Court Opinion

ID: 4892786
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-02 23:52:36.362501+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:09:47.148079
License: Public Domain

Roberts, Chief Justice.
It is contended by counsel for the appellants that the court erred in refusing to give the charge asked for by the appellants, the object and purport of , which was to secure them a mechanics’ lien, under the law of 1871, whether or not they proved to the satisfaction of the jury that Scott had become bound by contract with them to pay what they were entitled to, under their contract with the contractor Green, for their labor done on Scott’s house.
The act provides, amongst other things, that a mechanic who may labor in the erection of a house improvement, shall have a lien upon the house and upon the lot or land upon which it is situated. To secure the lien he must file and cause to he recorded his contract in the district clerk’s office, *4in the county where the lot or land is situated, within six months from the time when the debt becomes due.
If the contract is verbal, affidavit must be made to duplicate copies, with a bill of particulars, one of which shall be served on the party owing the debt. The said contract or account must be accompanied with a description of the lot or land upon which the lien is claimed. (2 Paschal’s Dig., art. 7112.)
Under this act a mechanic who performs labor on a house, though he be only a sub-contractor or employe of the contractor, may secure a lien upon the house and lot, or land to the extent of fifty acres if it be in the country, by complying with the terms of the law, although there has been no contract about the labor between him and the owner of the lot or land. (Phillips on Mechanics’ Lien, sec. 52.) The law contemplates that he shall file and have recorded the contract that he has made with his employer, and serve the owner of the house with a copy of that, made out as prescribed by tbe statute.
Tins authorizes him to fix a lien upon the house and lot, or land, which may be enforced by a judgment against the owner, subjecting that property to the payment of the debt, but does not authorize him to recover a general judgment in personam, against the owner for the debt claimed, to be collected out of his property generally, as other judgments rendered against him for his own debts. (Phillips on M. Liens, secs. 10 and 305; 1 E. D. Smith, (N. Y.,) 661.)
This act of 1871 does not prescribe any mode of adjusting the amount of the debt as between the mechanic and his employer, the contractor, for which the lien upon the house and lot or land of the owner is to be enforced, such as is provided, before suit, by the act of 1844, where the mechanic seeks to stop the amount of his debt for his labor in the hands of, and to recover it from, the owner of the house upon which the labor is performed. (Paschal’s Dig.; arts. 4595-4598.)
There is no special mode of proceeding pointed out for *5enforcing in the courts this mechanics’ lien on the house and lot or land of the owner under the law of 1871; and therefore the remedy pursued should he in accordance with the general principles and practice relating to the enforcement of liens in our courts. (Phillips on M. L., sec. 315.)
Under this view, it would seem to be appropriate for the sub-contractor, in bringing a suit against the owner to enforce his lien, to make his employer a party, so as to adjudicate the amount of his debt at the same time, unless it had been previously adjudicated. (Phillips on M. L., sec. 312.) And it might also be necessary to make others parties, who had liens, in order to adjust their priority, as well as to settle their validity. (Preston v. Breedlove, 45 Tex., 47; Byler v. Johnson, 45 Tex., 509.)
These suggestions are made on account of the want of any established practice in our courts in the enforcement of the right of lien given in this recent statute of 1871.
The account and memorandum of contract made out, filed, and caused to be recorded by the plaintiffs, was not for a debt due them from Green, the contractor, but from the defendant Scott, the owner of the house and land.
The plaintiffs declared against Scott, the owner, on a contract made by him with them, and on a promise to become directly responsible to them for the price of their labor on the house, and sought to recover a personal judgment against Mm for their debt, as well to obtain a judgment and decree of the court, establishing their mechanics’ lien upon his house and land to secure.his alleged debt due to them.
The plaintiffs, neither in the mode of maMng out their account and specification of contract, nor in the allegations and prayer of their petition, placed themselves in the attitude of sub-contractors or employes of the contractor.
The court therefore correctly refused to give the charge asked for by their counsel, which would havó permitted a recovery, simply on the ground that they did the work as sub-contractors or employes of Green.
*6The evidence, on the trial, might have required such a charge, and it would have been proper to have given it, if the case made by the plaintiffs in their pleadings had warranted it. It was not practicable for the pleadings to have been shaped so as to admit of such a charge, because the contract, filed and recorded to fix the lien, put plaintiffs in the position of contractors, and not sub-contractors or employes of a contractor.
The court, in the charge which was given to the jury, made the plaintiffs’ recovery depend upon them establishing the account and contract with the defendant, that being the contract, filed and recorded to fix a lien, of which defendant had been notified, and which was set out and declared on in the petition.
The evidence in regard to the contract sued on was conflicting, and both sides being well sustained by the testimony of witnesses, the jury had to determine the matter in issue between the parties. Their verdict cannot be disturbed by this court under the well-settled rule on that subject by which it has been governed.
Iff either in the action of the court, nor that of the jury, do we find any good ground of reversal, and therefore the judgment is affirmed.
Aeeirmed.