Atlantic Terra Cotta Co. v. Carson

53 Pa. Super. 91, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 138
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 27, 1913
DocketAppeal, No. 137
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 53 Pa. Super. 91 (Atlantic Terra Cotta Co. v. Carson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic Terra Cotta Co. v. Carson, 53 Pa. Super. 91, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 138 (Pa. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion bt

Portee, J.,

The plaintiff, on March 1,1912, caused this writ of scire facias to issue upon a mechanic’s lien, which complied with all the statutory requirements, the writ being returnable to the first Monday of March, less than fifteen days after the day it issued. The defendants having been duly served, within the county of Philadelphia, obtained a rule to-show cause why the writ of scire facias should not be quashed. This rule the court subsequently discharged, which action is the subject of the first specification of error. The plaintiff then entered judgment for want of an affidavit of defense, whereupon the defendants obtained a rule to show cause why that judgment should not be stricken off, and the discharge of that rule is the subject of the second and third specifications of error.

The Act of June 16,1836, P. L. 695, relating to mechanics’ liens, had provided: “That no such scire facias shall in any case be issued, within fifteen days previous to the return day of the next term.” This provision was omitted from and repealed by the Act of June 4, 1901, P. L. 431, and if this later statute does not, in this respect, violate the constitution of the commonwealth, the writ in this case could not be successfully challenged because of the time at which it issued. The appellant contends that because the act of 1901 caused this change in procedure upon mechanics’ liens it must be held to violate art. Ill, sec. 7, of the constitution, in that it is a special law “providing or changing methods for the collection of debts or the enforcement of judgments.” While many of the provisions of the aet of 1901 have been held to violate this copstitiitional restriction, for the reason that they gave to this special class of creditors some new right, or some remedy which enabled them to reach property which had not been subject to stich claims prior to the constitution of 1874, none of the decisions relied on by the appellants can reasonably be interpreted to mean that it is beyond the power of the legislature to make any change in the details of the procedure relating to the old methods for the collec[96]*96tion of debts. The result of the decisions is to make it clear that any provision of the act of 1901 which is clearly divergent from, and is an advance upon the law as it stood prior to the constitution of 1874, is to be regarded as invalid: Page v. Carr, 232 Pa. 371. “A number of the sections of that act have been declared unconstitutional for the reason that since the adoption of the constitution of 1874 any statute which extends the law as it then stood by providing new methods for the collection of debts due a special class of creditors is void:” Sax v. School District, 237 Pa. 68. There is a manifest distinction between a law which gives to a party a new remedy, enabling him to reach property which could not before be taken to satisfy his claim, and a law which is a mere regulation of the old remedy, affecting only the time when and the form in which a scire facias may issue. “This method of filing a lien and enforcing'the collection of a debt thus secured had been provided by law in our state about seventy years before the new constitution was adopted, and it is not conceivable that the framers of our fundamental law intended to disturb the old method of procedure relating thereto. The constitution does not in terms undertake to do any such thing, and certainly no such implication can arise from any reasonable interpretation thereof. A fair construction of the constitution leads to the conclusion that the intention of its framers was not to prohibit legislation relating to old methods for the collection of debts or enforcing of judgments recognized and in general use at the time of its adoption, but to prevent the enactment of local and special laws providing new methods or changing old ones and applicable only to particular localities or to special classes:” Vulcanite Portland Cement Co. v. Allison, 220 Pa. 382. The procedure under a mechanic’s lien, by scire facias which binds onty the particular property, is an old method. It is a proceeding in rem, well understood and of general application, and was so at the time of the adoption of the constitution.

The foundation of the entire method for the collection [97]*97of these claims was the hen which the law gave upon the property, the building with its curtilage. Any provision of the act of 1901 which extended that lien to other property involved, therefore, a departure from the principle upon which the whole system was based. The claimant must, under the system prevailing prior to 1874, file his lien in proper form within six months, in order to preserve the lien of the claim against the property beyond that period after the completion of .his work. In so far as these primary steps in the proceeding are concerned, the provisions of the act of 1901 applicable to the present case involved no departure from the pre-existing law. The appellants concede that the claim was properly filed and is, apparently, a valid lien. The statutes having given the lien and required it to be filed of record provided, as the method for its collection, a proceeding in rem, of which the owner of the property and the contractor for the building should have notice and an opportunity to defend. These were the essential characteristics of “the method,” prior to the constitution of 1874, well recognized for the collection of debts of this particular class. Any new statute which changed the nature of the action and permitted a personal judgment to be entered against the parties named as defendants, or permitted the property to be sold without notice to the owner and contractor, would involve a change in the method of collecting this special class of debts. The proceeding must continue to be one in rem, and the owner and contractor must have notice and an opportunity to defend. The mere form of the notice to the defendants and the time at which it may issue need not necessarily always remain unchanged, so long as clear and distinct notice is given and the defendants are deprived of no substantial right. The claim being a matter of record, the legislature very properly saw fit to require that the notice to the owner and contractor to appear and defend should take the form of a writ of scire facias. The writ of scire facias is used to summon defendants to appear at a day named and show cause why the plaintiff should [98]*98not have the advantage by law given him out of a matter of record. The records,"to enforce the rights growing out of which this writ may issue, are sometimes founded upon the express contract of the parties, such as a recognizance or mortgage, or they may arise without an express contract, as in case of the exercise of the taxing power; or the record may owe its origin, as in case of a mechanic’s lien, to statutory right, arising indirectly out of the dealings of the parties. The variety of the records upon which the writ of scire facias may issue renders it proper and necessary, in order that the defendant may have sufficient notice, that the form of the writ shall vary to meet the exigencies of each particular case. This is a mere detail of pleading, and the variation in the several writs involves no departure from the essential nature of the proceeding. The writ of scire facias upon a mortgage, a tax lien, a municipal claim, or a mechanic’s lien, should disclose the character of record upon which it issued, and, this being so, it is manifest that precisely the same language ought not to be used in each and all of the said writs. The writ of scire facias upon a mechanic’s lien so far as its mere form is concerned must necessarily be different from such a writ issued upon a mortgage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 Pa. Super. 91, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-terra-cotta-co-v-carson-pasuperct-1913.