Filston Farm Co. v. Henderson & Co.

67 A. 228, 106 Md. 335, 1907 Md. LEXIS 82
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 67 A. 228 (Filston Farm Co. v. Henderson & 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
Filston Farm Co. v. Henderson & Co., 67 A. 228, 106 Md. 335, 1907 Md. LEXIS 82 (Md. 1907).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County as a Court of equity, establishing a mechanics’ lien for the sum of $68,542.62, with interest on $53,542.62 from November 29th, 1904, for the erection ofa certain school building upon a tract of land near Glencoe Station, in Baltimore County, and ordering a sale of said building, together with twelve hundred and ninety three acres of adjacent land belonging to the owner of said building, for the payment of said lien. The case involves a very considerable amount of money. The record is voluminous, covering 1650 printed pages; eminent counsel have appeared on both sides, and numerous questions have been raised, that as to the extent of the mechanics ’lien for the construction of buildings upon farming lands, and to be used for farming purposes being for the first time before us. The statute being the same in all cases however, the *358 amount involved cannot alter, or control the application of the legal principles to be applied.

The bill states that the plaintiff, a corporation under the laws of Pennsylvania, being a contractor and builder, entered into a contract on June ioth, 1904,-with the defendants, Henry D. Perky, and the Filston Farm Company, a corporation under the laws of Maryland, to furnish the materials and labor required for the erection of a large building or two connected buildings, designed for use as a school of agriculture and other pursuits, “to be maintained by and upon tracts of land located in the Tenth District of Baltimore County,”- and that there was then due the plaintiff for such material, work and labor, the sum of $77,307.46.

That the said Perky and the Filston Farm Company were, at the beginning of the said work and labor, and the furnishing of said materials, the owners of all the lands intended to be used for said school, including the land actually covered by said building or buildings.

That part of said land so owned had been conveyed before said contract to one George C. Weddell of Philadelphia by sundry deeds from parties acting under the direction of said Perky and said Filston Farm Company, but that the purchase money was paid by them, and that said Weddell had no beneficial interest in said lands, and held the same in trust and at the pleasure of said Perky and said Filston Farm Company; and that other parts of said lands- were conveyed by deed of mortgage by said Perky and said Filston Farm Company on October 22nd, 1904, to one Joseph Fels of Philadelphia, to secure an alleged indebtedness therein mentioned.

That on November 4th, 1904, said sum of $77,307.46 being then due and unpaid, the plaintiff filed in the Clerk’s Office of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County “a claim for lien under and in accordance with the provisions of Article 63 of the Code of Public General Laws of Maryland, against the said building, the ground upon which it is erected and the land immediately adjacent thereto, belonging in like manner to the owners of said building or buildings, which is necessary *359 for the ordinary and useful purposes of said b'uilding or buildings and the convenient use of the same for the purpose for which the same was or were designed,” and that said lien claim was filed therewith as Exhibit A.

The prayer of the bill was that the land so conveyed to Weddell should be declared to be held in trust for said Perky and for said P'ilston Farm Company, and be so brought within the whole tract of which it was alleged to be a part, and was intended to be devoted to the use and maintenance and convenience of said school building or buildings.

The lien claim filed described by metes and bounds a number of tracts of land containing in all about 1700 acres conveyed at different times and by different persons, some to said Perky and said Filston Farm Company and some to said Weddell, by ten distinct conveyances, some of which embraced several distinct tracts or parcels of land. The amount claimed is thus stated:

Total price of original contract:— $64,357.00
Amount of extras,— 27,372.46
Credits July 11, 1904, $1,833,44 $91,729.46
Credits Aug. 11, 1904, 12,588.56 14,422.00
$77,307.46

But no copy of the conti act was filed with the bill, nor were its provisions set forth or referred to therein.

The defendants Perky and the Filston Farm, filed a joint answer accompanied by a copy of the contract. The answer denied that the sum claimed, or any other sum whatever, was due under the terms of said contract, and alleged that the P'ilston Farm was at the time of the execution of the contract, and still continued to be, the sole owner of the land upon which said buildings stand and of all the other land immediately adjacent thereto, and necessary for the ordinary and useful purpose thereof; also that one of said other tracts attempted to be included in said lien was used as a residence by Mr. Perky, and the remainder were used for farming and *360 stock raising, a portion being in timber,-and were so intended to be used. It admitted that Weddell had no substantial interest in the property conveyed to him as alleged in the bill, and declared that it was purchased by Perky and wholly paid for by him and had since been conveyed to him by said Weddell, and that they were purchased to be used in connection with other buildings designed to be erected on one of said tracts near the line of the railroad, at a point distant more than one mile from the building erected by the plaintiff. It alleged that the mortgage to Joseph Fels mentioned in the bill was made by the Filston Farm alone, of land, belonging exclusively to it, and that it was made in good faith to secure an actual indebtedness. It alleged that the plaintiff had wholly failed to fulfill the terms of said contract, and charged that the buildings because of bad workmanship and improper materials done and provided by the plaintiff, were defective and unsafe, and could not be used for the purposes for which they were designed; that the plaintiff refused, after due notice by the architect under said contract, to make said work and materials conform to said contract, and stopped all work thereon on October 22nd, 1904, and since then had made no effort to complete the work as required by said contract. It alleged that the contract provided that payments should be made only on certificates of the architects, and that the architects had certified to the defendants that no money is due to the plaintiff by reason of faulty and unsafe construction, and that all certificates that were given by said architects had been promptly paid. It alleged with reference to the claim for extras that all bills for materials and labor were required to be approved by the architects, before any money should be due and payable therefor, and that no bills for any of such extras have ever been presented to or approved by said architects, and that a large part thereof is defective and improper and has been duly rejected by said architects, but the plaintiff has refused to make the same good.

The other defendants, Weddell and Fels, adopt this answer as their own.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 A. 228, 106 Md. 335, 1907 Md. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/filston-farm-co-v-henderson-co-md-1907.