Mason v. Dulaney

124 A. 390, 144 Md. 108, 1923 Md. LEXIS 152
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 11, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 124 A. 390 (Mason v. Dulaney) 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
Mason v. Dulaney, 124 A. 390, 144 Md. 108, 1923 Md. LEXIS 152 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

Pattison J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By ,a written contract made in April, 1918, the appellees, Charles H. Consolvo and one William J. O. Dulaney, bought of R. Brent Keyser, William Keyser, Jr., and Mathilda K. Manly, a tract of land in Baltimore County, known as “Brentwood” with the growing crops and certain property therein mentioned, at and for the sum of twenty-two thousand five hundred dollars; of this sum twenty-five hundred dollars were paid before the execution of the contract, and the balance was to be paid in installments with interest thereon, at the times therein stated.

Included within the grant was the vendors’ right to use “the right of way across the ‘Bank’s1 property’ adjoining the Reisterstown road,” in respect to which the contract contained a provision that if upon examination of the title it w;as found that such right of way did not pass, then, upon the purchasers giving thirty days’ notice of such fact, the amount of the purchase money paid prior to the execution of the contract was to be returned to them and the contract can-celled.

As stated by Consolvo, ,a few days after the signing of the contract Dulaney approached him and said his wife was much pleased with the property and asked Consolvo if he would sell to’ him his interest in it. Consolvo, as he expressed it, “retired” from the transaction and Dulaney “took the place.” He thereafter gave it no concern, and, as he says), he1 thought he was absolutely out of it.

Thereafter, between the tenth and twentieth days of May, the appellant, Randolph B. Mason, a contractor and builder, by appointment with Dulaney, went to the “Brentwood *110 Barm,” and there Dulaney pointed out to him. certain repairs he wished made upon the -dwelling house and stables thereon. In addition to this work, he also made known to Mason that he wished to bnild .a hog house 'and chicken house, but before building these he said he wished to get an approximate price or charge therefor 'and submit it to his partner before having the work done.

A few days thereafter, Mason went to “the bank,” and after consulting some one in the bank, was told that Dulaney “did not rank very well,” but as to Oonsolvo, “do all the Work he wants.” Upon that statement of the financial status of the parties, he says he sent labor and material to “Brent-wood” and did the work mentioned, including the building of the hog house and ehickeu house, which, as we gather from the record, was finished sometime early in August, 1918. The record, however, discloses that he never called on Oonsolvo to learn what Work he wanted done, but he did the work under an agreement with Dulaney alone, because, as he says, he was told Dulaney .and Oonsolvo were the owners of (the property. The work was done and the material furnished under a verbal understanding between Mason and Dulaney by which the former should he paid the cost of material and labor, phis ten per’ cent.

During the progress of the work, bills were rendered every two weeks to Dulaney by Mason, for labor furnished and material used, in which Dulaney was charged therewith, and the payments made thereon were made by Dulaney.

The entire cost of the work and material amounted to' $9,736.68. Of this amount $5,634.68 were, at different times, paid by Dulaney on account, leaving unpaid there'on the sum of $4,102.00.

The appellant at no time saw or had any communication with Oonsolvo in relation to the work and material furnished, and he, when upon the stand, testified that he never saw him until the morning of that day in the court house.

It was Dulaney, as he says, that he “did all the business with for the whole work.” He further said that he made *111 no effort to ascertain by whom the property was owned, but Was told that Dulaney and Oonsolvo had together bought the property.

On the 18th day of October, 1918, Mason notified William J. C. Dulaney, Charles H. Oonsolvo, E. Brent Keyset;, William Keyser, Jr., and Mathilda K. Manly, as owners of the property, of his intention to claim a mechanic’s lien upon it for the balance owing upon the work done and material furnished by him, as above stated. In that notice he stated that he had furnished the labor and material to William J. C. Dulaney under an agreement made by him with Dulaney.

It would seem from the record that there was nothing done, after the execution of the contract, to carry out its provisions, that is to say, neither the deed to the purchasers, nor the mortgage from them, to the vendors mentioned therein, was ever executed.

Dulaney took possession of the property and had the building and repair work done, but, as we understand, nothing more than we have stated was done towards the performance of the contract-.

Some time after the filing of the mechanic’s lien, but just when the record does not disclose, a bill was filed by the vendors, E. Brent Keyser and others, to enforce the payment of their lien by the sale of the property, and in those proceedings a decree was passed on January 6th, 1921, for the sale of the property, with direction that out of the proceeds of sale the costs of the proceedings and the vendors’ lien should first be paid, and the surplus, if any, paid to Mason upon his mechanic’s lien. The proceeds of sale were not more than sufficient to pay the costs of the proceedings! and the vendor’s lien with interest, and consequently nothing was paid on the mechanic’s lien.

At the sale, the property was struck off to one Trehy, acting for Oonsolvo, Who is the admitted owner of the property.

Thereafter, on the 23rd day of July, the suit in this case was brought by the appellant against Dulaney and Oonsolvo *112 ■upon the common counts, to recover the amount said to be due and owing to Mason for the work .and material furnished by him in the construction and repairs madei upon the property in question.

The summons was never served upon Dulaney, and the case went to> trial against Oonsolvo alone, resulting in a verdict for the defendant. It is from that judgment that the appeal in this ease was taken.

In the trial of the case five exceptions were taken to the court’s rulings on the evidence. These, we understand from the appellant’s brief, are abandoned, but if not, we find no reversible error in the rulings on them.

The sixth exception is to the ruling of the court in granting the defendant’s prayer instructing the jury “that the defendant Oonsolvo is not bound by any contract or agreement Which the jury may find the defendant Dulaney made with the plaintiff for repairs or improvements to the property mentioned in the evidence, known as “Brentwood,” unless the making of such contract or agreement was previously authorized or subsequently ratified by the said Oonsolvo, and the jury are further instructed that there is no evidence in this case legally sufficient to show any such authorization or ratification by the said Oonsolvo, and the verdict of the jury should therefore be for the defendant Oonsolvo.”

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Bluebook (online)
124 A. 390, 144 Md. 108, 1923 Md. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mason-v-dulaney-md-1923.