Lewers & Cooke, Ltd. v. Wong Wong

24 Haw. 39, 1917 Haw. LEXIS 16
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1917
DocketNo. 1034
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 24 Haw. 39 (Lewers & Cooke, Ltd. v. Wong Wong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewers & Cooke, Ltd. v. Wong Wong, 24 Haw. 39, 1917 Haw. LEXIS 16 (haw 1917).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

ROBERTSON, C.J.

This case, which is one to enforce a material-man’s lien, was before this court upon certain reserved questions which were certified up in connection with a demurrer to the complaint which was then pending in the circuit court. 22 Haw. 765. After that, the demurrer having been overruled, an answer was filed by the defendants Rosenbledt and Harrison. The Honolulu Skating Rink, Limited, defaulted, and Wong Wong confessed judgment in open court. Trial was had upon the issues raised by the answer of Rosenbledt and Harrison, and at the conclusion of the evidence for the plaintiff the court granted a nonsuit upon the grounds (1) that it affirmatively appeared that the contractor, Wong Wong had paid the plaintiff in full for all the material which had been supplied and used in the building in question, and (2) that there was no proof that the plaintiff had made a demand upon the owners against whose property the lien was sought to be established, after the notice of lien had been filed and before this proceeding had been commenced, for the sum due. The plaintiff brings exceptions.

We take up the second ground first. The argument made on behalf of the appellant is that demand by a subcontractor or material-man upon the owner is not required to be shown; that if the statute requires that such demand be made, it being for the advantage of the owner may be waived by him, and in this case demand was waived by Rosenbledt and Harrison. It is also contended that this court [41]*41in passing on the reserved questions decided for all purposes of this case that the plaintiff’s complaint set forth a valid cause of action, and that as a demand upon the owners had not been alleged none need be proved. The record shows that prior to the reserving of the questions by the circuit court a plea in abatement had, -by stipulation of the parties, been withdrawn and a demurrer filed upon agreement that a copy of the lease between Kosenbledt and Harrison, as lessors, and the skating rink company, as lessee, which was attached to the stipulation, should be considered by the court in connection with the complaint and the demurrer thereto. In addition to the general ground that the complaint did not set forth facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, certain special grounds were stated, namely, that it appeared by the complaint that there was no contractual relation between the plaintiff and the defendant lessors, that the lessors were not “owners” within the meaning- of section 2863 of the Revised Laws, that their interest in the land was not subject to a lien for materials furnished to their lessee, that the lessors had no interest in the subject-matter of the suit, and that there was a misjoinder of parties defendant. The point that the complaint did not allege a demand on the defendants other than Wong Wong, the contractor, was not specially raised. The stipulation contained the statement that “The object of this stipulation is to submit to the circuit court and the supreme court the question whether the plaintiff’s bill of complaint in connection with said lease constitutes a good cause of action against the defendants Rosenbledt and Harrison.” But the questions actually reserved for the consideration of this court were not as broad as the demurrer. As shown by our former opinion the questions went to the single point “whether the plaintiff’s lien attaches to the interest of the lessors, as well as that of the lessee, in the land upon [42]*42which the building was erected.” The questions might well have been returned unanswered, as being an attempt to try a case by piecemeal. Rumsey v. N. Y. Life Ins. Co., 23 Haw. 142. Nevertheless, we went on and answered the questions in the affirmative. The question whether plaintiff’s complaint was demurrable for the lack of an allegation of a demand on the owners, not having been presented for our consideration, was not passed npon either expressly or impliedly. We hold that the point as to no demand on the owners was properly raised as a ground for a. nonsuit.

Section 2867 of the Revised Laws provides that “The liens hereby provided may after demand and refusal of the amount due, or upon neglect to pay the same upon demand, he enforced by proceedings in any court of competent jurisdiction, by service of summons, as in other cases.” That provision, in the case of Lewers & Cooke v. Fernandez, 23 Haw. 744, was held to apply in a proceeding instituted against an owner and a contractor by a material-man, the court expressing the view that after notice of lien is served demand upon the owner for the amount claimed under the lien is a condition precedent to the enforcement of the lien. It is contended that that case was incorrectly decided; that it is in conflict with the decision in Hopper v. Lincoln, 12 Haw. 352; and that it is inconsistent with the ruling made in the former decision in the case at bar to the effect that the mechanics’ liens statute, in its remedial aspect, is to be liberally construed. The opinion in Hopper v. Lincoln states that “The only question raised by the exceptions is whether an execution could properly issue upon a judgment for the enforcement of the lien against the property covered by it.” The provision of the statute relating to demand was not involved or referred to in that case. And this is true also of the case of Allen & Robinson v. Redward, 10 Haw. 151, [43]*43which is cited in the appellant’s brief. In two cases cited by the appellant, Steel Bridle-Siding Co. v. Muskegon M. & F. Co., 98 Mich. 616, and Duckwall v. Jones, 156 Ind. 682, it was held that a demand before filing suit is not necessary. But in neither of them does it appear that the statute required that demand should be made. In the former opinion in this case it was held that the prescribed requirements which are to be met by persons who may assert the lien must be strictly complied with, and the conditions which give rise to the lien must be clearly shown to exist, but that the remedial portions of the statute should be liberally construed. The making of the demand required by section 2867 lies between those conditions which must be met in order to give rise to the lien and the proceedings for its enforcement. But granting that it falls within the remedial- aspect of the statute, the rule of liberal construction would not warrant the court in ignoring the requirement. Though there is some fo°rce in the argument that a demand by a material-man upon the owner for money due from the contractor ought not to be required, and that service upon the owner of a copy of the notice of the claim fully serves the purpose of apprising him of the nature of the claim and its amount, we believe the reasoning in Lowers & Cooke v. Fernandez to be sound. It is contended that a demand, though required by statute to be made, is a matter for the benefit only of the owner and may be waived by him, and that demand was waived by the owners in this case by their failure to demur on the ground of the absence of an allegation of demand and the filing of an answer denying all liability. A liberal construction of the statutory requirement would require a holding that demand may be waived, by the owner, but we are unable to sustain the contention that a failure to demur and the filing of an answer of general denial constitutes a waiver. The making of the demand is a [44]*44condition precedent to the commencing of the proceeding for the enforcement of the lien. It should be alleged in the plaintiff’s complaint as having been made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 Haw. 39, 1917 Haw. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewers-cooke-ltd-v-wong-wong-haw-1917.