Alter v. Eckhardt

123 A. 388, 143 Md. 658, 1923 Md. LEXIS 140
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 123 A. 388 (Alter v. Eckhardt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alter v. Eckhardt, 123 A. 388, 143 Md. 658, 1923 Md. LEXIS 140 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill of complaint, in this case, was filed ¡by the appellant against the appellee in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, to enforce what is claimed to be a lien against the property of the appellee, under article 63, of the Code of Public General Law's, entitled “Mechanics’ Lien.”

The bill charges that, on or about the month of June, 1921, the plaintiff contracted with the defendant, to' furnish and did furnish certain lumber, mill work, sash, doors, blinds, &c., to be used and which were used in and about the erection and *659 construction of a dwelling house, built by the defendant, William Eekhart, on a tract of land or ground known as Lots Eos. 23 and 24, in a development known as Bar Harbor, fronting on Eock Creek, in the Third Election District of Anne Arundel County.

The hill further avers, that the plaintiff has completed its part of the contract for the furnishing of the materials so used in the erection and construction of the dwelling house, that its claim for such materials, so furnished, is overdue, and the defendant though often requested to do so, has failed to pay the same.

The bill then avers that the plaintiff duly filed, in the clerk’s office of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, its claim, as a lien against the dwelling house and the ground upon which the same is erected, as well as so much other ground immediately adjacent thereto as may he necessary for the ordinary and useful purposes thereof, which claim contains an accurate description of the location of the property, and sets forth the nature, kind and amount of materials so furnished by the plaintiff for or about the erection and construction of the dwelling, and the time when and the prices for which the same were agreed to be furnished. And the plaintiff files herewith, as part hereof, the original of the lien claim, marked “Complainant’s Exhibit Eo. 1,” where it appears that there is due and owing to the plaintiff from the defendant the sum of five hundred and eighty-one dollars and sixty-nine cents being the balance of the whole bill for the materials so furnished, after deducting a credit of t$350, for and on account of payment made thereon on June 9th, 1921.

The prayer of the hill is, that a decree may he passed by the court for the sale of the property, or so much thereof, as may he necessary to satisfy the lien claim, interest and costs, and that the lien claim may he paid, with interest, and then, a prayer for general relief.

On January 13th, 1922, the defendant made answer to the plaintiff’s hill, as follows:

*660 “(1) The defendant denies that in June, 1921, or at any other time did the plaintiffs contract with this defendant to fnrnish mill work, sash, doors, blinds or any other material to he nsed in or about the erection and construction of a dwelling house by the defendant in Anne Arundel County, on a tract of ground which this defendant is the owner of; that this defendant entered into a contract with a certain Conrad Muhl for the erection and construction of a dwelling on his property at Bar Harbor, but this defendant does not know of his own knowledge from whom the said Conrad Muhl secured the materials for the erection of said dwelling, nor was any notice served upon him by the said plaintiffs that they furnished the said Conrad'Muhl with the said building materials, or that they intended to claim a lien against said building, or the said ground.
“(2) The defendant has no knowledge of the matters and facts alleged in the second paragraph of the hill, and can therefore neither admit nor deny the same, hut calls for strict proof of its allegations.
“(3) This defendant is informed that the plaintiffs have filed a mechanic’s lien against his property, in the clerk’s office of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, but he denies that the quantity of building materials mentioned in said lien claim was nsed in the construction of said building,' and
“(4) Further answering said bill of complaint, this defendant denies that he ever had any agreement, contract or dealings with the plaintiffs for the purchase of material for the erection or construction of said building, or that he is indebted to said plaintiff in any sum.”

The ease was heard upon bill, answer and proof, and from a- decree of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, refusing the relief sought by the bill, and dismissing tbe plaintiff’s bill, tbe plaintiff has taken this appeal.

A large amount of testimony was taken on both sides and is set out in the record. We have examined it with much care, but we do not find it sufficient to establish the allegations of *661 the bill, or to make out such a case as would authorize the court to enforce the plaintiff’s claim as a lien against the property.

While there is. some testimony on the part of the plaintiff, standing alone, which tends to show that the plaintiff sold the materials to the defendant, and held hint responsible for the debt, but tbis testimony is, directly contradicted by the defendant himself and by other witnesses in the case, on behalf of the defendant.

It appears from the testimony and the pleadings in the (‘ase, that William Eckhardt, the defendant, was the owner of the small lot of land on Rock Creek, in Anne Arundel County, and that he made a contract with one Conrad Muhl to furnish material and build him a. small bungalow upon the same, the total price being seventeen hundred dollars, and the evidence shows that the contract price has been paid by the defendant, Eckhardt, to the contractor, Conrad Muhl.

The defendant, William Eckhardt, testified in answer to the twenty-second question as follows: “A gentleman came over to see me, after I made the contract with Muhl, and asked me if I was going to do some building at Rock Creek, and I told Mm £Yes,’ I made a contract with Muhl, and he asked me what kind of a man he, was. Told him I did not know only he built a house on the adjoining lot and T was going to have Mm put up a house for me, on the same dimensions, three rooms and a kitchen, only where Mr. Windel had a porch on three sides, I wanted a porch around the entire house, and that was the only difference in the two buildings. He asked me if I owned any other property, and I said no, I disposed of all my other property, I sold the piece on the corner1 adjoining where I lived, and I had money enough left to erect, this house and I could pay Muhl every week as he went along', or would pay Mm as he progressed with the building. The fellow said, won’t you be responsible for this bill and I told him with, the only plain word £Yo,’ T made a contract with Muhl and it is up fo Mm to furnish everything.” In answer to the twentytMrd question he says: ££I don’t know where their office is. *662 or where the lumber yard is, never been near the place, don’t know where they are situated or located and never saw a member of the firm until the house was built.’'

In answer to the twenty-fourth question, he said, that he never saw -any member of the firm until after this tiling was all over and the bouse was built.

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Bluebook (online)
123 A. 388, 143 Md. 658, 1923 Md. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alter-v-eckhardt-md-1923.