Alfred Richards Brick Co. v. Trott
Alfred Richards Brick Co. v. Trott
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court:
The bill in this case was filed to enforce payment of a balance due on a lien claimed for ■ materials furnished for
The bill was filed against the defendant, Trott, and his alienee, Samuel E. Rabbitt, and Charles W. Handy and Charles C. Glover, trustees, to whom had been conveyed part of the ground and buildings included in the lien claim, the part so conveyed in trust being lot 135 in subdivision, etc., and James Edgar Smith, the holder of the debt intended to be secured by the said deed of trust. It is alleged that the sale and conveyance of lot 135, by Trott to the defendant Rabbitt, was subject to a previous deed of trust thereon to Handy and Glover.
It is alleged in the bill, by the third paragraph thereof, that the defendant Trott was the owner in fee of certain real estate, known as lots numbers 135 to 142, both inclusive, in Trott’s subdivision of lots number 89, 90, and the east four feet of lot number 91, in McGuire’s subdivision in square number 555, in the city of Washington; and that, being such owner, the said Trott, on or about the 23d of May, 1893, began the erection of eight dwelling houses thereon, of similar size and structure, one upon each of said lots, and substantially completed the same on or about the 23d of January, 1894.
By the fourth paragraph of the bill, it is alleged that the plaintiff contracted with said Trott to furnish him the bricks for the construction of the eight houses on said lots, and that it did, accordingly, between May 23 and September 27, 1893, deliver the bricks, and they were used in the construction of the said houses, to the value of $1,717.97, that’ being the fair value of the same. And by the fifth and sixth paragraphs of the bill, that said Trott failing to pay for the bricks so furnished, the plaintiff became entitled to
It is further alleged, that, on the 4th of September, 1893; while the buildings were in course of erection, the defendant, Trott, conveyed said lot number 135 to the defendants, Charles W. Handy and Charles C. Glover, as trustees, to secure the sum of $1,300, due to the defendant James Edgar Smith; but that said deed of trust was subject to the lien in favor of the plaintiff. And further, that on the 7th of September, 1893, the defendant Trott sold and conveyed said lot number 135 to the defendant Rabbitt.
The relief prayed for is, that the lien may be enforced against the said lot number 135 and the improvements thereon, to the extent of its claim; and that a sale of said premises be decreed; and for such further and other relief as the nature of the case may require.
The defendants having been summoned, but failing to appear and answer, the bill, on the 8th of February, 1895, was decreed to be taken pro confesso as against the defendants Trott, Handy, Glover and Smith; and on the 6th of March, 1895, the bill was also taken pro confesso as against the defendant Rabbit. But the latter order, taking the bill pro confesso as against Rabbitt, was vacated, by order of court, on the 18th of March, 1895, and the defendant was allowed to answer the bill.
It is not alleged, either in the bill or answer, when the other lots, numbers 136 to 142, both inclusive, were in fact sold by Trott, but it is admitted in the answer that the seven-eighths of the lien claim was paid, and was released of record by the plaintiff, as to the seven houses sold, on December 17,1894. The original claim for bricks furnished is made out as an entire claim, without designating any particular house or lot upon which they were to be used; nor is the contract, under which the bricks were furnished, and which is referred to in the notice of lien, made part of the record, and is not, therefore, before the court. The party or parties who purchased the seven lots are not parties to this suit.
To the answer filed by the defendant Babbitt, the purchaser of lot 135, the plaintiff entered a general replication. And thereupon the defendant B,abbitt, by his solicitor,
Upon the case being thus presented, aiid having been argued, the court below, by its decree of the 18th of December, 1899, dismissed the bill, with costs to the defendant Rabbitt.
Upon the case being so disposed of by the court below, and being presented to this court on appeal upon the proceedings just recited, it becomes necessary to determine a question of procedure, arising under the rules of the court below, taken in connection with settled rules of equity pleading, and which may render it proper that the decree dismissing the bill should be reversed, and the cause be remanded for further proceedings.
Equity rule 64, of the court below, provides that, “No cause in equity shall be set down for hearing unless the same be at issue and ready for hearing, or be properly set down for hearing on bill and answer, or bill and answer and replication; and every such cause may be ordered by either party or his counsel to be placed upon the calendar, provided such order be given at least five days previous to the first day of the next term.” And by rule 65 it is declared, that the answer shall not be evidence for the party making it except under certain conditions (which do not exist here), “unless1 the cause be set down on bill and answer only.”
As will be observed in this case, after replication filed by the plaintiff, it was the defendant who set the case down to be heard on bill, answer and replication; and, upon such presentation, the question is, what office does the answer perform, or can it have any effect whatever? It is certainly not within the power of the defendant, by setting the case down for hearing on such state of pleading, to deprive the plaintiff of the right to establish the material facts charged
If the plaintiff concludes to set down the cause for hearing, upon bill and answer, the case is quite different. In that case, it behooves the plaintiff, however, to consider well whether he will rest his case upon the bill and answer, or whether he will reply to the answer; for it must be borne in mind, that, in a hearing upon bill and answer, the answer will be taken to be true in every point and particular, because the defendant has been, by the action of the plaintiff, precluded from substantiating it by proof. The plaintiff should be careful therefore to look attentively into the answer, and see that the effect of the defendant’s admissions is not avoided by any new matter. If such should be the case, he should reply to the answer, and proceed to establish his case by evidence. It may, sometimes, also be found to be necessary to reply to the answer, in order to put the defendant to the proof of the allegations of his
It is very clear, we think, that the cause was improvidently and improperly set down for hearing by 'the defendant, on the bill, answer and general replication; as by setting the case down for hearing on such state of pleading we can not suppose it was the intention of the defendant to waive or abandon his answer, and to submit the case on the allegations of the bill alone. Indeed, the terms of the submission completely negative any such suggestion.
We shall therefore reverse the decree appealed from, and remand the cause that it may be proceeded with in regular order, to the end that it may be heard on its merits, as such merits, if any, shall be properly disclosed.. ,
Decree reversed, and cause remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE ALFRED RICHARDS BRICK COMPANY v. TROTT
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Equity Pleading and Practice; Hearing on Bill, Answer and Replication. 1. A defendant in equity can not, by setting the cause down for hearing on .bill, answer and replication, deprive the complainant of the right to establish the material allegations of the bill, nor deprive him of the right to controvert and disprove the averments of the answer. 2. Where a cause in equity is set down for hearing after the filing of a general replication, the facts alleged in the answer as a defense are denied. 3. On an appeal by the complainant from a decree dismissing his bill after the cause has been set down for hearing by one of several defendants upon bill, answer and a decree pro confesso against the other defendants, it can not be assumed that it was the intention of the defendant to waive or abandon his answer and to submit the case on the allegations of the bill alone, but the decree will be reversed upon the ground that the°eause was improperly and improvidently set down for hearing.