Green v. Williams

19 L.R.A. 478, 92 Tenn. 220
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 19 L.R.A. 478 (Green v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Williams, 19 L.R.A. 478, 92 Tenn. 220 (Tenn. 1893).

Opinion

LüRton, C. J.

This is an action at law to set •up and enforce a “furnisher’s” lien for materials used upon premises now owned by the appellant, Green. A jury was waived, and there was a judgment declaring the lien.

Wall, the then owner, of the premises, contracted with one Vaughn to make certain repairs •and alterations, and to furnish the materials. Vaughn agreed to take in payment an order on ■one of Wall’s debtors in part settlement, and that Wall should work out the rest of his bill.

Vaughn, on his own credit, contracted with the plaintiff, Williams, for the materials, and that they ■should be delivered on Wall’s premises. Pending the improvements, Wall sold the premises to the plaintiff’ in error. Part of the materials were delivered before this sale and a part after. Upon the completion of the work, Vaughn having failed to pay the subcontractor, Williams, for the materials so furnished, the latter, within the time required by the statute, gave notice of his claim to a lien on the premises both to Wall and Green, Ms vendee.

Wall and Vaughn being insolvent, Williams seeks to enforce his lien as a furnisher against the building to which they were furnished.

It appears that when Green bought he went to [222]*222Vaughn, the contractor, to ascertain whether he claimed any lien as a mechanic, with a view of withholding from his vendor a- sufficiency of the purchase-price to protect himself. Vaughn informed him as to the arrangement with Wall in regard to payment, and assured him that he claimed no lien. Under this assurance the vendee paid the purchase-money in full and took deed.

It is clear that, under this state of facts, Vaughn could not assert any lien as against such a purchaser. But the lien in favor of the furnisher of materials is distinct from, and independent of, that of the original contractor. The statute gives the lien to several classes of persons, and the lien of each depends upon the statute, and is not derived from the right or dependent upon the existence or non-existence of the lien of any other. The contractor may by contract or conduct waive or estop himself. But his subcontractor may nevertheless bring himself within the protection of the, statute, and independently assert a lien for his work or materials.

That Williams sold these materials to the contractor, and upon the personal credit of the contractor, does not prevent the creation of the statutory lien, unless he expressly waived the lien, or has by his conduct estopped himself from its assertion. Nothing of that sort appears in the evidence. Green knew nothing mf Vaughn’s contract for materials with Williams. Williams was equally ignorant of the sale by Wall 'to him. He did [223]*223nothing to mislead the purchaser. He did nothing to cut himself off from the assertion of any lien given him under the statute.

But it-is insisted very earnestly for plaintiff in error that he purchased the property without any •notice of Williams’ claim; that no notice was given him, and the claim remained unregistered until after he had bought and paid for the property. It is also shown that he knew nothing of the delivery of materials after he bought, until after delivery, and after the materials had been worked into the house. The notice required by the statute was given within thirty days after the completion of the contract, and, we may add, within thirty days after the delivery of the last of the materials he had contracted to furnish. This claim was then registered as required by the statute, and suit brought within ninety days. Does the lien begin only when the notice has been given, or does it begin when the delivery of the materials begins ? Hpon the solution of this depends the judgment.

Under the old Act of 1845-6, Ch. 118, carried into Code (T. & S.) as § 1986, the lien given by the Act of 1825, Ch. 37 (being §1981, Code of T. & S.), was extended to every person “employed by such mechanic, founder, or machinist to work on the building, * * * or to furnish materials, if, at the time he begins to work or furnishes materials, he notifies the owner of the property, in writing, of his intention to rely upon [224]*224the lien.” It is clear that, under this original Act, -the lien began token the delivery óf materials began, provided notice was then given. If there was any ■delay in giving • the notice, the lien was lost. Shelly v. Hicks, 1 Sneed, 197.

To meet such a result, § 1980 (T. & S.) was .so amended by the Act of 1881, Chapter 67, Section 2, as to add to it the following:

“ Such' person shall also have a lien, if such written notice is served on the owner during the progress of the work, or after its completion, and before the contractor has been paid, but only to the extent of any 'sum or balance then due or to become due under said contract.”

Here it is seen that the effect of the failure to givé notice of the intent to rely upon the lien at the commencement of the delivery was to limit the lien to the balance due or to become due to the original contractor. This amendment of the ■Code was itself amended by the Act of 1889, Ch. 103, so as to give tlie same lien originally extended to the contractor to all such subcontractors as are mentioned in § 1986, and in the Act of 1881, as should, “ within thirty days after the building is •completed, or the contract of such laborer, mechanic, or workman shall expire, or he be discharged, * * * notify, in writing, the -owner of the property on which the building or improvement is being made * * * * that said lien is claimed; * * * * .Provided, A statement of the amount due for such [225]*225work, labor, or material shall he filed with the County Register; * * * * and this registration- shall be notice to all persons of the existence of the lien.”

By this amendment the limitations of the lien to the balance due the contractor, when the notice was not given before the materials were delivered, was . removed. By the same Act the owner is protected against demands which should come upon him after payment to the contractor, by being permitted to take a bond, and to have summary relief thereon. This Act was construed, and its constitutionality vindicated, in Cole Manufacturing Co. v. Falls, 90 Tenn., 471 et seq.

Row, the Act amended by the two Acts we have cited clearly provided that the lien should begin when the work began, or when the delivery of materials began, provided notice was given of the intent to rely upon the lien before the work began or the delivery of materials began. The effect of the amendment is not to postpone the beginning of the lien, but to postpone the time when the notice may be given of the intent to rely on the lien. The lien begins when the delivery begins. It is lost if notice be not given within the time specified in the statute. Any other construction would defeat the purpose of the Act. If the property, pending the improvements, may pass to a vendee freed from the lien, then it would be likewise subject to judgment and attachment liens, and a mortgagee would acquire a su[226]*226perior right. If this be the meaning of the amendment of 1889, then the persons intended to be benefited by a postponement of the time within which notice must be given of intent to rely upon the lien, have been really injured and misled to their ruin.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 L.R.A. 478, 92 Tenn. 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-williams-tenn-1893.