, filed in the office of the Superior Court clerk of Nash County.
The feme defendant denies that she made any contract with the plaintiff. She says that Thomas Taylor had a house built on her land, but he did not contract in her name for the building of the same, nor had he any authority to do so, and whatever is due to the plaintiff is due from the defendant Thomas Taylor, and he and his creditors have her permission to remove the house from her land; but she denies that she or her land is in any way liable for the plaintiff's claim.
The issues submitted, by consent, to the jury were:
1. Is feme defendant liable for the account claimed by plaintiffs?
2. Is her land, or any part thereof, subject to lien for the (71) payment of said account? *51
The following evidence was offered by plaintiff:
"The plaintiff testified that he furnished the lumber to build the house on the land of feme defendant and also worked on the house, and that there is due for the same the sum of $98.54."
The following questions were submitted to the witness, objected to byfeme defendant; objection sustained by the court, to which plaintiff excepted, to wit:
1. Did feme defendant know that you were furnishing the lumber and labor for the building of this house?
2. Did you have any conversation with feme defendant while you were delivering the lumber and working on the house?
3. Was she present when the lumber was being delivered?
4. Did she live in the house after it was finished?
Thomas W. Taylor testified that he is the husband of feme defendant, and that the house was built upon her land, and that plaintiff's account is correct, and the amount claimed by him is due.
The following questions were propounded to this witness, to which thefeme defendant objected; objections were sustained by the court, and the plaintiff excepted, to wit:
1. Did you and your wife live in the house after it was finished?
2. Was this house built at the request of your wife?
3. Did your wife know that the plaintiff was furnishing lumber to build the house?
The court then announced that it would hold that no lien could be created upon the separate real estate of feme defendant, except by an instrument executed according to the statute, and that mere silence would not estop her.
The plaintiff admitted that no such instrument had been executed, whereupon the court directed the jury to answer "No" (72) to each of the issues, to which the plaintiff excepted.
The plaintiff excepted to the judgment, upon the ground of error in his Honor's exclusion of the testimony offered, and in directing the jury to respond "No" to the issues as above indicated, and appealed from the judgment rendered.
No fraud is alleged or suggested, and it is too well settled to need discussion that no contract can bind a married woman, not a free trader, unless executed in the manner prescribed by law. Farthing v. Shields,
But the counsel for the plaintiff say: "We rely on no promise (express or implied) of the feme defendant, but upon the law, which *52 makes the contract for her, at least to the extent of having satisfaction out of her land to the extent of the value of the materials furnished and labor done in improving it."
Counsel say: "The statute on which we rely is that in The Code, sec. 1781, `Every building built, rebuilt, repaired, together . . . with the necessary lots on which said building may be situated . . . shall be subject to a lien for work done on the same or material furnished.' Does coverture constitute an exception which will relieve the feme defendant's land from liability?"
The argument is an ingenious one, but counsel fail to note the words of the statute which subject the property only to "a lien for the payment of all debts contracted for work done on the same," etc. Evidently the contract must be made, not by the law, but by some one capable of contracting. The statute did not intend to give a lien to (73) a person who officiously, and without contract or authority, builds a house upon the land of another.
The plaintiff, without the authority of the feme defendant, built the house upon her land, and he cannot hold her or her land responsible for his work and labor or material furnished.
No error.
Cited: Nicholson v. Nichols,
NOTE — This has been changed by Laws 1901, ch. 617, now C. S. 2434; Finger v. Hunter,