Hill v. Kaufman

56 A. 783, 98 Md. 247, 1904 Md. LEXIS 2
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 12, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 56 A. 783 (Hill v. Kaufman) 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
Hill v. Kaufman, 56 A. 783, 98 Md. 247, 1904 Md. LEXIS 2 (Md. 1904).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The decree appealed from in this case establishes the validity of a mechanic’s lien claimed by the appellees upon a dwelling on Wiley avenue in Baltimore County, owned by the appellant. The lien is claimed for materials sold and delivered on. the premises to a builder named Eckstine who erected the dwelling upon the appellant’s land under a contract with him.

The bill of complaint was filed by other lien claimants to procure a sale of the dwelling for the payment of their liens upon it, and the appellees were made parties to the case by an order of Court passed pendente lite. The appellant purchased and took assignments of all of the lien claims except that of the appellees which he resisted upon the ground that there had been no service upon him as owner of the property of the notice required by sec. 11 of Art. 63 of the Code. The appellees, after once calling at the appellant’s office and residence and not finding him at either place, had on the same day without' making any further éffort to find him, set up the notice on the premises by nailing it to the door of the house. The vital question presented by the record is whether the setting up the notice on the premises constituted under the circumstances of this case, a sufficient compliance with the requirements of sec. 11 of Art. 63 of the Code.

The appellees, who are dealers in glass, paints, oils, &c., sold to Eckstine the entire supply of such materials used in the erection of the dwelling. These materials were delivered by the appellees to Eckstine at the building from time to time as requested by him during its erection. The first delivery was made on May 18th, 1899, and the last four deliveries were respectively made on August 30th, September 4th, 8th, and 20th, of the same year. The notice was set up on the premises on October 28th, 1899.

*249 The appellees contend that the materials were sold under two contracts and that the delivery made on August 30th, was the last delivery under the first sale, while the appellants insist that all of the materials were sold under one continuous contract although delivered from time to time as requested by Eckstine down to September 20th. If the contention of the appellees be correct, the 28th of October on which they failed to find the appellant at his office or residence, was the last one of the sixty days allowed by the Code for serving the notice on the owner of the premises, and if they had not set up the notice on the premises on that day they would have lost their lien. On the other hand, if the contention of the appellant that all of the materials were sold under one contract be correct the appellees on failing to find the appellant on October 28th, would have had twenty days more in which to have made further efforts to serve the notice on him personally.

It therefore becomes necessary to examine with care the evidence in the record touching the nature of the sale of the materials by the appellees to the appellant. The only oral testimony bearing upon the subject is that of John H. Boland, one of the appellees. He testified that “Eckstine came to our office and informed us he was building this cottage and wanted us to furnish the material he might use in its construction, explained its location and for whom he was building it and stating it was a contract job.’’ “We agreed to furnish him whatever goods he might require at whatever the ruling market prices would be.” That the witness personally had the conversation with Eckstine and that in pursuance of the agreement thus made his firm furnished to Eckstine the materials charged for in their mechanics’ lien claim, amounting to $731.32, that all of the items charged thereon were delivered at the dwelling in question from time to time as ordered by Eckstine either personally or through his brother. The usual shipping tickets, receipted by Eckstine or his brother and in one instance by his foreman, for all of the items charged in the lien claim including those of September 4th, 8th and 20th were produced and put in evidence by the witness.

*250 Upon cross-examination this witness said that his firm had also in a written letter to Eckstine agreed to furnish him all of the material in their line he might want for the erection of the Dr. Hill cottage specifying the price per square foot of the' glass and agreeing to furnish the other articles at market prices and that Eckstine in response “stated we could go ahead and furnish him whatever he may want for the cottage. This was on May 18th, 1899, he made the arrangement-with me.” The witness further testified that he did not retain a copy of the letter to Eckstine, but he produced the estimate book of his firm upon which appeared as of May 18th, 1899, memoranda of an estimate for materials tobe furnished Eckstine for “Dr. Hill’s house.”

The only evidence tending to show that the materials delivered on the three days in September 1899, constituted a separate purchase by Eckstine were the statements by the appellee Boland, in other portions of his testimony that they “were purchased after the time limit, were for extra work and breakage” and that “Eckstine at the time he ordered these goods asked us to keep a separate account as the same were to be charged to some material man who had broken this glass after it had been glazed. ” But Boland’s own counsel, upon his re-examination in chief, called his attention to the fact that he, after having testified that he had given the estimate to Eckstine at his request for all the material he might require for the Hill cottage, had several times in his subsequent answers used the word purchased and the counsel then asked him to “state in detail what purchases were made by Mr. Eckstine for the Hill cottage other than that embraced in the estimate of May 18th, 1899.” To this question then put' to him, Boland replied “By the word purchased I meant that he ordered goods to their respective places to' apply on his purchase of May 18th, 1899.”

It is thus apparent from Boland’s own testimony as finally explained by himself that the contract of May 18th, 1899, between the appellees and Eckstine for materials for the Hill cottage was intended by the parties to it to be an entire and *251 continuous one and to embrace within its operation all of the materials furnished by them to him in that connection. The appellees therefore on the 28th of October when they set up the notice on the premises had twenty days more in which they might have made further efforts to serve it on him personally.

The appellee, Boland, and his then attorney, George G. Hooper, both testified that on the morning of October 28th, 1899, they went together to Dr. Hill’s office in Baltimore City for the purpose of serving the notice on him and he was not in at that time, but they were told that he might return in the afternoon. They went up again to his office in the afternoon and not finding him there they went to his residence on Wiley avenue, about one hundred yards from the cottage on which the lien was claimed, and asked if he was at home. The colored woman who came to the door told them the doctor had gone fox hunting. Mr. Hooper knowing that the doctor had come from North Carolina asked the woman if he had gone to that State and she replied in the affirmative saying at the same time that no other person than herself was in the house.

Boland and Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 A. 783, 98 Md. 247, 1904 Md. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-kaufman-md-1904.