Whittington v. Segal

193 A.2d 534, 56 Del. 414, 6 Storey 414, 1963 Del. Super. LEXIS 151
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedAugust 9, 1963
Docket157
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 193 A.2d 534 (Whittington v. Segal) 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
Whittington v. Segal, 193 A.2d 534, 56 Del. 414, 6 Storey 414, 1963 Del. Super. LEXIS 151 (Del. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

*415 Lynch, Judge.

This is a mechanics’ lien action to recover $1,173.76, alleged to be due for certain supplies delivered to real estate located in White Clay Creek Hundred, New Castle County, Delaware, and owned by defendants.

The third paragraph of plaintiff’s Statement of Claim alleges:

“That the labor ami materials hereinafter referred to were performed and furnished by the Plaintiff, Thomas D. Whittington, trading as Whittington’s Sand and Gravel Company, in and for the construction of a driveway on the lands hereinafter referred to, said driveway being used in the operation of a store erected on said lands, and the construction of the said driveway was pursuant to a contract between Thomas D. Whittington, trading as Whit-tington’s Sand and Gravel Company, Plaintiff, and Herman Segal and Helen Segal, his wife, the Defendants, by and through their agent wherein the said Plaintiff was to furnish the labor and materials hereinafter referred to.” (Emphasis supplied)

The Statement of Claim alleged the labor and materials were furnished within the period from September 19,. 1956 to October 12, 1956.

The exhibit attached to the Statement of Claim was in the form of a bill in which Newark Fair, Inc. was named the debtor. The bill identifies “Charles Hammer” as “Tenant” and stated the owner was “Herman Segal”.

The Building Code of New Castle County provides (Section 104.0) : .

“Before any individual, partnership, firm or corporation proceeds with the construction, enlargement, alteration, repair or removal of any building, a permit shall first. *416 be obtained from the Building Inspector. In any case in which the construction, enlargement, alteration, repair or removal of any building is to be done by or at the direction of any individual, partnership, firm or corporation other than the owner, it shall be the duty of the said individual, partnership, firm or corporation to procure the said permit, provided, however, the imposition of this duty upon the individual, partnership, firm or corporation which is to do or direct the doing of the work in question shall' not be interpreted so as to relieve any owner or agent from liabilities or penalties provided for in Section 101.4 of this Building Code. In any case in which the said work is to be done by the owner or under his immediate direction, the duty to procure the permit shall rest upon the said owner solely.”

Section 100.4 of said Code provides:

“Compliance: All buildings and structures shall be constructed, altered, repaired, used or removed and the equipment of said buildings and structures shall be constructed, altered, repaired, used or removed in full compliance with this Code unless exempted by Section 100.5. All such constructions, alterations, repairs or removals shall be performed only by a contractor or an individual-holding a building permit as required below.”

Section 104.2 of said Code provides:

' “It shall be unlawful for any person, firm or corporation, Whether contractor, lessor, agent, or owner, to erect, use, occupy or maintain any building or -structure in violation of any provision of this Code, or to cause, permit, or suffer any such violation to be committed. * *

Penalties are provided in Section 104.21 of the. Code:

: “Any person, firm or corporation guilty of a violation of this Code is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by fine *417 of not more than Two Hundred Dollars ($200.00) for each, offense and the further sum of Ten Dollars ($10.00) for each and every day such violation continues. For the purposes of this section, the violation of any section of this Code shall constitute an individual offense.”

After filing their answer, defendants moved for summary judgment. In this connection the Court has had before it (1) copy of the lease dated July 21, 1956 between the defendants and Newark Fair, Inc., named as lessee, which was signed in its behalf by Charles W. Hammer, as President, and Dorothy Hammer, Secretary; (2) affidavit of Herman Segal; (3) affidavit of Thomas D. Whitting-ton, the plaintiff; (4) affidavit of Charles W. Hammer; (5) affidavit of New Castle County Building Inspector; and (6) the verified Statement of Claim, the pertinent provisions of which are quoted supra, p. 534.

■ ■ Plaintiff opposes the granting of the motion for summary judgment — contending the material before the Court demonstrates the existence of a genuine issue as. to material. .facts. I propose to examine the discovery material that has been placed before me.

The lease, dated July 21, 1956, referred to shows four things:

(a) .The cost of any and all alterations to the interior of. the building and any redecorating or painting thereof; and the maintenance thereof, shall be borne and paid for by the lessee.

■ '(b) Lessors are to be responsible for the costs of structural repairs to the exterior of the premises and for repairs to the roof of the premises; they were not to be “responsible for costs of other repairs whether structural' or otherwise”.

*418 (c) The lessee was to make no major alterations, to the premises “without the consent of Lessor”.

(d) Lessors agreed “they will contribute the sum of Two Thousand Dollars ($2,000.00) to help defray the cost of hard surfacing the parking area surrounding the building herein demised. It is to be noted that plaintiff’s, verified Statement of Claim alleged the work and materials were furnished in the period from September 19, 1956 to October 12, 1956.

The affidavit of Herman Segal stated:

“* * * that premises located in White Clay Creek Hundred, New Castle County, * * * was fully and completely built early in 1955 and was sold during the summer of 1955 to Cherry Lane Market, Inc., at which time a purchase money mortgage in the sum of $35,000.00 was taken by the defendants above named. * * *. The deponent further avers that at the time the lease was entered into between the defendants herein and Newark Fair, Inc. in August of 1956, the building covered by the said lease had long since been fully completed, to wit, in the summer of 1955, and that at the time the parking lot was paved in October 1956, the paving of the lot could not be and was not part of the construction of the above premised.”

The affidavits of Charles W. Hammer and Thomas D. Whittington are less than satisfactory; neither of them states what alterations, repairs, remodeling or improvements were to be made in the period of September 19, 1956 to October 12, 1956. For the most part these affidavits consist primarily of legal conclusions and they set forth no facts and in my opinion they do not meet the tests of an affidavit as found in 2 C.J.S. Affidavits, § 16a (2) and 3 Am.Jur.2d — Affidavits—§§ 20 and 21. I entertain very grave doubt that they meet the test, as *419 stated in 2 C.J.S. Affidavits, § 18 and 3 Am.Jur.2d — Affidavits — § 20, page 397. These affidavits are insufficient.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 A.2d 534, 56 Del. 414, 6 Storey 414, 1963 Del. Super. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whittington-v-segal-delsuperct-1963.