Cook, Borden & Co. v. R. Z. L. Realty Corp.

147 A. 891, 50 R.I. 375, 1929 R.I. LEXIS 80
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 4, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 147 A. 891 (Cook, Borden & Co. v. R. Z. L. Realty Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook, Borden & Co. v. R. Z. L. Realty Corp., 147 A. 891, 50 R.I. 375, 1929 R.I. LEXIS 80 (R.I. 1929).

Opinion

*376 Barrows, J.

These are appeals from decrees of the Superior Court confirming a master’s report that petitioners *377 were entitled as materialmen to mechanics’ liens for lumber and fabricated structural steel furnished “without written contract” on order of the Radding Construction Co., which had contracted with respondent to make certain alterations in a building in Providence which respondent held under a leasehold interest.

(Cook, Borden & Co., Inc., claim.)

The lien was allowed for $2,669.27 by virtue of General Laws, 1923, Chapter 301, Section 5. Notice of intention to a claim and “commencement of legal process” to enforce took place in due season in proper form to satisfy the requirements of Section 7 and was followed in due time by the petition in equity required by Section 9, accompanied by an exhibit, “setting forth the particulars” of the account or demand. These particulars were identical with those stated in the “commencement of legal process” filed in the office of the Recorder of Deeds. They were itemized and showed various dates of delivery between October 1 and November 10, 1925, and the price, amount, kind and quantity of material furnished on the several dates. The total charge therefor was $2,667.41.

Among the items was one under date of “October 7, 1925” for “229.23” and another, “October 20, 1925” for “$137.50.” The testimony showed that these items were actually delivered on October 6 and October 21 in said year and that the error in dating was a clerical one. Amendment of the bill of particulars attached to the petition in equity was permitted to conform to the facts. The papers show that the same written changes were made on the copy of the statement of account filed as commencement of legal process, called Exhibit B., attached to the petition in equity as on the bill of particulars attached to the petition in equity as Exhibit A, but examination of the transcript shows that the master’s ruling was only that the bill of particulars might be amended.

Respondent asserts as its first reason of appeal that the Superior Court erred in permitting the amendment. It *378 urges that the error in dating created a substantial omission from the account of any such claim as is now made under dates of October 7 and October 20; that this omission prevented the court from having authority to decree a lien. Hawkins v. Boyden, 25 R. I. 181.

In the Boyden case we said that the notice given by the account lodged to “commence legal process” was jurisdictional; that its purpose was to inform the owner and the public of the nature and extent of the account for which the lien is sought and that omissions from that notice are substantial and can not be supplied by amendment. The court was there referring to amendments of a kind which might enlarge the total amount claimed in the account and cited Murphy v. Guisti, 22 R. I. 588; Harris v. Page, 23 R. I. 440. Such amendments are substantial.

A correction in a delivery date is not extending or adding to the account. When the date as corrected still leaves delivery within the required period, there is no substantial alteration of the account. The situation is not the same as if no claim on a specific contract has been made and the • petitioner, by amendment, is seeking for the first time to assert a specific unliquidated claim, as in McPherson v. Greenwell, 27 R. I. 178.

In the case before us the account filed as “commencement of legal process” showed the nature and the extent of the account and was completely itemized. Itemization as fully as occurred was not necessary to give notice to the owner and the public. The erroneous date in the account which was filed as commencement of legal process pursuant to Section 7 was surplusage. The correct date left all deliveries within the necessary time to sustain petitioner’s lien. Authority of the court to permit amendment in order to clarify the bill of particulars accompanying the petition in equity is clear. McPherson v. Greenwell, supra. Confusion here was created because the bill of particulars which was amended was identical with the account commencing legal process, and by some one’s error the dates were altered on *379 the copy of the latter attached to the petition in equity. Allowance of the amendment was proper. 2 Jones Liens, p. 636, § 1407. 40 C. J. 209. In Treusch v. Shryock, 55 Md. 330, such amendment was allowed under a statute requiring dates to be specified in the claim. See also Phelan v. Cheyenne Brick Co. (Wyoming), 188 Pacif. 354, where proof of the correct date of the last delivery (Sept. 13) was permitted although an inadvertently erroneous date in the claim (Sept. 11) would have shown that proceedings had not been instituted within the time required after the last delivery.

It was admitted that petitioner had not complied with G. L. 1923, Ch. 248, Sec. 65 (3530) so as to be authorized to do business or enforce a contract made in this State. The question therefore arose where the contract was made. Petitioner asserted that the contract was made in Massachusetts. Perry v. Mt. Hope Iron Co., 15 R. I. 380. Its terms were certainly discussed and agreed upon in Providence by petitioner’s treasurer, Eagan, so far as Eagan had authority to fix prices, and the R adding Construction Company’s agent, Sullivan; but it is clear that the contract was not closed in Providence on July 30, 1925. The conversation that day ended by Sullivan telling Eagan that “the order will probably be yours.” The evidence of Eagan not denied by Sullivan was that when he, Eagan, left Providence, he, Eagan, told Sullivan that the prices must be approved by Hartley, the price-maker for petitioner at Fall River but that he, Eagan, had little doubt that such approval would be given.

Whether the testimony of Eagan at the several hearings was an honest statement of the facts as he recalled them or an intentional alteration of his prior evidence after the importance of the matter became clear to the witness, was peculiarly a question for the master, who saw and heard the witnesses. As stated in his report by the master, had Sullivan denied Eagan’s testimony, the circumstances and correspondence, together with Eagan’s recall and alteration *380 of testimony, would have rendered the truth of his testimony exceedingly doubtful but Eagan’s evidence was undisputed and it is entitled to stand because not otherwise shown to be plainly false.

We can not say from the documentary evidence or a careful reading of the testimony that the master was so clearly wrong that we should reverse his finding of fact, especially when fortified by the approval of the Superior Court.

Accepting Eagan’s testimony, petitioner’s contention is sound that the contract, made by the letters of July 8 and 9, and oral talks prior to and including July 30 and the written acknowledgment from Eagan at Fall River, on July 30 after conference with Hartley, was made in Massachusetts.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kelley v. Dunne
316 A.2d 341 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1974)
MUTUAL LUMBER COMPANY v. Gero
244 A.2d 564 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1968)
Graybar Electric Co. v. Providence Journal Co.
166 A.2d 885 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 A. 891, 50 R.I. 375, 1929 R.I. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-borden-co-v-r-z-l-realty-corp-ri-1929.