City of Crawfordsville v. Irwin

46 Ind. 438
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 46 Ind. 438 (City of Crawfordsville v. Irwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Crawfordsville v. Irwin, 46 Ind. 438 (Ind. 1874).

Opinion

Worden, C. J.

This action was brought by Volney Q. Irwin and Tilghman J. Lehr against Robert Alexander, Benjamin Whits et, and the city of Crawfordsville. The object of the action was to recover from the defendants the value of certain brick sold and delivered by the plaintiffs to the defendants Alexander and Whitset, and to enforce a lien against the city upon real estate. Such proceedings were-had as that judgment was rendered against the city for the debt and for the enforcement of the supposed lien. From this judgment, the city appeals, and has assigned, amongst, other alleged errors, that the complaint does not state facts-sufficient to constitute a cause of action against her. This-assignment of error makes it proper that we should first examine the complaint, and if found radically defective as against the city, it will be unnecessary to consider any questions involved in the subsequent proceedings.

[439]*439The complaint was in four paragraphs. The first alleges, in substance, that Alexander and Whitset were emyloyedby the city to erect a brick building, for the city, on part of lot No. one hundred and ten (no) on the original plat of the town (now city) of Crawfordsville; that the plaintiffs sold and delivered to Alexander and Whitset one hundred and eighty thousand bricks, at seven dollars and fifty cents per thousand, for said building; that the plaintiffs, within sixty days after the money was to have been paid for the brick, filed and caused to be recorded in the proper recorder’s office the following notice, viz.:

“To all whom this may concern, notice is hereby given that the undersigned intend holding a lien upon the following real estate and the improvements thereon, belonging to the city of Crawfordsville, described as follows: part of lot No. no in the original plat of the city of Crawfordsville, to secure the payment of thirteen hundred and fifty ($1,350) dollars, per bill as follows, for materials: October 16th, I872, one hundred and eighty thousand brick at seven dollars and fifty cents per thousand, thirteen hundred and fifty dollars.

“Witness our hands and seals this 17th day of October, 1872. Irwin & Lehr.”

The paragraph further alleges that the plaintiffs served upon Robert E. Bryant, Lucas A. Foote, and H. H. Crist,, the building committee appointed by the common council of the city, the following notice, viz.:

“Crawfordsville, October 17th, 1872.

“ R. E. Bryant, L. A. Foote, H. H. Crist, Gents: This is to notify you that we have filed a lien on the engine house now in course of construction in this city, and we will hold you for amount, thirteen hundred and fifty ($1,350) dollars, now due us for brick furnished for said building.

“ Irwin & Lehr.”

It is further averred that the common council of the city, after they had notice of the filing and recording of the lien as aforesaid, paid Alexander and Whitset the sum of four thousand dollars for work and labor on said building; that [440]*440the sum above specified as due to the plaintiffs remains due and unpaid; wherefore, etc.

Section 649 of the statute on the subject of mechanic’s liens (see Barkers. Buell, 35 Ind. 297, where the entire provisions are collected) provides for a personal action in certain cases, by the sub-contractor, material man, etc., against the owner, by giving the notice therein specified. But it is clear that tire notice addressed to Bryant and the other members of the building committee does not fix a personal liability upon the city. This notice not only does not state to whom the brick were sold, in other words, who were the debtors of the plaintiffs, as would seem to be required by the statute, but it does not notify any one that the plaintiffs would hold the city liable for the claim. It purports, on its •face, to notify the persons to whom it was addressed that the plaintiffs would hold them liable. The obvious and unmistakable purpose of the notice was to inform the persons to whom it was addressed that the plaintiffs had filed a lien. If the lien fails, the action fails, as no foundation is laid by this notice for a personal action against the city. This brings us to the lien itself.

Section650 of the act provides, that “any person wishing to acquire such lien upon any property, whether his claim be due or not, shall file in the recorder’s office of the county, within sixty days after the completion of the building or repairs, notice of his intention to hold a lien upon such property for the amount of his claim,” etc. It does not appear by the averments that the notice was filed within sixty days -after the completion of the building. The averment is, that the notice was filed within sixty days after the money was to have been paid for the brick. This may or may not have been within sixty days after the completion of the building. But, besides this, we regard the notice of the lien as radically defective for uncertainty in the description of the property. Whether the uncertainty could have been cured by averment, we need not decide, as no averments having that object were made. “A part of lot No. no” is descriptive of no [441]*441'particular property. What part of the lot, or how much of it, can not be determined. Under this description, what would the sheriff sell or the purchaser buy ? The case of Howell v. Zerbee, 26 Ind. 214, is exactly in point. There the court say: “We think, to constitute a valid lien under the .statute, that the lot or land, on which the building is situated should be described with such certainty that it may be definitely ascertained and located. Here the description is, ‘a part of lot 3, section 36, township 33, range 4 west, containing five acres, situated in Starke county, and State of Indiana.’ It contains a patent ambiguity, in not defining the particular part of lot 3 intended, and there is nothing in the description by which the part intended can be ascertained .and rendered certain. It is therefore void for uncertainty,” See, also, the cases of The Eel River Draining Association v. Topp, 16 Ind. 242, Munger v. Green, 20 Ind. 38, and Cochran v. Utt, 42 Ind. 267. We conclude for these reasons that the error is well assigned as to the first paragraph of the complaint.

We come to the second. This paragraph, as we understand it, does not purport to set up any cause of action against the city. It alleges an accounting between the plaintiffs and Alexander & Whitset of and concerning the brick delivered for the building of the engine house and of the money paid thereon, and that there was found due the •plaintiffs the sum of one thousand and twenty-seven dollars and fifty cents, and that the defendants Alexander & Whit-set executed to the plaintiffs the following order on the city, which the city refused to accept, viz.:

To the City Council:
“Gents.—You will please pay V. Q. Irwin one thousand ■and twenty-seven dollars and fifty cents for brick delivered ■for the engine house.
“ Crawfordsville, December 6th, 1872.
“ Alexander & Whitset.”

The paragraph concludes : “ Wherefore the plaintiffs say ■that said defendants Alexander & Whitset are indebted [442]*442to them in the sum of one thousand and twenty-seven dollars and fifty cents, which remains wholly unpaid'; wherefore the plaintiffs demand judgment,” etc.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Ind. 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-crawfordsville-v-irwin-ind-1874.