Miller v. Trustees of Trinity Union Methodist Episcopal Church

101 A. 106, 40 R.I. 456, 1917 R.I. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 3, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 101 A. 106 (Miller v. Trustees of Trinity Union Methodist Episcopal Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Trustees of Trinity Union Methodist Episcopal Church, 101 A. 106, 40 R.I. 456, 1917 R.I. LEXIS 41 (R.I. 1917).

Opinion

Vincent, J.

This is a petition to establish, a mechanic’s *457 lien upon land and buildings belonging to tbe Trinity Union Methodist Episcopal Church. The cause comes before this court upon the petitioner’s appeal from a final decree of the Superior Court denying and’dismissing his petition. The petitioner’s claim is for certain extra-work and materials furnished by him in the construction of a certain building owned by the respondents.

It appears that the Thomas F. Cullinan Company entered into a written contract with the Trustees of Trinity Union Methodist Episcopal Church to erect a certain building, for Sunday school purposes, upon the premises owned by them and located -at the corner of Bridgham street and Trinity Square in the city of Providence; that the contract for the painting was sublet by the Cullinan Company to Charles Miller, the present petitioner; that the petitioner delivered certain materials and commenced work under his painting contract on May 3,1915, and rendered his bill to the Cullinan Company for $1,000, which ‘was the entire amount of the contract price; that the petitioner on the 4th and 5th days of October, 1915, performed certain extra work and supplied certain extra materials amounting to $32.86, rendering a bill therefor on October 11, 1915; that the petitioner performed some work around a doorway in the church, a building adjoining the Sunday school building and standing upon a separate and -adjoining lot of land; that the Sunday school, while being erected was connected with the church by a corridor, electric wires, water and steam pipes, etc.; that a notice of intention to claim a mechanic’s lien was served on the respondent on November 5, 1915, and on the same day a copy thereof was placed on record in the office of the recorder of deeds in Providence; that the petitioner on January 6, 1916, lodged his account or demand in the office of said recorder of deeds and filed his notice setting forth the land and to whose interest therein the account or demand referred for the purpose of commencingTegal *458 proceedings; that the petitioner afterwards lodged in the office of said recorder of deeds three other accounts or demands each of which was followed by a notice setting forth the land and to whose estate the account or demand referred for the purpose of commencing legal proceedings. These accounts were filed respectively on January 34, 1916, February 25, 1916, and February 29, 1916; that on March 1, 1916, within twenty days after the lodging of the fourth account, and the demand and notice, the petitioner filed in the office of the clerk of the Superior Court-for Providence County his petition to enforce said claim of lien, attaching thereto notice of the last account or demand filed under date of February 29, 1916; that notice of the filing of said petition was duly given by the clerk of the Superior Court for Providence County.

All these accounts were filed within the statutory period of six months from the commencement of the work and the furnishing of the materials which are the subject of the claim, and the petition to enforce the lien was filed in the clerk’s office of the Superior Court within twenty days after the lodging of the fourth account, demand and notice.

(1) The respondent claims that the petitioner is seeking to enforce a joint lien on two separate buildings, that is, that the Sunday school building, although connected by means of a corridor, electric wires, water and steam pipes, etc., is, in contemplation of the statutory provisions, two separate buildings and that the petitioner’s account lodged with the recorder of deeds fails to separate and specify which items apply to the Sunday school building and which apply to the church building. The respondent also claims that the petitioner cannot be permitted to file more than one account within the required period of six months from the commencement of the work or, in other words, that the second, third and fourth accounts filed must be regarded as amendatory of the first *459 account filed on January 6, 1916, and that being so the petition to enforce a lien was not filed in the office of the' clerk of the Superior Court within twenty days after the commencement of legal proceedings.

The respondent, admitting for the purpose of argument that the petitioner may abandon the first three accounts filed by him for the purpose of commencing legal process and can rely upon the fourth account filed February 29, 1916, contends that such fourth account is fatally defective in that it does hot specify which items are chargeable to'the Sunday school building and which items are chargeable to the church building.

The estate of the respondent at the corner of Bridgham street and Trinity Square comprises two adjoining lots of land, one having been conveyed to it March 14, 1864, and the other November 10, 1909. The church building, so-called, is situated upon the first named lot and the Sunday school building upon the other lot. These buildings are used by the respondent for the purpose of conducting and carrying on its usual and customary church work and the two structures are, for more convenient use, connected by a passageway providing an easy and unexposed means of communication from one to the other. Light, heat and water are supplied to the Sunday school building by means of wires, steam and water pipes extended from the church building through the connecting corridor before mentioned.

The respondent has cited Section 7, Chapter 257, General Laws of 1909, and also several Rhode Island cases in support of its contention that the account is defective in not specifying the items chargeable to each building. In order to extend to these authorities any applicability to the case before us it would be necessary to reach the conclusion that the church and Sunday school buildings were separate and distinct structures. In Bouchard v. Guisti, 22 R. I. 591, the notice failed to state that the materials *460 were furnished for any building or improvement at all.

In McElroy v. Keily, 27 R. I. 64, it was held that the petitioner should have filed a separate notice of his intention to claim a lien upon, each house and a separate account for each house of the material furnished and used in it. In that case, as the court said in its opinion, ‘ ‘ The houses were exactly alike but were liot joined together in a block, but separated and adapted to be occupied each with a separate curtilage.”

In Butter & Co. v. Rivers, 4 R. I. 38, the petitioner proceeded against two several estates having distinct owners and sought to charge both estates for the work and materials furnished for each, as the court said, “ in effect to make one of them chargeable with work and materials expended upon the other.”

In McDuff Coal & Lumber Co. v. Monaco, 32 R. I.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 A. 106, 40 R.I. 456, 1917 R.I. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-trustees-of-trinity-union-methodist-episcopal-church-ri-1917.