Jim Carpenter Co. v. Ross Brothers Builders, Inc.

36 Va. Cir. 257, 1995 Va. Cir. LEXIS 1249
CourtStafford County Circuit Court
DecidedApril 18, 1995
DocketCase Nos. (Chancery) 91000095 and 91000098
StatusPublished

This text of 36 Va. Cir. 257 (Jim Carpenter Co. v. Ross Brothers Builders, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Stafford County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jim Carpenter Co. v. Ross Brothers Builders, Inc., 36 Va. Cir. 257, 1995 Va. Cir. LEXIS 1249 (Va. Super. Ct. 1995).

Opinion

By Judge James W. Haley, Jr.

In this materialman’s lien proceeding involving two subdivision lots in Stafford County, the Defendants have filed twenty-one exceptions to a Commissioner’s Report. Most are redundan!. A rational organization shows there are only actually seven exceptions, which are addressed as follows.

(1) Defendants maintain Ross Brothers Builder’s, Inc., and Plaintiff over time entered into a series of individual “informal, unilateral contracts,” represented by 54 invoice tickets, and that therefore the major portion of Plaintiff’s claim is time barred by the 90 day limitation of Va. Code § 43-4.

The evidence makes clear that Defendants’ position is unfounded. The invoice tickets and job sheets (which the court finds were properly admitted in evidence) show allocation of specific materials to specific lots on specific dates and identified by specific account numbers. This evidence, in conjunction with the testimony of Alan Ford, Plaintiff’s employee, demonstrates, as the Commissioner found, that this was a “classic open account” contract, Addington-Beaman Lumber Co. v. Lincoln Savings and Loan, 241 Va. 436, 439, 403 S.E.2d 688, 690 (1991), not a series of [258]*258individual unrelated contracts. In addition, there is no evidence that any of the materials supplied were “extras” or “replacement materials,” American Standard Homes Construction v. Reinecke, 245 Va. 113, 120-121, 425 S.E.2d 515, 518 (1993), or were “correction of previous or warranty repairs,” Dominion Trust Co. v. Kenbridge Constr. Co., 248 Va. 393, 395, 448 S.E.2d 659, 660 (1994), or were supplied otherwise than in the normal course of business.

Accordingly, Defendants’ exceptions on this point are overruled.

(2) Defendants maintain that the inclusion of “a statement declaring [lienor’s] intention to claim the benefit of a lien,” as required by Code § 43-4, in the affidavit recorded with the memorandum of lien, rather than in the memorandum itself, does not constitute substantial compliance as authorized by Code § 43-5. (It is interesting to note that a statement of the lienor’s intent to claim a lien is included in neither the memorandum nor affidavit form set forth in Code § 43-5.)

Circuit court opinions cited by Defendants are not persuasive, because in each the statement declaring the lienor’s intent was not included in either the memorandum of lien or the affidavit.

This court concludes that the inclusion of the lienor’s intention to claim a lien in the affidavit attached to and recorded with the memorandum of lien constitutes substantial compliance. Thus, Defendants’ exceptions on this point are overruled.

(3) Over the objection of Defendants, the Commissioner admitted into evidence photocopies of the two memoranda of lien with affidavits attached, with each certified as a “copy teste” by a deputy clerk of the circuit court. The basis of the objection was that Code § 8.01-391 permits die introduction of photocopies, but the certification must be original, not a photocopy. This objection appears well-founded, but it is not dispositive of the exception that there was a failure of proof as to the validity of die memoranda and affidavits themselves.

In Ms report, the Commissioner states that during the tide examination he performed he scanned line by line the original recorded memoranda and affidavits in the land records and found them to be identical to the photocopies introduced, save the certification clause. Based upon this examination, the Commissioner concluded they were valid and properly recorded.

Defendants object to the Commissioner’s examination of the land records on this and other points, as “not part of the record in this case.”

[259]*259Among the inquiries directed to the Commissioner by the Decree of Reference were the following:

2. Whether the Memorandum of Mechanic’s Lien was properly filed, recorded, and instituted? ....
5. The commissioner shall further report such other matters as may be germane to the issues raised by the pleadings and requested by the parties to this suit, their counsel, or the Commissioner .... [Emphasis supplied.]

This exception, that is, an objection to a Commissioner in Chancery examining the land records of the Circuit Court in execution of his duties in responding to a Decree of Reference, is unique to this court. It has been the experience of this court that Commissioners historically and routinely examine land records in chancery matters referred to them, such as partition suits, creditor’s bills, and related matters. But that experience does not constitute the law.

hr Lite’s Equity Pleading and Practice, § 6, p. 3 (3d ed. 1952), the commentator, Edwin B. Meade, states that: “The chief function of the... commissioner ... is as ... the investigator of special matters of fact involved in litigation before the court . . . and in creditor’s suite, the ascertainment of liens and their priorities.” (Emphasis supplied.)

In Barton’s Chancery Practice, vol. 1, ch. 32, n. 2, pp. 716-717 (3d ed. 1926), Robert T. Barton, Jr., cites 4 Minor, Institutes, part 2, p. 1472, for the proposition that a commissioner is “the agency employed by the court of chancery to adjust and settle accounts, and also to make other complex inquiries.”

hi Atkinson v. Sotenberger, 112 Va. 667, 669, 72 S.E. 727, 729 (1910), tire Supreme Court of Appeals stated:

The general direction found in the decree that the commissioner shall report any other matter deemed pertinent by himself or required by any party in interest does not warrant departure from the rule of practice adverted to, but it is merely incidental to the questions specifically raised [emphasis supplied].

Finally, Rule of Court 2:18(b) authorizes a Commissioner in Chancery to "require the production before him of evidence of all matters embraced in the decree of reference, including the production of all... documents and writings applicable thereto ....” [Emphasis supplied.]

[260]*260From the foregoing this court concludes that a Commissioner in Chancery on his own initiative may examine the land records of the appropriate Circuit Court, providing that the evidence so disclosed is relative to and reasonably encompassed within the Court directed inquiries contained in the Decree of Reference to which the Commissioner has been ordered to respond, hi this case it is obvious that the Commissioner’s examination of the memoranda and affidavits of lien in the Clerk’s Office were well within these parameters. Accordingly, even if the Commissioner improperly admitted the photocopies in evidence, any error in so doing was rendered harmless by the Commissioner’s subsequent examination of the land records themselves. Defendants’ exceptions addressed to this point are overruled.

(4) Defendants maintain the trustees and beneficiary of an antecedent credit line deed of trust encumbering Lot 54 are necessary parties not joined. Mendenhall v. Cooper, 239 Va.

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

Related

Sprott v. Sprott
355 S.E.2d 881 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1987)
Jarvis v. Tonkin
380 S.E.2d 900 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1989)
Hill v. Hill
318 S.E.2d 292 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1984)
Mendenhall v. Douglas L. Cooper, Inc.
387 S.E.2d 468 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1990)
American Standard Homes Corp. v. Reinecke
425 S.E.2d 515 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1993)
Addington-Beaman Lumber Co. v. Lincoln Savings & Loan Ass'n
403 S.E.2d 688 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1991)
Walt Robbins, Inc. v. Damon Corporation
348 S.E.2d 223 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1986)
Morris v. United Virginia Bank
377 S.E.2d 611 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1989)
Dominion Trust Co. v. Kenbridge Construction Co.
448 S.E.2d 659 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1994)
Atkinson v. Solenberger
72 S.E. 727 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 Va. Cir. 257, 1995 Va. Cir. LEXIS 1249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jim-carpenter-co-v-ross-brothers-builders-inc-vaccstafford-1995.