Pfaff & Smith Builders Supply Co. v. Mason

137 S.E. 356, 103 W. Va. 318, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 62
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1927
Docket5712
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 137 S.E. 356 (Pfaff & Smith Builders Supply Co. v. Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pfaff & Smith Builders Supply Co. v. Mason, 137 S.E. 356, 103 W. Va. 318, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 62 (W. Va. 1927).

Opinion

Lively, Judge:

The validity of a materialman’s lien is here involved.

The Charleston Baptist Church through its Trustees, Thomas J. Mason and others, contracted the erection of its church with Ring-Hartman Company, a corporation, which gave bond with defendant, Standard Accident Insurance Company as surety for the faithful performance of the contract and to indemnify against mechanics and materialman’s liens. Later Pfail & Smith Builders Supply Company instituted this suit in the Court of Common Pleas to enforce its materialman’s lien, and Metal Products Company, appellant herein, came into the suit by petition to enforce its lien for specially fabricated steel trench covers furnished the contractor, and the validity of that lien is here involved. It amounts to $444.78, including interest at date of 'decree. The decree appealed from, entered July 13, 1926, denied the claim as a lien upon the church property, and required appel *320 lant to pay a proportion of the costs. By order of April 5, 1926, the Circuit Court refused the appeal, being of the opinion the decree of the Court of Common Pleas was plainly right.

The answer of Standard Accident Insurance Company charges that Metal Products Company’s purported lien is invalid; that petitioner failed to perfect its alleged lien; that its notice of lien filed in the County Clerk’s office is wholly insufficient under the statute, as set out in sub-section (b) of Sec. 3, chap. 75 of the Code.

The cause was referred to a Master Commissioner who' reported petitioner’s claim as a valid lien, to which report, exceptions were taken by Standard Accident Insurance Company, and the Court sustained the exceptions. The exceptions are: (1) That said lien was not perfected because no proper notice thereof was recorded in the County Clerk’s office; and because the notice thereof filed in said Clerk’s office and not recorded is insufficient under'the statute; and (2) That the evidence before the Commissioner shows that the material forming the basis of the lien were never used in the building and never became a part thereof. These exceptions thus sustained, formed the issues, and both were decided against appellant.

Was the lien of appellant perfected as required by the statute ?

It appears that appellant is a corporation, and on January 28, 1924, proposed to the Ring-Hartman Company to furnish the trench covers for $420.00 for use in the Baptist Temple Building, which proposal was accepted by Ring-Hartman Company, the general contractor. The trench covers were fabricated in accordance with the plan for the building and were delivered, according to petitioner, inside the building on June 26, 1924. On August 21, 1924, notice was served upon the trustees that certain materials in the nature of steel and iron trench covers had been furnished the general contractor for use in the erection of the building, at a price of $420.00, being for steel and iron trench covers as per specifications; that the same had not been paid, and that a lien was claimed *321 on tbe lot and buildings to secure payment. Tbe statements in the notice were sworn to by tbe president'of tbe corporation; and on August 25, 1924, this notice together with tbe certificate thereto annexed was filed in tbe County Clerk’s office. Tbe Clerk did not spread tbe notice in full upon the Mechanics Lien Record. An index of tbe same was made in the trust deed book indexed as follows: “Baptist Church, Charleston, (Name of Trustee or beneficiary) Metal Products Co., (Book Mch) 1, p. 279, (year of record) 1924, (Description or location) Mch. Lien”. The Mechanics Lien Record showed the following: “(Name of Parties) Metal Products Co. v. Charleston Baptist Church, (Amt. and character of claim) $420.; (When filed) Aug. 25, 1924, (Description of property) 2 Lots corner of Morris and Quarrier Streets, City of Charleston”. The notice itself remained on file, with the notation thereon by the Clerk “admitted to record”. It is stipulated by the parties that such was the usual and customary manner of filing and recording such liens adopted by the County Clerk. On what ground the trial chancellor denied the lien, the decree does not state. The exceptions to the Master Commissioner’s report are that the notice of the lien was defective; and that it was not recorded as the statute requires. The notice served on the trustees on August 21, 1924, contains all that is required by sub-sec. (e) Sec. 3, chap. 75 Code. It clearly follows the statutory form, and the account of the claim therein contained as having been furnished the contractor for the building is as follows: “June 26, 1924, Trench covers as per specifications $420. Balance due $420.” The notice was sufficient. While the notice was not spread in full upon the Mechanics Lien Record by the County Clerk, there was a sufficient recordation as between the petitioner and the owners of the property in order to preserve and perfect the lien. The surety on the contractor’s bond agreed to protect the owners against such liens, and if the validity of the lien against the owners is sustained, the Accident Insurance Company as surety on the bond would be responsible. That delivery of the notice to the County Clerk and by him admitted to record, and the *322 substance thereof recorded preserves the lien as between the parties, is decided in Lumber Co. v. Coal Co., 101 W. Va. 567, handed down May 4, 1926, and in Doss v. Coal Co., 102 W. Va. 470, 135 S. E. 575, decided Nov. 9, 1926. See also Georgia Lumber Co. v. Harrison Construction Co., 103 W. Va. 1, 136 S. E. 399. It will be noted that these cases, just cited, were decided after the decree appealed from was entered on January 13, 1926, by Court of Common Pleas and appeal therefrom refused by the Circuit Court on April 5, 1926. The first exception to the Commissioner’s report should have been overruled. But the second ground of exception to the Commissioner’s report, namely, that the .evidence shows that the materials were never used in the building* and never became a part thereof is urged as barring the alleged lien and as ground for sustaining the decree; and also that the evidence fails to show that petitioner, Metal Products Company, gave notice to the owners that it claimed a lien within 60 days after it ceased to furnish the material for the building. This last point was not made an exception to the Commissioner’s report,-and seems not to have been raised in the lower court. We will consider these two points. The petition avers that petitioner, Metal Products Company, is a West Virginia corporation, and on June 26, 1924, it delivered to Ring-Hartman Company, general contractor for Charleston Baptist Church, certain trench covers as per specifications; that on August 25, 1924, it served its notice of mechanic’s lien, (the notice itself shows it was served on August 21, 1924) and that said notice was filed and recorded in the County Clerk’s office August 25, 1924, in Mechanics Lien Book No. 1, p. 279; that said lien was filed within 60 days from, the time said materials were delivered to said Baptist Church; and suit thereon was begun within 6 months from the filing of the lien, which has not been paid off and discharged.

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Bluebook (online)
137 S.E. 356, 103 W. Va. 318, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pfaff-smith-builders-supply-co-v-mason-wva-1927.