DocketNumber: Appeal, No. 116
Judges: Beaver, Head, Henderson, Orlady, Porter, Rice
Filed Date: 7/13/1911
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
Opinion by
The plaintiff was a subcontractor employed to build a foundation for the house which Doherty, the contractor, had agreed to build for the appellant. The subcontractor’s undertaking was for the whole of the foundation work at the price of $4.35 a perch. The plaintiff began the work about July 25, and had it practically completed on August 10. A little additional work was to be done after the sills were laid by the carpenters. On the date last named the contractor filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy and the same day was adjudged a bankrupt. Proceedings were then suspended in the construction of the house, nothing further being done by the plaintiff until December 8, when he finished the work on his contract. No objection is made to the regularity of the proceedings to enforce the lien, the principal defense being that the work done by the plaintiff on December 8, was ineffective to extend the time within which a lien might be entered against the owner, because of the adjudication in bankruptcy against the contractor. The right to a lien is not denied and could not be for it was not “obtained through legal proceedings” and is therefore not forbidden by the national bankruptcy act of 1898. It is only liens created by suit or proceedings at law or in equity begun within four months before the filing of the petition in bankruptcy which are dissolved by the adjudication of such person in bankruptcy. The plaintiff’s claim was attached by law to the building as of the date when the first work was done on the ground and remains a lien without any act of co-operation on the part of the claimant. It was in force therefore at the date of the adjudication in bankruptcy and was a charge on the appellant’s land. During the time within which the lien could be filed the plaintiff had “a preferential statutory claim” which was perfected by filing the lien after the adjudication in bankruptcy: Wagner v. Burnham, 224 Pa. 586. The twentieth section of the mechanic’s lien law of June 4, 1901, P. L. 431, provides that “Where proceedings in bank
The complaint set forth in the fourth and fifth assignments that the court permitted the plaintiff to introduce additional evidence after a motion for a nonsuit had been made does not present a case for reversal. It was a matter to be disposed of according to the discretion of the court. The plaintiff was not in any wise prejudiced or put at a disadvantage: Barnhart v. Pettit, 22 Pa. 135; McCoy v. Niblick, 221 Pa. 123.
The judgment is affirmed.