87 A. 759 | Md. | 1913
The bill in this case was filed by the appellant to enforce an alleged mechanics' lien against the property of the appellee, and the appeal is from a decree of the Circuit Court for Prince George's County dismissing the bill as to the appellant.
The relief prayed is resisted on two grounds: first, because the claim was not filed in accordance with the provisions of the Code; and, second, because the lien was waived by the appellant.
The Code requires the claim to be filed within six months after the work has been finished or the materials furnished and section 19 of Article 63 of the Code of 1912 provides that, "Every such claim shall set forth: first, the name of the party claimant, and the owner or reputed owner of the building, and also of the contractor or architect or builder when the contract was made by the claimant with such contractor, architect or builder; second, 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; thirdly, the locality of the building and the number and size of the stories of the same, or such other matters of description as may be necessary to identify the same." In the case of German LutheranChurch v. Heise,
The claim in this case was filed on the 24th day of December, 1910, and states that it is for work and materials furnished "at the particular time, and of the nature or kind and amount and for the purposes set forth in a bill of particulars hereto annexed, and which work has been finished and materials furnished within less than six months before the filing of this claim." The bill of particulars contains three items. The first is "To plumbing as per contract including furnishing of material and labor, furnished and performed between April 2nd and August 16th, 1910 — $200.00." The second item is "To heating plant as per contract including furnishing of material and labor, furnished and performed between April 2d 1910, and August 16th, 1910, — $400.00; and the third item is "To extra bath room outfit as per agreement including furnishing of material and labor furnished and performed between June 27th, 1910, and August 15th, 1910, — $135.00." It therefore appears from the bill of particulars that the last item is for work done and materials furnished within six months before the filing of the claim, but it fails to show, as to the first two items, that the work was done and the materials were furnished within that time. If the work referred to in these two items was done and the materials therein mentioned were furnished at any time between the second day of April and the twenty-fourth of June, 1910, said work was "finished and materials furnished," at the time mentioned in the bill of particulars, yet as to such work and materials the claim was not filed in time, unless all the work referred to in the bill of particulars was done and *269
the materials were furnished under one contract. It is true, the claim states that the "work has been finished and the material furnished within less than six months before the filing of this claim," but if the work was done and the materials furnished under separate and distinct contracts, it would be impossible to tell what work and materials this statement refers to. The statement would be literally true if the work done and materials furnished under either of two contracts had been finished and furnished within six months prior to the filing of the claim, and yet the work done and the materials furnished under the other contract may have been finished and furnished at any time after the 2nd of April and prior to the 16th of August, 1910. The evidence shows that the work referred to in the first two items of the bill of particulars was done and the materials were furnished under one contract, while the work and materials referred to in the third item were covered by a separate and distinct contract. The claim is, therefore, defective as to the first two items of the bill of particulars, because it fails to show that the work charged for in those items was done, and that the materials therein referred to were furnished, within the time required by the statute. In the case of Clark v. Boarman,
The defect in the claim to which we have alluded affects, however, only the first two items of the bill of particulars. The third item, as we have said, relates to work done and materials furnished under a separate contract, and the bill of particulars shows that the work was done and the materials were furnished within six months before the filing of the claim.
The second ground of the defense presents a more serious objection to the enforcement of the appellant's claim. The evidence shows that the appellant contracted to furnish the materials and to do the work mentioned in the first two items of the bill of particulars for $600.00, and later contracted to do the work and to furnish the materials mentioned in the third item for $135.00; that on July 12th, 1910, there was about $400.00 due the appellant on account of said work and materials, and that he called at the office of Daniels, who then owned the property and with whom the appellant contracted to furnish said materials and do said work, and finding him out, requested his clerk to ask Daniels to send him a check for that amount, or for as much as he could and a note for the balance, and that Daniels sent him by mail his note for $400.00, payable to the appellant ninety days after date, which the appellant endorsed and delivered to the Chesapeake Supply Company, of Washington, D.C., from whom he purchased the materials. After the work was completed under the two contracts, on the seventh of September, Daniels sent the appellant his note for $335.00, the entire balance due *271 under said contracts, payable to the appellant ninety days after date, upon which was written, "Payment in full for plumbing on house No. 4, Autoville." This note was also endorsed by the appellant and delivered to the Chesapeake Supply Company. The Chesapeake Supply Company had an account against the appellant for materials furnished him for the completion of the work mentioned in the contracts referred to and other contracts of the appellant, and when it received Daniel's notes endorsed by the appellant it gave the appellant credit for the amounts thereof on said account, and the company had said notes discounted at the bank in Washington with which it dealt. On the 13th of September, 1910, Daniels conveyed the property referred to in said claim to the appellee. When the $400.00 note came due, Daniels paid to the Chesapeake Supply Company the interest due thereon and $100.00 on account of the principal of said note, and, according to his testimony and the testimony of his clerk, gave his note to said company for the balance, $300.00, payable sixty days after date. According to the testimony of Sykes, the bookkeeper of said company, and Stock, its vice-president and manager, the new note for $300.00 was made payable to the appellant and delivered by Daniels to said company, but these witnesses do not appear to have any distinct recollection of that particular transaction. The Chesapeake Supply Company had the new note for $300.00 discounted by the bank and returned to Daniels the original note for $400.00, which was destroyed by him. The note for $335.00 came due on December 6th and the Chesapeake Supply Company, called on Daniels for payment or renewal of the note. Daniels and his clerk state that he paid by check to the Chesapeake Supply Company the interest on said note and $35.00 on account of the prinipal, and gave the company a new note for the balance, $300.00. In this they are confirmed by Sykes, the bookkeeper of said company, except as to the payee of the new note, and he states that it was made payable to the appellant. Stock says that the company did not receive said note of $300.00 at all, but it clearly appears *272 that the company did receive Daniel's check for $40.03, dated December 6th, 1910, being the interest and $35.00 on account of the prinipal of said note for $335.00, and we think that the fact that the company also received the $300.00 note is established by the decided preponderance of the testimony. We are also satisfied from the evidence in the case that both of the $300.00 notes given by Daniels were made payable to the Chesapeake Supply Company. Daniels and his clerk are positive in their statements to that effect, while Sykes and Stock do not appear to have any definite recollection about the matter. The note for $335.00 was marked "paid" by the bank December 6th, 1910, the date of the check for $40.03, which shows that it must have been paid by the check and the new note of that date for $300.00. The appellant's place of business was in Baltimore, and it is not probable that the company secured his endorsement and had the new note discounted at the bank on the same day the check and note were given. The appellant testified in the case, yet no attempt was made to prove by him that the two notes for $300.00 were made payable to him and that he endorsed them to the Chesapeake Supply Company, but he states that he never had any further dealings with Daniels after he received from him the note for $400.00 and the note for $335.00; that he never saw or heard of the $400.00 note after he transferred it to the Supply Company, and that the $335.00 note was given to him by the company when he asked for it. But the $335.00 note was not "paid" by the check for $40.03 and the new note for $300.00 until December 6th, 1910, and it appears that it was not given to the appellant by the company until he was required by the order of the Court below to produce it. The fact that it was not delivered by the Chesapeake Supply Company to Daniels after he gave his check and new note for it is probably accounted for by the fact that on December 8th, 1910, he was forced to institute proceedings in bankruptcy, but he says that when he gave the company his check and the new note he relied upon it to send him the old note as it had always done in like previous *273 dealings with him. Neither of the $300.00 notes given by Daniels to the Chesapeake Supply Company has been produced or satisfactorily accounted for. Stock says that they may have been mislaid among the papers of the company, or lost by the bank. It further appears that in previous transactions of the kind between Daniels and the appellant the notes given for materials furnished and work done by the appellant were endorsed by him to the Chesapeake Supply Company; that when they came due they were paid in part by Daniels and new notes given by him for the balance, payable to said company, and that in those cases, as in this, that course was followed with the knowledge and approval of the appellant.
Section 3 of Article 63 of the Code of 1912 provides that, "No person having such lien shall be considered as waiving the same by granting a credit or receiving notes or other securities, unless the same be received as payment or the lien be expressly waived, but the sole effect thereof shall be to prevent the institution of any proceedings to enforce said lien until the expiration of the time agreed upon." Under this section in the absence of an express agreement to the contrary, or some agreement inconsistent with the existence of a lien, the person having a lien does not waive it by taking notes for the amount due him, unless they are received as payment. Maryland BrickCo. v. Spilman,
We have carefully examined the authorities cited by the appellant but we do not find in them a sufficient warrant for a different conclusion. We think the only reasonable inference to be drawn from the conduct of the appellant under all the circumstances of this case is that he did accept the notes of Daniels as payment of his claim, and that he thereby waived the lien he seeks to enforce. We must therefore, affirm the decree of the Court below.
Decree affirmed, with costs. *276