Court Opinion

ID: 6431706
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:08:50.064424+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:13.236027
License: Public Domain

Rugg, C. J.
This is a petition to enforce a mechanic’s lien for labor performed under an entire written contract for labor and material. There was no sufficient statement of the contract price included in that which was filed in the registry of deeds. Hurley v. Lally, 151 Mass. 129. Gogin v. Walsh, 124 Mass. 516. Since these cases were decided, St. 1892, c. 191, now R. L. c. 197, § 6, has been enacted, which provides that “The statement shall not be invalid or insufficient solely by reason of an inaccuracy in stating or "failing to state the contract price, ... if it is shown that there was no intention to mislead and that the parties entitled to notice of the statement were not in fact misled thereby.” It is plain, in view of this statute, that the request for a ruling to the effect that the statement was insufficient as matter of law to support a petition to enforce the lien was refused rightly. Devine v. Clark, 198 Mass. 56. Brown v. Haddock, 199 Mass. 480, 485. Borden v. Mercer, 163 Mass. 7. The evidence is not reported, and the findings of the jury in favor of the contentions of the petitioner must be presumed to have been reached in accordance with correct instructions upon evidence adequate to meet these terms of the statute.
The petitioner received from the respondents $500, and gave a receipt therefor “on account of . . . contract for mason work.” The request for a ruling that this language of the written “receipt was conclusive evidence that the $500 was to be applied to the labor account ” could not have been given properly. Work is used frequently in the sense of an undertaking, enterprise or project, and is not employed necessarily as a synonym for labor. There is nothing in the language of this receipt, which constitutes an appropriation of the payment to the labor account alone. It should be treated as a partial payment on the contract. It did not affect the right of the petitioner to maintain the lien, which he was en*171titled to enforce, for the value of the labor up to an amount not exceeding, with the payments made, the contract price. Casey v. Weaver, 141 Mass. 280. Scannell v. Hub Brewing Co. 178 Mass. 288, 292. R. L. c. 197, § 2.
In accordance with the stipulation filed by the respondents, the lien is to be established for the amount claimed in the account in the statement filed.

So ordered.