Court Opinion

ID: 7894831
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 21:51:51.757414+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:32:02.364153
License: Public Domain

Miller, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a proceeding in equity to enforce a mechanics’ lien for bricks furnished in the erection and construction of a certain house, of which the appellant was owner or reputed owner. The bill of particulars or account accompanying the lien claim and filed with it, is made out against the appellant, and shows items for bricks commencing on the 17th of June, 1873, and the last item charged is of the 7th of October, 1873. This account also shows that items consisting of common bricks were charged as having been furnished and delivered at short intervals between the 17th of June and the 12th of July. There is then a long interval to the 6th of October, when *356on that and on the following day there are two charges for paving bricks amounting to $18. The lien claim was filed on the 16th of March, 1874, within six months after the date of the last item, but more than six months after the 12th of July, 1873.
One of the principal defences relied on is that the common or house bricks were furnished by the complainants under a contract with one Wilson, and not with Watts, the appellant, and that the latter contracted with the complainants only for the two items of paving bricks, and hence there can be no lien on account of the furnishing of the common bricks, inasmuch as the claim for them was not filed in time. This is without doubt a good defence if sustained by the proof; for it is well settled that if materials are furnished under distinct contracts, though to be used for the same purpose, or by the contractor in executing one and the same contract with the owner, the right to take the lien must date from the time of furnishing the different parcels of material, and not from the last item in the account. German Lutheran Church vs. Heise & Co., 44 Md., 470. We have examined the evidence in the record, and our conclusion from it is that the bricks, or at least the common bricks, were furnished under a contract with Wilson, and that Watts only ordered the two items of paving bricks. The preponderance of testimony is to that effect, Wilson and Watts both so testify. Amos, one of the complainants, testifies to the contrary. In this state of direct conflict in the testimony, we must accept that of the two witnesses as entitled to the greater weight, unless we can clearly see they are mistaken or that their testimony is false, and that conclusion we have been unable to reach from anything that appears in this record. It follows there can be no lien for the materials furnished in June and July.
For those furnished in October we think a. lien does exist. The appellant’s counsel has contended that these paving bricks were used in paving a walk around the *357house on which the appellant originally designed to plant grass plats, and that this pavement formed no part of the house or of the way of egress or ingress to it, and was not essential or incidental to the proper enjoyment of the house as a. building or mansion, but was merely a matter of caprice or taste; and he insists that for such an ornamental improvement no lien is given by the statute. But whether there can be a lien for an improvement of this chanacter around a house we do not propose to decide in this case. In order to raise that question, it must appear that the party furnishing the materials knew they were to be used, or contracted to furnish them, for such a purpose. There is no evidence in the record to sustain that position. The only thing proved is that paving bricks were ordered and furnished for this house, and these may as well be used for purposes essential to the building as for an ornamental pavement. Besides, it is well settled, that if there be a bona fide sale and delivery of materials for a building, it is immaterial whether they were used in its construction or not. Greenway vs. Turner, 4 Md., 296.
(Decided 26th March, 1878.)
As to the objection that the claim for these paving bricks cannot be more than twenty dollars, which is a sum below the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court, that is answered by the provisions of the law that any person furnishing work or materials, or both, shall be entitled to the lien “without regard to the amount of his claim,” (Code, Art. 61, sec. 14,) and that the proceedings to recover the amount of any lien shall be by bill in eguiiy or by scire facias. Code, Art. 61, sec. 24.
It follows that the decree appealed from must be reversed and the cause remanded in order that the decree may be so modified as to establish and enforce a lien for the materials furnished on the 6th and 7th of October, 1873.

Decree reversed, and cause remanded.