Blythe v. Hammond
Blythe v. Hammond
Opinion of the Court
The record discloses no error prejudicial to appellants, as each of appellants, except Phelan, by his petition of intervention and answer, claims a mechanic’s lien only, and on the trial each failed to establish the same. Meyerback’s offer to establish on the trial before the referee an attachment lien upon the fund due from the employer to the contractor was properly rejected as no such claim was set up in his petition. Phelan’s intervention sets up a claim upon the fund due the contractor from the employer by virtue of an attachment lien, but his evidence, as found in the record, fails to show that any writ of attachment was ever properly issued or served in a manner to create a lien upon such fund.
Appellants, therefore, having failed to establish a valid lien upon the structure or money due from the owner to the original contractor, are not either of them in a position, as disclosed by the record, to be injuriously affected by the decree in favor of Blythe and Wetherbee.
If the interveners had any valid attachment liens upon the money due from the owner to the original contractor we can perceive no rational objection to an assertion of the same by
Judgment affirmed.
Concurring Opinion
I concur in the judgment on the grounds stated in the opinion of my associate. But as it is not necessary to the decision, I neither express nor intimate an opinion, as to whether a creditor of the contractor, who has attached in the hands of the owner the money due the contractor, is entitled to intervene in an action brought by a subcontractor to enforce a mechanic’s lien to the extent of the contract price unpaid.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- HENRY BLYTHE v. A. E. HAMMOND, and MEYERBACK, Interveners
- Status
- Published