Brunt v. Farinholt-Meredith Co.

88 A. 42, 121 Md. 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 24, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 88 A. 42 (Brunt v. Farinholt-Meredith Co.) 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
Brunt v. Farinholt-Meredith Co., 88 A. 42, 121 Md. 126 (Md. 1913).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The three appeals of Henry Brunt v. Farinholt-Meredith Company, Mary Coale Dugan v. Same, and The National Junior Republic of the City of Baltimore v. Same, were argued together.

The firm of De Waard and Sons, contractors and builders, entered into a contract with each of the appellants for the erection of a house — those of Mr. Brunt and Miss Dugan being in Annapolis and that of the National Junior Republic being at Annapolis Junction, in Anne Arundel County. The Farinholt-Meredith Company furnished materials for the three houses at the request of the contractors, and, having filed Mechanics’ Liens against the respective houses, instituted proceedings in equity to enforce them. The lower Court on December 17, 1912, passed decrees in favor of the plaintiff (appellee) in each case, providing that unless the amounts named be paid within thirty days the respective properties should be sold, and containing the usual provisions in such decrees. From the respective decrees the defendants appealed, and as some of the principal questions are involved in all of them and they must be governed by the same principles of law, we will pass on the three cases in one opinion.

1. Decree against house of Henry Brunt.

This decree is for $642.94 with interest from January 23rd, 1911, — being the total amount of the plaintiff’s claim. The; bill of particulars contains items furnished from July 2nd, 1910, to October 26th, 1910, amounting to $634.65, and *128 then on October 29th there was a charge for some items amounting to $8.29. Notice of the intention of the company to file a lien claim was served on Mr. Brunt on December 21st, 1910. He concedes that the items furnished from October 5th to October 26th are properly chargeable and that the appellee is entitled to a lien for them, but he contends that the items delivered prior to that time were not furnished under the same contract or understanding between the appellee and the contractors, and hence as to them the notice was not in time. The testimony on the part of the plaintiff is not altogether clear.' When Mr. Carey L. Meredith, secretary, and treasurer of the appelleej testified in chief he said, in answer to the question, how they came to furnish the material on this building: “Mr. De Waard came to our office after he had put up some of the rough lumber which he furnished himself from a sawmill in the country and asked us for a bid on a small list of materials, which amounted to $252.64.” That list was filed with the examiner and marked “Exhibit A.” He was then asked: “Did this consist of all materials furnished on the job?” and replied, “No; he after-wards ordered a lot of materials not included in this list each day as he needed it.”

“Exhibit A” is not in the record but on cross-examination of that witness it appears that it was dated October 1st, 1910, and was what the witness called an “estimate.” He said the house was nearly half completed when the estimate was made, and the contractors had then already bought “approximately $350.00” from the appellee for the Brunt house. Apparently either Mr. Meredith was mistaken when he testified in chief that the contractors “afterwards” ordered the materials not included in the list, or the record does not correctly state what he testified to, for with the exception of a small difference between the -amount of the estimate and the sum of the items furnished- between October' 5th and October 26th, the bill of particulars shows that the greater part of the bill was furnished before Mr. De Waard asked for a bid on the list *129 of materials in the estimate, and not afterwards, as his evidence in chief states. On cross-examination he stated that the materials furnished before October 1st were not furnished pursuant to any agreement between them that his company was to furnish them, and he did not know from day to day that the contractors were going to buy from him for this house; that when they furnished the articles on the second of July that might have been the last order they would have gotten from the De Waard for the Brunt house. He was then asked: “Then you had no contract with De Waard to continue to furnish his material for the Brunt house or were under no obligation to continue to sell him, or for him to buy from you but when he sent his orders from day to day you furnished the things and sent them to the place that he told you to,” and replied: “That is right.”

The following also appears in his cross-examination:

“16 Q. These items charged in this account are widely separated, for instance on the 1st day of August you sell De Waard and Sons 1 keg of 20 penny nails, and there appears to be nothing further charged until the 16th of August, more than two weeks later, when you furnished him the 20 penny nails on the 1st of August you had no contract or agreement to furnish anything else? A. No. 11 Q. And you simply might or might not receive any further orders ? A. Yes, sir. 18 Q. And does that apply all the way through to everything furnished? A. That applies until we get to the list of materials estimated from. 19 Q. The list of things of October 1st, 1910 ? A. Yes. 20 Q. These are the things tliat you had a contract with De Waard to furnish at the prices specified therein? A. Right. T want to say that the reason for the long time between deliveries was because of the fact that they put their rough lumber in from the country sawmill, and all nails and other materials from us which explains why it would be a long time between buying from us. 21 Q. In other words they were buying first from one person . and then another, wherever *130 they chose, and you had no contract to furnish anything except the items mentioned in Exhibit A?' A. That is right.” It is true he said on re-examination that all of the goods furnished for the Brunt job were furnished continuously, considered to be one bill and so charged, but while it may be true that in his dealings with the contractors he treated it as one bill, the testimony does undoubtedly show that the materials furnished after October 1st were furnished under a separate contract from those prior to that time. Mr. William Gr. Meredith, shipping and order clerk for appellee, testified as follows on cross-examination:- “22 Q. Did he (De Waard) make any contract with you to furnish all this material, or just send in orders from time to time as he wanted stuff ? A. He made a contract with C. L. Meredith and afterwards orders came to me and I would enter them on the day book and then on the wagon. 23 Q. Is the contract you refer to, is this the contract mentioned in the paper marked ‘Exhibit A’ which he made with C. L. Meredith? A. It is. 24 Q. That is the only contract you know anything about ? A. Only one I know of. 25 Q. All the other orders came in from various, parties from time to time as he wanted the things ? A. Yes.”

Having quoted from the testimony at some length, it would be well at this point to recall the principles of law applicable to such facts.

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Bluebook (online)
88 A. 42, 121 Md. 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brunt-v-farinholt-meredith-co-md-1913.