delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a proceeding in equity to enforce a mechanics’ lien for materials furnished by the appellant to one Robert V. Saylor, a contractor, to build four houses for the appellee at the corner of Bond street and Fairmount avenue, in the city of Baltimore. The notice required by the 1 ith section of Code, Article 6j, was given on the eleventh day of December, 1896, within sixty days after the time of the last delivеry, on the. 13th of October, 1896. On the 18th February following the appellant filed his claim in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court, and on the same day began these proceedings to enforce the lien. While this suit was pending, and before a hearing was reached, the Act of i8p8, chap. 502, was passed, by which all the sections in Article 6j of the Code which provide for a lien for materials furnished for the construction of buildings were repealed, so far as the samе were applicable to Baltimore City, and reenacted so as to provide only for liens for the payment of debts contracted for work. The effect of this statute upon the case at bar is the first matter for our consideration. Must it be construed so as to destroy the appellant’s lien ? *5 and if so, is it invalid in respect to all liens existing and valid at the date of its passage, as being a lаw impairing the obligation of contracts, and within the inhibition of the Constitution of the United States, Article i, sec. io, which declares that “ No State shall pass any law impairing the obligations of contracts.”
There can be no serious doubt about the first question. In
Dashiel
v.
M. & C. C. of Baltimore,
As to the second question there is more difficulty. The contention of the appellant is that at the time the Act of 1898 was passed he had a legal vested light to pursue his lien against the buildings for which the materials were furnished, and that it was not within the power of the State to deprive him of that right. The decisions throughout the country are very conflicting. In some of the States it has been held that a mechanics’ lien is a vested right, of which the lienor cannot be divested by repealing the statutе under which the right accrued, while in other States it is regarded merely as an extraordinary remedy, which can be changed from time to time or discontinued according to the will of
*6
the Legislature. The formеr view has been maintained by the Appellate Courts in the following States, viz: Minnesota,
Tell
v.
Woodruff,
The contract under which the appellant parted with his property gave him (aside from the statute) no right to look to the buildings. The owner was not a party to it, and came under no personal obligation to pаy him. His right to a lien on the buildings was not a right which sprang either from the obligation or from any of the principles or practices of the common law. It was an extraordinary remedy, the creature of “ positive statutory enactment.” When it had been discontinued by the passage of the Act of 1898 all the contractual and common law rights of the parties remained. The appellant’s right to bring his action, secure judgment and execution and make sale of Saylor’s property remained unimpaired.
In
Stocking
v.
Hunt,
We are of opinion, therefore, on principle, that the effect of the repealing statute was not to impair any of the obligations of the appellant’s contract, though it took from him the lien theretofore given him; and that the right to a mechanics’ lien for materials furnished under the law of this State is not a vested right, but an extraordinary' remedy only, which the State may discontinue at pleasure.
These views, in accord we think with sоund reasoning, are supported by decisions of the Appellate Courts in many States. We need not review them, for it may be said they all rest upon the theory that the lien given by statutes similar to the mechanics’ lien law of this State is a remedy only, and constitutes no obligation upon the owner of the buildings for which materials were furnished, except to the extent prescribed by statute.
Hanes
v.
Wadey,
It follows from what has been said that the decree must be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.
