Battle Creek Lumber Co. v. Poland

Michigan Supreme Court
Battle Creek Lumber Co. v. Poland, 150 Mich. 690 (Mich. 1908)
114 N.W. 671; 1908 Mich. LEXIS 801
Carpenter, Hooker, McAlvay, Moore, Ostrander

Battle Creek Lumber Co. v. Poland

Opinion of the Court

Hooker, J.

The above-entitled causes between the same parties were commenced simultaneously to enforce two mechanics’ liens upon two city lots for building material alleged to have been furniáhed for the respective houses. That the defendant is indebted to the complainant for most of the items charged is not denied. The most important question is one of fact, viz., whether two items of April 21, and May 12, 1904, respectively, were ordered by the defendant for, and were used in, the respective houses. If they were, the liens were seasonably filed; otherwise they were not. The bill of April 21st included several items of lumber; that of May 12th, cellar windows for both houses. No witness for the complainant testified that these" articles were delivered at the premises except the complainant’s salesman. On cross-examination he admitted that he had no personal knowledge upon the subject, but relied upon his delivery slips and books, neither of which indicated anything except the ledger, and this one from pencil memoranda made by him subsequent to the posting of the items from the sales-book by a bookkeeper. He admitted that the windows were not used in the houses. On the other hand, the defendant testified that the windows were delivered but were not used; being not the right size. In this he was corroborated by another witness who testified that on September 12, 1904, he ordered windows from another firm, and that those furnished by the complainant were not used in the buildings.

Defendant testified that the April 21st items were delivered elsewhere and went into another house at the corner of Pearl and MeOamly streets. Defendant denied that he gave a positive order for the windows. He testified: *692“Yes, I mentioned to Mm that I hadn’t got cellar sash, and he said, c We’ll send them right up.’ I said, ‘ I can’t give you the dimensions,’ and I didn’t have them. I never gave him the dimensions, nor I never gave him the order.” The circuit court considered this a “ practical admission that he gave the order.” It certainly was not an order for sash that would not fit and we are of the opinion that the complainant had no reason for sending them without first obtaining the measurements.

Complainant’s witness testified that defendant gave the orderfor the windows. He could not tell where it occurred and he did not give the conversation or contradict defendant’s version of the talk. He produced the order book, however, showing an entry of an order for two sash for each house. This, however, did not materially strengthen his testimony, for it was nothing more than self-made evidence of a transaction testified to by him and the defendant which might or might not justify the entry. It was at most a contemporary act which tended to show that he understood that the sash were ordered for the houses.

It is not denied that the defendant is indebted to the complainant, whom he should pay, and we recognize such a fact as a potent force in the administration of justice. But a debtor has his rights, and one is that his property be not held subject to a lien unless the creditor has complied with the statute. In this case the debtor is subject to judgment and execution, but it does not follow that his property is subject to a lien; nor is a court justified in using that fact as a sort of impairment of his credibility. The most that this record can be claimed to show is that the sash were ordered for the houses; that sash suitable for the purpose were never furnished and never used. We are convinced that no order was given that called upon complainant’s salesman to send sash until dimensions should be furnished, and that proper sash were not furnished. The defendant being under no obligation to pay *693for them, they could not well constitute an item that would extend the period for filing k lien.

We think the items furnished on April 21st are open to a similar criticism. It is to our minds satisfactorily proved that these articles were ordered for, delivered at, and used in, a third house. Complainant’s testimony shows that it was giving defendant a general credit, items for several jobs being charged in a single account. It has not produced much evidence to sustain its claim, most of it being deductions from books made by others, or otherwise in its nature hearsay. It let the period for liens on these two buildings expire, with the consequence that it has difficulty in establishing a lien or liens that .would cover the entire account.

The decrees are reversed, and bills dismissed, with costs of both courts.

Ostrander, Moore, Carpenter, and McAlvay, JJ., concurred.

Reference

Full Case Name
BATTLE CREEK LUMBER CO. v. POLAND
Status
Published