Bailey Lumber Co. v. General Construction Co.

133 S.E. 135, 101 W. Va. 567, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 218
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1926
Docket5439
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 133 S.E. 135 (Bailey Lumber Co. v. General Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey Lumber Co. v. General Construction Co., 133 S.E. 135, 101 W. Va. 567, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 218 (W. Va. 1926).

Opinion

*569 Lively, Judge:

Tbe decree complained of enforces a materialman’s lien in favor of tbe Lumber Company (plaintiff below) against the Coal Company (defendant below, appellant here) by rendering a personal decree against the Coal Company and ordering a sale of its property unless sooner paid.

The issue involved is the validity of the lien. Defects in the notice of lien and its recordation are claimed by the Coal Company, which invalidate the lien; and the Coal Company further claims it and its property were released from responsibility and lien because it required by notice in writing the Lumber Company to file with it, the owner, an itemized list of the materials furnished the contractor, the dates, prices charged and nature of the materials furnished, as provided in Sec. 6, Chap. 75, Code 1923, which requirement was ignored by the Lumber Company. Another defense is that not all of the materials furnished by the Lumber Company and listed in its notice of lien were in fact used on the Coal Company’s property, but were used by the contractor in construction elsewhere; value of which materials used elsewhere is in the approximate sum of four or five thousand dollars.

, It appears that the Coal Company having a coal lease on 79.29 acres, desired to build houses thereon for mining purposes, and on May 1, 1923, contracted in writing with the General Construction Company, a corporation, to build the houses. The contractor began the work and continued in the erection of the houses until about December 1, 1923, when it ceased work, leaving it unfinished, and the Coal Company completed the work after that date and -paid the contractor all that was due him. The contractor purchased materials from the Lumber Company, alleged by the latter to amount to $51,425.33, on which it had paid $27,007.04, leaving a balance which with interest amounted to $25,009.21, for which it claims its lien, notice of which was served on the Coal Company, and on Gulf Smokeless Coal Company, December 18, 1923, and filed for record with the Clerk of the County Court of Wyoming County on December 14, 1923. About the middle *570 of September, the Coal Company through W. P. Tams, Jr., its president, inquired of the Lumber Company by letter to Bluefield, where it conducted its business, how the construction company was paying its bills, to which the Lumber Company promptly replied that it was paying its bills after a slight delay and that they thought there was nothing to fear, and acknowledged the interest of the Coal Company in the matter, as it, the Coal Company, would be liable for mechanic’s lien. On September 22, 1923, Tams as president wrote a letter to the Lumber Company asking for itemized statement of materials furnished General Construction Company for work at Covel (where the houses were being constructed), the dates, prices, and nature of the materials. This letter was sent to Beckley by mistake and was returned to the writer. In the meantime Tams had gone to Baltimore, and some one in his office wrote a similar letter dated October 15, 1923, which he forwarded to Tams at Baltimore who received, signed and returned by mail to the office at Tams, thence it was mailed to the Lumber Company, and in due course of mail should have been received by it about October 23. That letter reads:

“Oct. 15/1923.
Bailey Lumber Company,
Bluefield, W. Ya.
Gentlemen:
On Sept. 22nd we wrote you a letter requesting certain information concerning General Construction Company’s account with you. Today this letter was returned to us on account of it having been mis-directed.
We desire you to furnish us an itemized statement of the material furnished to the General Construction Company by your company for work at Covel; the dates upon which such materials were furnished, and the price charged therefor by you against the General Construction Company; and the exact grades and nature of such material.
Yours very truly,
President. ’ ’

No reply was made. About December 3rd following, Cheney, the general manager of the Lumber Company, acknowledged *571 to McWhorter, superintendent of the Coal Company and to Rupe, an employee, that he had received the letter about thirty days before that time, and had delayed reply until he could check up credits with the construction company’s manager. There can be little doubt that the Lumber Company received the letter in due course of mail. It was in their files and was not produced on the trial, because it had been lost or misplaced.

The Coal Company says the failure of the Lumber Company to comply with the request in the letter mentioned above releases it from all responsibility and its property from all lien or charge for materials furnished the contractor, under' See. 6, Chap. 75 Code, which says: “The said owner may, at any time, by notice in writing, require . . . such ma-terialman ... to file with said owner an itemized account of the . . . materials . . . furnished by said materialman ... to show the dates upon which . . . said materials were furnished, the price charged therefor and the nature of such . . . materials, and the neglect or failure ... so to file said itemized statement with the said owner, within ten days after the receipt by him of- said written notice so to do, shall release the said owner from all responsibility and his property from all lien or charge . . . for all materials furnished by the person so failing to file such required itemized statement, prior to the giving of said notice. ’ ’

On the other hand, the Lumber Company says this letter is not the notice contemplated by the statute, was not served on it, but sent to it through the mails, and is not sufficient on its face to show that Covel Smokeless Coal Company, the owner of the property, required such itemized statement. It is argued that the notice should be served by an officer to be effective; that such was the intention of the statute.

The statute does not state how the notice shall be given. It does not say that it shall be served. It simply says that the owner by notice in writing may require the itemized statement from the materialman, and provides that if he fails or neglects to file such statement within ten days after *572 the receipt of the notice (not after it has been served), the owner is released from any lien for material furnished the contractor prior to the giving (not serving) of such notice. Where the statute is silent as to the manner or method of giving notice it is generally sufficient if actual notice has been received by the person affected. Brost v. Whitall-Tatum Co., 99 Atl. (N. J.) 315. Our statute says that if a notice is to be given no particular mode of serving being prescribed, it may be served by delivering a copy thereof to the party in person. Sec. 1, Chap. 121, Code.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 S.E. 135, 101 W. Va. 567, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-lumber-co-v-general-construction-co-wva-1926.