McNeal Pipe & Foundry Co. v. Howland

16 S.E. 857, 111 N.C. 615
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 16 S.E. 857 (McNeal Pipe & Foundry Co. v. Howland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNeal Pipe & Foundry Co. v. Howland, 16 S.E. 857, 111 N.C. 615 (N.C. 1892).

Opinions

AVERY, J., dissenting. In June, 1886, the defendant Howland contracted in writing with the defendant town of Durham to construct a system of waterworks for said town to supply water for public and domestic purposes. On 3 November, 1886, the plaintiff contracted to sell to Howland the necessary materials, and the same were supplied and used for constructing said waterworks, and the delivery thereof, which was included in the contract, began on 4 December, 1886, and was completed on (616) 7 May, 1887.

In the latter part of 1886 the Durham Water Company was incorporated, and on 1 January, 1887, Howland assigned his contract with the town to the said Durham Water Company, and the company assumed the duties, liabilities and obligations of Howland to said town under the contract aforesaid.

On 19 July, 1887, Howland having failed to pay plaintiff a large part of his indebtedness for materials furnished, the plaintiff filed its claim for the same in the office of the clerk of the Superior Court of Durham, in order to secure a lien as allowed by The Code, secs. 1782-1808. *Page 384 It was admitted that this claim was sufficient in form and comprehensiveness, but it was contended that it was not sufficient to create the lien as claimed by plaintiff. On the day the claim was filed, the plaintiff gave the defendants notice of Howland's indebtedness to it and the filing of its claim and its alleged lien, and demanded of said defendant company that it retain out of the amount due, or to become due from it to the said Howland, on account of the said waterworks, so much as was necessary to pay plaintiff's claim.

The court below adjudged that the lien filed by plaintiff was of no force and effect, and that the same be vacated and set aside, and it was further adjudged that the Durham Water Company recover its costs of plaintiff, and also that plaintiff pay all the cost connected with the filing of the lien. And it was further adjudged that plaintiff recover of the defendant Howland the sum of $16,975.73, with interest, etc. Both parties appealed. We adopt the following opinion, prepared by the late Chief Justice Merrimon, in this case, with such additions thereto as in our judgment are necessary to a full determination of the questions presented to us on appeal. That opinion is as follows:

"The statute (The Code, secs. 1781 to 1808) entitled `Liens,' is remedial, and its clear purpose is to give contractors', subcontractors' and laborers' liens upon property as therein prescribed and provided, to secure the payment of money due for labor done or materials supplied on or about the same. To that end its language, phraseology, and scope are broad and comprehensive. There are few, if any, express exceptive provisions in it, and, in the absence of them, exceptions and limitations affecting such liens cannot be allowed unless by necessary implication. The object is to give a lien on particular property deriving particular benefit in favor of classes of persons whose claims are supposed to have particular merit. All this is made the more manifest by the amendatory statute (Laws 1887, chap. 67). Moreover, numerous decisions of this Court, interpreting this statute, and the amendments thereto, fully sustain the view here expressed.Chadbourn v. Williams, 71 N.C. 444; Wooten v. Hill, 98 N.C. 48; Burr v.Maultsby, 99 N.C. 263.

"Advertising now to provisions of the statute pertinent to the present case, section 1781 thereof provides, among other things, that `every lot, farm, or vessel, or any other kind of property, real or personal, not herein enumerated, shall be subject to a lien for the payment of all debts contracted for work done on the same, or material furnished.' It is *Page 385 further provided that `the lien for work on crops or farms, or materials given by this chapter, shall be preferred to every other lien or incumbrance which attached upon the property subsequent to the time at which the work was commenced or the materials were furnished.' The Code, sec. 1782. It is further provided that `all subcontractors and laborers who are employed to furnish or do furnish material (618) for the building, repairing or altering of any house, or other improvement on real estate, shall have a lien on said house and real estate for the amount of such labor done or material furnished, which lien shall be preferred to the mechanic's lien, now provided by law, when the notice thereof shall be given as hereinafter provided, provided that the sum total of all the liens due subcontractors and material men shall not exceed the amount due the original contractor at the time of notice.' The Code, sec. 1801. In this connection section 1802 provides that `any subcontractor, laborer or material man who claims a lien as provided in the preceding section, may give notice to the owner or lessee of the real estate who makes the contract for such building or improvement at any time before the settlement with the contractor, and if the said owner or lessee shall refuse or neglect to retain out of the amount due the said contractor under the contract as much as shall be due or claimed by the subcontractor, laborer or material man, the subcontractor, laborer or material man may proceed to enforce his lien, and after such notice is given no payment to the contractor shall be a credit on or discharge of the lien herein provided.' It is further provided in section 1789 that `notice of the lien shall be filed as hereinbefore provided at any time within twelve months after the completion of the labor, or the final furnishing of the materials, or the gathering of the crops, provided that in cases of liens on real estate or any interest therein, given by this chapter, the notice shall be filed in the office of the Superior Court clerk within twelvemonths after the completion of the labor or the final furnishing of the materials.' When the claim is so filed within twelve months, the lien relates back to the time at which the work was commenced or the materials were furnished, and is preferred to all liens or incumbrances created to that time. The Code, section 1782; Burr v. Maultsby, supra, and cases there cited. And this is so, although the subsequent incumbrancer had no notice of the lien thus relating back.

"The clause of the statute (The Code, sec. 1781) first above (619) recited, declares that `every lot, farm or vessel, or any kind of property, real or personal, not herein enumerated, shall be subject to a lien for the payment of all debts contracted for work done on the same, ormaterials furnished.' This phraseology and the purpose of it are comprehensive. The lien prescribed attaches, in the case provided for, toany real property, whether it be denominated `a lot or farm,' or a *Page 386 storehouse site, a mill site, a water reservoir site, or the like. The lien arises in favor of and to secure the payment of any and `all debts contracted for work done on the same, or materials furnished.' By the term `material furnished,' is meant something furnished to be appropriated, used and pertinently applied on the land, devoted to some purpose, no matter what, so that the purpose be lawful. The purpose is to secure the debt contracted for materials furnished on or about or connected with the land in connection with the purpose to which it is devoted, in whole or in part. The debt so contracted becomes a lien, a charge upon the land, and that land may, if need be, be sold, or in some appropriate way applied to the payment of the debt secured by and constituting the ground of the lien.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 S.E. 857, 111 N.C. 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcneal-pipe-foundry-co-v-howland-nc-1892.