Dodge v. Hall

Decision Date22 May 1897
Citation168 Mass. 435,47 N.E. 110
PartiesDODGE v. HALL.
CourtUnited States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court
COUNSEL

H.L. Whittlesey, for petitioner.

J.F Pickering and J.W. Pickering, for respondent.

OPINION

ALLEN J.

The sufficiency of the description of the land was rightly left to the jury. A description is sufficient which will enable one who is familiar with the locality to identify the land with reasonable certainty, and inaccuracies will not vitiate the lien, if the land can be so identified. St.1892, c. 191; Cleverly v. Moseley, 148 Mass. 280, 19 N.E. 394; Phil.Mech.Liens, §§ 379, 383, and cases there cited. Under proper instructions, the jury must have found the description to be sufficient, and we cannot say that they were wrong. The defendant contends that it is a part of the petitioner's description that the lot of land was owned by Charles E. Hall and Margaret H. Hall at the time when the labor was furnished, while it is an undisputed fact that they were never joint owners of the land. If this is treated as a matter of description, it is merely an inaccuracy, which is not fatal.

The defendant further contends that the petitioner has no claim against her, and no lien upon her property, and that his claim is only against Charles E. Hall and his property. The land was owned by Charles E. Hall until August 17, 1894 and under the instructions by the court the jury must have found that the labor both before and after August 17th was performed and furnished by the petitioner under a contract with Hall, by the terms of which Hall employed him generally to perform and furnish the labor necessary for the construction of the house, and promised to pay him a fair and reasonable price therefor. If work is done under such a contract made with the owner, a conveyance by him while the work is going on will not defeat the lien. Gale v. Blaikie, 126 Mass. 274. The lien continues till all that is called for by the contract has been done. Upon the facts found by the auditor, the house was real estate. McIver v. Estabrook, 134 Mass. 550; Westgate v. Wixon, 128 Mass. 304; Madigan v. McCarthy, 108 Mass. 376.

The court rightly refused to instruct the jury that the burden of proof was on the petitioner to show that the lot of land was actually bounded northerly on Garfield avenue. The way this question arose was as follows: The description in the petition bounded the lot northerly on Garfield avenue, 40...

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