Stockman v. McKee

71 A.2d 875, 45 Del. 274, 6 Terry 274, 1950 Del. Super. LEXIS 131
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 28, 1950
Docket879 & 959
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 71 A.2d 875 (Stockman v. McKee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stockman v. McKee, 71 A.2d 875, 45 Del. 274, 6 Terry 274, 1950 Del. Super. LEXIS 131 (Del. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

*277 Wolcott, Judge.

I will dispose of the three motions before me in the order in which they are set forth in the statement of the nature of the case.

Motion to Strike the Lien in Civil Action No. 879

This motion is predicated upon the contention that the plaintiff is a “contractor” within the meaning of Section 3324, Revised Code, 1935 and, as such, is required to file mechanic’s lien proceedings within 30 days after 90 days of the completion of the work,

The term “contractor” as it is used in the Mechanic’s Lien Law has been defined by the courts of this state. In Carswell v. Patzowski, 4 Penn. 403, 55 A. 342, 1013 the plaintiff, an architect, filed a claim under the Mechanic’s Lien Law for work furnished under contract made with the owner. The court held that an architect was not a “contractor” under the statute. In the course of its opinion, the court defined a “contractor” as one who has made his contract with the owner and who has furnished both work and labor and material.

In Cantera v. Trustees of Eighth Street Baptist Church, 3 Boyce 461, 84 A. 1035, a claim was filed by a plaintiff who performed labor and furnished materials under contracts with the building contractor. The claim was filed by the plaintiff as a “contractor” under the statute. The court dismissed the claim, holding that the plaintiff was not a “contractor” within the meaning of the statute since he had not contracted with the owner. The court accepted the definition in the Carswell case and held that the two *278 qualifications set forth therein were in the conjunctive and that a person to be a contractor within the meaning of the statute must initially have contracted with the owner or reputed owner. •

Both Cantera v. Trustees of Eighth Street Baptist Church, supra, and Carswell v. Patzowski, supra, received the approval of the Supreme Court of this state in Breeding v. Melson, 4 W. W. Harr. 9, 143 A. 23, 24, 60 A. L. R. 1252. The Supreme Court said that “a contractor, within the meaning of the statute, is one who furnishes both labor and materials for the erection of any building, house or structure.” The Supreme Court, in its statement of the definition, did not include the requirement of the existence of a contract between the contractor and the owner. However, its approval of the Carswell and Cantera cases clearly indicates, when coirpled with the language of the statute, that the statement in the Supreme Court’s opinion could not have been meant to exclude the contract relationship between the owner and the person filing a claim as “contractor.”

The rule, therefore, is that a contractor within the meaning of the statute is a person who performs work and labor and furnishes materials for the erection or alteration of a house or structure under a contract, express or implied, with the owners or reputed owners.

The plaintiff urges that in considering the rule laid down in the Carswell and Cantera cases, the underlying cases upon the authority of which the Carswell case was decided must be considered in order to determine the true extent of the rule.

The first of these cases is Mulrine v. Washington Lodge, 6 Houst. 350. In that case, the facts were that the owner of a quarry supplied stone under a contract with a subcontractor for the construction of the building in question. The court, in charging the jury, instructed it that the plaintiff was not a contractor but was *279 a material-man and went on to say that everyone hired to work on and every day laborer employed in building a house is in a sense a contractor to perforin work and labor but that they were not contractors as that word was used in the statute. The term “contractor’’ under the statute was confined “to such persons only who contract to do the whole or any part of the work in the construction of any building or structure and also to furnish the materials required for such contract; and no other than sue! i person is a contractor in contemplation of the act.”

The second case relied on as authority in the Carswell case is Curlett v. Aaron, 6 Houst. 477. In that case, the court defined the word “contractor” as it is employed in Mechanic’s Lien Law as something more than a mechanic and a builder merely and as one who was required by contract to erect, alter or repair either in whole or in part the building referred to, and also as one who was required by contract to furnish in whole or in part the materials required. The court then went on to use language upon which the plaintiff strongly relies. This language is as follows:

“But the laborers and workmen who perform the work, the brickmakers who contract to furnish the bricks, the lumbermen who contract to furnish the lumber, the plasterer who merely contracts to do the plastering, and the hardware merchant who contracts to furnish the nails, locks and bolts for the building, and, in fine, all other contractors, mechanics, workmen and laborers in any way employed in the erection and completion, the repair or alteration of the house, building or structure are not deferred in the filing of their respective claims like the special class of contractors I have before been speaking of, * *

The plaintiff argues that he falls within the class of persons referred to in the quoted excerpt from the opinion of Judge Houston in the Curlett case.

*280 Conceding that if a person falls within the categories mentioned within the quotation from the Curlett case he is required to file his claiin within 90 days from the completion of the labor performed or the materials furnished, the question still remains whether or not the statement of claim in the instant case puts the plaintiff within that category.

The plaintiff’s claim is made up largely of the labor of the plaintiff himself but, in addition, the claim consists of amounts paid to three individuals for their labor and, in further addition, consists of nine items of materials which the plaintiff purchased from other concerns and which were used in the completion of the structure. If the claim were for the labor of the plaintiff alone, there would be merit to his contention that he falls within the category of a laborer or workman and not within the category of contractor under the statute. However, he claims for more than just his labor. He claims for the labor of persons other than himself, and he claims for materials purchased from others which he used for the completion of the structure. He did, in fact, what contractors generally do. He hired labor and paid the labor himself, and he purchased materials to be used in the construction of the structure. Furthermore, he supplied the labor and materials under an implied contract with the owners for the erection of the structure.

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Bluebook (online)
71 A.2d 875, 45 Del. 274, 6 Terry 274, 1950 Del. Super. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stockman-v-mckee-delsuperct-1950.