DocketNumber: No. 94
Citation Numbers: 72 Pa. 355
Judges: Agnew, Read, Sharswood, Thompson, Williams
Filed Date: 11/18/1872
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 2/17/2022
The opinion of the court was delivered, by
— We are asked in this case to reverse our decision at the last term upon the Act of 17th February 1858, in the case of The Brick Machine Co. v. Moore’s Administrators.
This case has been argued as if our decision in Brick Machine Co. v. Moore’s Administrators, confined the operation of the Act of 1858 to leases of coal-lands or collieries. This is an error. The point decided was that the act did not extend the mechanics’ lien law to the “ creation of liens upon ordinary houses or dwellings of tenants, independently of the works indicated By the other expressions used in connection with the wrord improvements,” viz., engines, pumps, machines, screens, &c. As an argument to show that private dwellings were not meant, it was said that the words of the act have clear reference to the works erected on colliery leases, because of their great number and importance in the counties of Luzerne and Schuylkill; and that the act was extended to the coal counties of Westmoreland and Allegheny for the same reason. And undoubtedly colliery leases were the chief subject in the mind of the legislature. But whether the • act was confined simply to colliery leases, was a question not before us, and was not decided. Without asserting the extent of the act, the legislature may have meant, and perhaps did mean, to embrace all estates for years leased for mining and manufacturing purposes, where engines, pumps, machinery, screens and fixtures are furnished to the tenant. A collation of the Acts of 21st April 1854, Pamph. L. 428, 21st April 1856, Brightly 710, pl. 16, and 17th February 1858, Id. 710, pl. 17, would probably lead to this conclusion; but as the question is not now before us, we shall express no opinion upon it. In this view of the Act of 1858, it would not .be a useless repetition of the Act of 1854, as has been argued. But without further discussion we may say, that the reasons given in the opinion last year satisfy us that the Act of 1858 was not intended to embrace private dwellings erected by tenants independently ef the works
Judgment affirmed. ‘
Nom. Schenley’s Appeal, 20 P. F. Smith 98.