OPINION
1 All Clean, Inc., doing business as The Flood Company, (All Clean) challenges the trial court's denial of its request for attorney fees under the mechanics' lien statute. See generally Utah Code Ann. §§ 38-1-1 to -~40 (2005, 2010, & Supp.2011). Timberline Properties, James B. Farrell, and Farrell J. De-Hart (collectively, Timberline) cross-appeal, asserting that Timberline is entitled to attorney fees under the mechanics' lien statute for successfully defending against All Clean's mechanies' lien claim. In the alternative, it requests attorney fees incurred on appeal only. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
12 On Monday, January 21, 2008, a pipe broke in one of Timberline's buildings, flooding several offices. Timberline's general partner, Farrell J. DeHart, hired All Clean to conduct "[mlitigation work to preserve, protect, [and] secure the property ... from further damage." The seope of the work included extracting the water, padding the furniture to prevent additional damage, drying the premises, cleaning and deodorizing the carpets, and applying a microbial agent to prevent mold. The mitigation did not involve any structural work or the removal or installation of any carpeting. All Clean estimated the work would take three days at a cost of approximately $2400.00. When De-Hart contacted All Clean on Thursday, January 24, however, the company advised him that it needed another day to complete the drying process. DeHart authorized one additional day of work. At the conclusion of its work, All Clean submitted an invoice to Timberline for $5074.45.
T3 In the meantime, All Clean had been negotiating with Timberline's property insurer, Travelers Insurance Company (Travelers), regarding payment for the flood mitigation. All Clean requested reimbursement in the amount of $5074.45. Travelers agreed to the seope of All Clean's work but authorized payment only in the amount of $4794.07, to be disbursed to All Clean through Timberline. Travelers forwarded a check for $4794.07, less Timberline's deductible under the insurance policy, directly to DeHart. DeHart, however, sent All Clean a check for $3200.00, indicating that he believed that amount was fair payment for All Clean's work. 1 All Clean deposited the check but sent Timberline an invoice for the balance, which Timberline refused to pay. On July 18, 2008, All Clean filed a "Notice of Mechan-ies' Lien" with the Weber County Recorder.
*246 {4 Five months later, All Clean filed a complaint in district court, asserting causes of action for breach of contract, breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, unjust enrichment, and foreclosure of the me-chanies' lien. All Clean also sought attorney fees under both the contract and the mechan-ies' lien statute. Following a bench trial, the trial court rejected All Clean's claims except for unjust enrichment, on which it awarded All Clean $1519.07, the difference between what Timberline had paid and what Travelers had agreed to pay. The court rejected All Clean's mechanics' lien claim, stating, "This is not a mechanie[s'] lien case because the work done by [All Clean] is not of the type which entitles [All Clean] to have a lien upon the property of [Timberline]." Consequently, it denied All Clean's request for attorney fees under the mechanies' lien statute. 2 All Clean has accepted full payment of the judgment on the unjust enrichment claim.
ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
15 All Clean now appeals, asserting that the trial court erred in deciding that the flood mitigation work it performed for Timberline was not lienable under the mechanies' lien statute and that it was therefore not entitled to statutory attorney fees. Timberline defends the trial court's interpretation of the mechanies' lien statute and cross-appeals, arguing that it is entitled to attorney fees under the mechanies' lien statute for successfully defending against All Clean's lien claim. Whether the trial court correctly interpreted and applied the statute is a question of law, which we review for correctness. See John Hoimes Constr. v. R.A. McKell Excavating, Inc.,
ANALYSIS
I. All Clean's Request for Attorney Fees Under the Mechanics' Lien Statute
A. The Acceptance of Benefits Doctrine
16 As a threshold issue, we address Timberline's contention that All Clean waived its right to appeal the trial court's decision when it accepted and deposited full payment on the judgment. "We are in agreement with the general rule that if a judgment is voluntarily paid, which is accepted, and a judgment satisfied, the controversy has become moot and the right to appeal is waived." Jensen v. Eddy,
If a judgment is entered as to one part of a controversy, which is separate and distinct from another part, and the disposition of the latter cannot affect the disposition of the former, a party may accept the money or property to which he is entitled, and not be deemed to waive his right to appeal as to other independent claims which the court refused to grant.
Id.
T7 All Clean's appeal from the trial court's denial of attorney fees under the mechanics' lien statute fits squarely within the language of the exception. The trial court granted judgment in favor of All Clean on its unjust enrichment claim on the basis that All Clean had conferred a benefit upon Timberline under cireumstances in which it would be inequitable to allow Timberline to retain that benefit without reimbursement of its fair value. All Clean has not appealed the principal *247 amount of the judgment awarded under this theory but instead seeks only attorney fees. Thus, the relief sought on appeal is "separate and distinct." See id.
T 8 More importantly, because the attorney fee relief sought by All Clean is separate and distinct from the principal amount of its judgment already paid by Timberline, this is not a case where Timberline has taken on a significant incremental risk by paying the judgment in full. See, eg., Trees,
B. Application of the Mechanics' Lien Statute
19 All Clean challenges the denial of attorney fees pursuant to the mechanies' lien statute. See generally Utah Code Ann. § 88-1-18(1) (2005) (permitting the successful party in an action to enforce a mechanies' lien to recover its reasonable attorney fees) (current version at id. (2010). The district court rejected All Clean's mechanies' lien claim and denied its request for attorney fees under that statute, stating, "This is not a mechanics] lien case because the work done by [All Clean] is not of the type which entitles [All Clean] to have a lien upon the property of [Timberline]."
110 "[The purpose of the mechanic's lien act is remedial in nature and seeks to provide protection to laborers and material-men who have added directly to the value of the property of another by their materials and labor." Projects Unlimited, Inc. v. Copper State Thrift,
1 11 At the time of All Clean's flood mitigation work in Timberline's office building, Utah's mechanies' lien statute provided that
[clontractors, subcontractors, and all persons performing any services or furnishing or renting any materials or equipment used in the construction, alteration, or improvement of any building or structure or improvement to any premises in any manmer ... shall have a lien upon the property upon or concerning which they have rendered service, performed labor, or furnished or rented materials or equipment.
Utah Code Ann. § 88-1-8 (2005) (emphasis added) (current version at id. (Supp.2011)). All Clean argues that the statute identifies two separate and distinct categories of liena-ble work: (1) services, materials, and equipment "used in the construction, alteration, or improvement of any building or structure" and (2) services, materials, and equipment used to make an "improvement to any premises in any manner." Id. According to All Clean, the second category of work is much
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broader than the first, particularly considering that this language was added following the Utah Supreme Court decision in Frehner v. Morton,
112 In Frehner, the supreme court was asked to determine whether the trial court had properly concluded that landscaping work was lienable under the version of the mechanics' lien statute then in effect,. See id. at 446-47. At that time, a lien could be filed by any person for "materialls] furnished and work done in the construction, alteration, or addition to or repair of any building, structure, or improvement upon land" as well as by certain categories of workers, not including landscapers and nurserymen. See id. at 448; see also Utah Code Ann. § 88-1-3 (1966). The majority of the court held that landscaping work was lienable because it was "of a character similar to those immediately before mentioned," that is, "construction, alteration, or addition to or repair of any building, structure, or improvement," and because it was done in connection with the construction of the home and "was designed to give the same [alesthetic qualities to the home as would the paint applied to the building after it was finished," thereby contributing to the inherent enjoyment of the home itself. See Frehner,
€ 13 All Clean urges us to read Frehner as standing for the proposition that the common law concept of "affixation" is no longer applicable because the statutory language is "superior{ ]." Therefore, it argues, in construing the statute's first phrase, "used in the construction, alteration, or improvement of any building or structure," id. (2005) (emphasis added), we can read the word "improvement" as similar to the terms "construction" and "alteration" which immediately precede it. With regard to the second phrase, "or improvement to any premises in any manner," id. (emphasis added), All Clean asserts that we must construe the term "improvement" more broadly to include betterments of any kind, whether or not "affixed" to the premises. We do not need to address whether the mechanies' lien statute establishes two distinct categories of lienable work because we conclude that work that falls within the seope of the mechanies' lien statute, whether "construction, alteration, or improvement of any building or structure" or "improvement to any premises in any manner," id., shares certain characteristics that All Clean's mitigation work for Timberline did not possess.
{14 We do not disagree with All Clean that the legislature broadened the scope of the mechanics' lien statute following Freh-ner. We understand the principal purpose of the amendments, however, to extend the reach of the statute to unequivocally encompass landscaping and other kinds of relatively significant and enduring improvements to land that were not part of a building or structure, rather than to expand the definition of lienable work to any betterment, however impermanent its nature. For one thing, the express purpose of the amendment was to extend the coverage of the mechanies' lien statute to work completed by landscapers and nurserymen. See House Working Bills, H.B. 107, 40th Leg., Gen. Sess. (1978) (entitled "Mechanics' Liens for Landscape Contractors and Nurserymen" and providing as the basis of the change to Utah Code section 38-1-8, the "entitlement of] landscape contractors and nurserymen to the benefit of the mechanies' lien laws of this state"). Moreover, the word "improvement" in the me-chanies' lien context does not refer simply to any work that makes the premises better. Rather, "improvement" is a legal term that *249 has been construed to connote physical affi-xation and enduring change to premises in a manner that adds value. See 56 C.J.S. Me-chamics' Liens § 18 (2007) ("The term "improvement, within the meaning of a mechanic's lien statute, is used in the sense of an addition to property rather than in the restricted sense of improvement by repair."); see also 53 Am.Jur.2d Mechanics' Liens § 55 (2006) (defining improvement as "anything that enhances the value of the land, or as a valuable addition made to property or an amelioration in its condition, that amounts to more than mere repairs, and is intended to enhance the value, beauty, or utility of the property or to adapt it for new or further purposes").
1 15 The recognition of physical annexation and physical alteration of relative substance and durability as the central characteristics of lienable work becomes even more apparent when considering cases that interpret the mechanies' lien statute post-Frehner. In Daniels v. Deseret Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n,
[in order to ascertain when an improvement has been made upon the land, for purposes of determining whether notice of a mechanic's lien can validly be filed, it is necessary that "there be an annexation to the land, or to some ... part of the realty; or a fixture appurtenant to it, and this must have been done with the intention of making it a permanent part thereof."
Id. at 1108 (emphasis and ellipsis added) (quoting King Bros., Inc. v. Utah Dry Kiln Co.,
§16 The distinction between ordinary cleanup and improvement, as the term is used in the mechanics' lien statute, is acknowledged in Calder Brothers Co. v.
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Anderson,
T17 All Clean's mitigation work in this case-the removal of the excess water and the drying, serubbing, and mold prevention activities within the building, rather than replacements or changes fimplicating the strue-tural components of Timberline's building or its fixtures-amounts to relatively minor restoration or cleanup work akin to the frozen pipe repair in Damiels or the maintenance work in Calder. As noted, our courts have held this type of work not to be independently lienable. 5
118 All Clean further asserts, however, that its mitigation work still constituted a lienable improvement because even if the change only restored the building to its previous condition, the work increased the building's value by "changling the property] from being uninhabitable to being fit for its intended purpose." All Clean finds support for this argument in First of Denver Mortgage Investors v. C.N. Zundel & Associates.,
119 Because All Clean's flood mitigation work in Timberline's building was not an "improvement of any building or structure or an improvement to any premises," see Utah Code Ann. § 38-1-3 (current version at id. (Supp.2011)), so as to fall within the seope of *251 the mechanics' lien statute, we affirm the trial court's decision that the statute did not apply here and that All Clean was therefore not entitled to the benefit of the statute's attorney fees provision. See generally Utah Code Ann. § 38-1-18(1) (2005) (awarding attorney fees to the "successful party" in a mechanies' lien foreclosure action) (current version at id. (2010)). We also deny All Clean's request for attorney fees on appeal on the same ground. See id.
II. Timberline's Cross-Appeal for Attorney Fees Under the Mechanies' Lien Statute
120 The mechanies' lien statute provides that "in any action brought to enforce any lien under this chapter the successful party shall be entitled to recover a reasonable attorneys' fee." Id. Timberline eross-appeals, arguing that it is entitled to attorney fees under the statute for its successful defense against All Clean's mechanics lien claim. We do not address this issue, however, because it was not raised in the trial court and, therefore, is not preserved for appeal. See generally 488 Main St. v. Easy Heat, Ine,
{21 Apparently recognizing this problem, Timberline does not assert that it raised the issue in the trial court but instead argues that because the trial court ruled on attorney fees, the issue is preserved for appeal. Specifically, it points to the trial court's oral statements that it did not "think this is a mechanie[s'] lien case. ... As a result, [it did] not award[ ] ... any attorney's fees." Nothing about the trial court's ruling, however, indicates that it was denying attorney fees to Timberline under the mechanics' lien statute. Rather, the ruling, in context, appears to be limited to All Clean's request for attorney fees.
122 In the alternative, Timberline claims it is entitled to attorney fees incurred only on appeal. In support of its position, Timberline cites Robertson's Marine, Inc. v. I4 Solutions, Inc.,
CONCLUSION
1 23 We agree with the trial court that the mechanics' lien statute does not apply to the work completed here. We therefore affirm its refusal to award attorney fees to All Clean pursuant to the statute. Furthermore, because Timberline failed to raise the issue of its entitlement to attorney fees for successfully defending against All Clean's mechanics' lien claim in the trial court, that issue is not preserved for appeal and we do not address it.
T 24 WE CONCUR: JAMES Z. DAVIS, Presiding Judge and GREGORY K. ORME, Judge.
Notes
. DeHart explained that he calculated his $3200.00 payment based on the original estimate of $2400.00 for three days. DeHart had authorized All Clean to work a fourth day and therefore paid $800.00 for the additional day. He testified that he intended to return the balance of the *246 $4794.07 (less the deductible) to Travelers once the matter was resolved with All Clean.
. The trial court also rejected All Clean's request for contractual attorney fees, concluding that a contract never existed between the parties.
. We recognize that Timberline's success on its cross-appeal could result in All Clean owing Timberline money. Success on a claim that results in an offset of judgments, however, does not reduce the amount owed on the original judgment, and Timberline has not addressed the legal question of whether the potential for an offset factors into the determination of whether the appellant has accepted the benefit of that judgment. We therefore do not address the issue further.
. While minor repair work is not an improvement for purposes of the mechanics' lien statute, we have held, in at least one case, that more significant repairs are. See generally Advanced Restoration, LLC v. Priskos,
. This interpretation of our mechanics' lien statute is in accord with decisions in other states with similar statutes. See, e.g., Inter-Rail Sys., Inc. v. Ravi Corp.,
