Blake v. Pitcher

46 Md. 453, 1877 Md. LEXIS 59
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 4, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 46 Md. 453 (Blake v. Pitcher) 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
Blake v. Pitcher, 46 Md. 453, 1877 Md. LEXIS 59 (Md. 1877).

Opinion

Bowie, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellees filed their claim for a lien under the Mechanics’ Lien law, against the appellant, Henry Blake, as owner, and Samuel K. Harris, contractor, on the 7th January, 1874, in the Superior Court of Baltimore City.

The hill of particulars consisted of charges for bricks furnished by the appellees to the appellant, Blake, from the 24th May, 1873, to 10th of July, inclusive, amounting to $1236.40.

To the scire facias issued on this claim against the appellant the defendants pleaded separately several pleas, on some of which issues were joined ; to others, the plaintiffs filed replications, to some of which the defendants demurred, and to others rejoined, to which rejoinder the plaintiffs demurred.

The defendant’s demurrer being overruled, and the plaintiffs’ sustained, the defendant, Blake, appealed.

The same questions being substantially involved in the demurrers and prayers, it will be unnecessary to notice the former more particularly.

[462]*462Three hills of exceptions were taken by the appellant below, two to the rulings of the Court upon the demurrers and the third to the granting of the appellees’ prayer, and the rejection of the five several prayers of the appellant.

The appellant relies only on the last bill of exceptions, but the appellees have moved to dismiss the appeal, so far as depends upon the exceptions, because they are unnecessary, insufficient, and improper in form and substance. .

A bill of exceptions to the ruling of a Court on demurrer to the pleas, replications, or rejoinders is certainly an anomaly in the practice of this State. The pleadings which are a part of the record, show upon their face, the facts on which the question of law the demurrer arises, and a bill of exceptions is, therefore, wholly unnecessary.

The third bill of exceptions is objected to by the appellees because it does not sufficiently set out the evidence upon which the plaintiffs’ prayer was based, but states concisely that, having “ offered evidence tending to prove the hypothesis of fact set out in their prayer,” * * * * “ therefore, the plaintiffs offered the following prayer.”

We think this mode of presenting in the bill of exceptions a question of law arising upon any given hj^pothesis of facts, is conformable to the new rules prescribed by this Court in relation to appeals. To avoid unnecessary prolixity and detail, they require, “Bills of Exception shall be so prepared as only to present to the Court of Appeals the rulings of the Court below upon some matter of law, and shall contain only such statement of facts as may be necessary to explain the bearings of the rulings upon the issues or questions involved ; and, if the facts are undisputed, they shall be stated as facts, and not the evidence from which they are deduced ; and, if disputed, it shall be sufficient to state, that evidence was adduced tending to prove them “ but if a defect of proof be the ground of ruling or exception, then the particulars in which the proof is supposed to be defective shall be briefly stated, [463]*463and all the evidence offered in anywise connected with such supposed defect, shall he set out in the hill of exception.” See Rule 5, Title Appeals, 29 Md.

The appellant’s third hill of exceptions, instead of repeating the facts hypothetically stated in the plaintiffs’ prayer, introduces that prayer with the preface before cited, referring to the prayer for the facts on which it was founded, which, in the language of the rule, sufficiently explained the bearing of the ruling on the question involved.

In cases like the present, where the prayer excepted to embodies all the evidence tending to support the theory of the instruction asked for, it would be wholly unnecessary to burden the record with a recapitulation of the same matter.

' The appellant submitted five prayers and the appellees one.

The first four of the appellant relate to the character of the contractor and the circumstances and conditions necessary to entitle the mechanic or material man to a lien upon the building erected or repaired.

The fifth, to the effect of taking a promissory note by the material man, from the contractor, upon the proceedings for a lien.

The principle asserted by those relating to the creation of the lien is, that unless the materials were furnished to the owner, builder, architect, or contractor for the erection of the houses, in pursuance of a contract with them or some of them, although the materials were used in the construction of the buildings, with the knowledge and consent of the owner, a lien will not lie in favor of the material man against the buildings.

The appellees’ prayer, asserts their right to recover if the jury find the facts embodied in its hypothesis, without basing their right upon the relation of Harris to Blake, as contractor for building the houses, or contractor for [464]*464furnishing the bricks. Relying mainly upon the facts that the bricks were furnished Blake, after an interview with Blake, who referred them to Harris, and that the said bricks were delivered and used by Blake, in the construction of his houses, with the knowledge and consent of Blake and Harris, leaving it to the jury to determine whether the materials furnished, were furnished under a contract with Blake or Harris, or with both. In this aspect of the prayer, there is no necessary conflict between it and those submitted by the appellant. But it is argued that it is susceptible al§o of the broader interpretation, that' if the materials were furnished under the circumstances recited, the lien lies, whether Harris was contractor for the building of the houses, or only sub-contractor for the bricks.

These prayers involve the construction of the 61st Article of the Code of P. G. Laws, Title “ Mechanics’ Lien.” The appellant’s counsel regards the position of the appellee as “ utterly repugnant to justice and right, without foundation in reason or statute.”

The spirit in which the Mechanics’ Lien Law is to be interpreted, has been prescribed by the Legislature and impressed in such strong terms upon its face, that no Court can mistake its meaning.

It is enacted by section 41 of Article 61, “this Article shall be construed, and have the same effect, as laws which give general jurisdiction or are remedial in their nature.” Exclusive of this directory clause, the language of the Code in other sections, indicates that the most liberal and comprehensive meaning should be given to its several provisions in favor of mechanics and material men.

“Sec. 1. Every building erected and every building repaired, rebuilt or improved to the extent of one-fourth its value, shall be subject to a lien for the payment of all debts contracted for work done or materials furnished for or about the same.”

[465]*465.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Md. 453, 1877 Md. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-v-pitcher-md-1877.