Orr & Lockett Hardware Co. v. Needham Co.

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

The question here is, whether or not the verification of the claim of appellant for a lien, as filed in the office of the circuit clerk, is sufficient.

Section 4 of the act entitled “Liens,” applicable to the case, is as follows: “Every creditor or contractor who wishes to avail himself of the provisions of this act shall file with the clerk of the circuit court of the county in which the building, erection or other improvement to be charged with the lien is situated, a just and true statement or account or demand due him after allowing all credits, setting forth the times when such material was furnished or labor performed, and containing a correct description of the property to be charged with the lien, and verified by an affidavit. Any person having filed a claim for a lien, as provided in this section, may bring a suit at once to enforce the same, by bill or petition, in any court of competent jurisdiction in the county where the claim for a lien has been filed.” (3 Starr & Curtis’ Stat. 819.) And section 28 provides: “No creditor shall be allowed to enforce a lien created under the provisions of this act, as against or to the prejudice of any other creditor or incumbrance of purchaser, unless a claim for a lien shall have been filed with the clerk of the circuit court, as provided in section 4 of this act, within four months after the last payment shall have become due and payable.”

In McDonald v. Bosengarten, 134 Ill. 126, in delivering the opinion of the court, Mr. Justice Scholfield said (p. 130): “The purpose of requiring the claim to set forth ‘the times when such material was furnished or labor performed,’ is, obviously, to enable those interested to know, from the claim itself, that it is such as can be enforced, and the verification by affidavit is required as a guaranty of the claim in this as in other respects,—and all this is, by section 28, indispensable to the enforcement of the lien against creditors and incumbrancers.” And in Campbell v. Jacobson, 145 Ill. 389, it was said (p. 403) that “the statute having required every creditor or contractor who wishes to avail himself of the provisions of the statute to file in a public office a sworn statement of a particular character, that requirement must be at least substantially complied with, and unless that is done his lien cannot be enforced.”

The question here is not whether the statement or account, as such, is sufficient, but whether it is sufficiently verified by affidavit. As shown by the statute and held in the cases cited, it is indispensable that “the times when such material was furnished or labor performed” be set forth, and it necessarily follows that if necessary to be stated it is necessary that it should be verified by affidavit. It would not be contended that a statement sufficient in all respects except that it was not verified by affidavit would be a sufficient compliance with the statute. No more can it be maintained that a statement containing all the statutory essentials, but with a verification of a part, only, of such essentials, wonld be sufficient. It follows, of course, that if the “times when the material was furnished” must be set forth to save the lien, the verification must be broad enough to cover that requirement. Here the dates were given in the itemized account, and the statement to which the account is attached states that the account “correctly sets forth the materials, consisting of builders’ hardware, so furnished, and the dates when furnished,” but the affidavit does not certify to the. truth of the statement and account, but simply that it “contains a full and true statement of builders’ hardware furnished,” etc. This affidavit could be .absolutely true and the dates in the statement and account wholly untrue. Such a verification would not be sufficient to a pleading necessary to be verified, and while we are not disposed to adopt a rule of construction requiring a strict compliance, we cannot dispense with a substantial compliance with the statute.

The verification here is almost literally the same as the verification set forth in McDonald v. Rosengarten, supra, which was there held to be defective. It would be overruling that case to hold that the verification in this case is sufficient. It was said in that case that “verification, in this connection, plainly means, certifying that the statement as made is true.” The affidavit here does not certify that the whole of the statement is true, but only that a part of it is true. It swears that the statement is a true statement as to the hardware furnished, as to its use in and upon the property, and as to the amount due therefor, but it omits to certify that the statement is true in so far as it sets forth the times when the material was furnished. In this respect it does not comply with the statute. If the affiant had simply sworn that the statement was true, his oath would be understood as applying to the whole statement, and this case would then be brought within the rulings of this court in the recent cases of Hayes v. Hammond, 162 Ill. 133, and Moore v. Parish, 163 id. 93. In the latter cases the verifications, which were held good, applied to the whole of the statement, while here the verification is clearly limited to a part of the statement.

The judgment of the Appellate Court and the decree of the circuit court are. affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.