This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court of Kankakee County allowing a motion to dismiss the complaint of Floyd M. Anderson which had been filed to foreclose a mechanic’s lien on land owned by defendant W. D. Gousset. The action was filed on August 28, 1963, and there was a prayer that the premises be sold to satisfy the claim. The action was brought within two years after plaintiff had completed the improvements referred to in the complaint, the completion date being September 23, 1961. Thereafter, the defendant filed an answer and the case was set for hearing in December of 1963 at which time defendant moved that plaintiff’s complaint be dismissed for nonjoinder of a necessary party, namely the wife of defendant whose interest in the property was an inchoate right of dower. Plaintiff thereupon asked leave to amend the complaint joining defendant’s wife as a proper and necessary party defendant. Defendant objected on the ground that the complaint could not be lawfully amended to include the wife after the two-year statutory period for filing the mechanic’s lien foreclosure had expired. The Court then entered a decree allowing the motion to dismiss.
On appeal in this Court, both parties assert that the defendant’s wife was a necessary party and plaintiff further contends that the proper procedure was to allow plaintiff’s amendment to the complaint joining the wife as a necessary party on the premise that such amendment relates back to the date of filing the original pleading. It was the position of the trial court and likewise of the defendant on appeal in this Court that the defendant’s wife, Olive Gousset, could not be made a party defendant on motion more than two years after the completion of the alleged contract which was the basis of the action to foreclose a mechanic’s lien.
The Mechanics’ Liens Act is designed for and contemplates a single action to foreclose the lien and for enforcement thereof. All lien claimants and other persons known to be interested in the premises must be joined either as plaintiffs or defendants, so that the Court can adjust all equities and render a decree properly distributing all of the proceeds of sale (Leffers v. Hayes, 327 Ill App 440,
Both parties agree that defendant’s wife was a necessary party to the action, principally because under section 1 of the Mechanics’ Liens Act (Illlinois Revised Statutes, chapter 82), a mechanic’s lien is made superior to the right of dower of husband or wife provided the owner of the dower interest has knowledge of the improvement and did not give written notice of objection to the same. To become effective this, necessarily, would require that the owner of the dower interest be made a defendant and that it be alleged and proven that he or she had knowledge of the improvement and did not object (Leffers v. Hayes, 327 Ill App 440,
Under the Civil Practice Act, liberal provisions are available for amendment any time before final judgment (Ill Rev Stats c 110, §46(1)) and joinder in mechanic’s lien procedures is permitted under the provisions of the Mechanics’ Liens Act (Ill Rev Stats c 82, § 11). The basic problem before us, however, is not one simply of allowing an amendment but whether a party defendant can thereby be deprived, in effect, of the defense of the Statute of Limitations, or whether such amendment can, in effect, eliminate objections raised by such party defendant based upon filing as against such Defendant after the two-year limitation period specified in the Mechanics’ Liens Act.
The courts of this State have pointed to the distinction between an amendment which states a new cause of action relative to the running of the Statute of Limitations and one which does not, in the case of Pipe Trades, Inc. v. Lemon, 346 Ill App 216,
While the North Side Sash & Door case preceded the enactment of the Civil Practice Act, it serves to point up a basic issue in the case before us. Under the terms of the Civil Practice Act (Ill Rev Stats c 110, § 46(4)), it is now specifically provided that a cause of action against a person not originally named a defendant is not barred by lapse of time under any statute or contract prescribing or limiting the time within which the action may be brought or the right asserted if all of certain terms and conditions are met including the service of summons upon the person; knowledge of that person within the time the action might have been brought or the right asserted against him that he knew that the original action was pending; and that it grew out of a transaction or occurrence involving or concerning him; and that for the purpose of preserving the cause of action under those conditions, an amendment adding the party as a party defendant would relate back to the date of the filing of the original pleading so amended. In the record before us, no such service of summons or knowledge was shown. Similarly, under section 11 of the Mechanics’ Liens Act in defining necessary parties, where provision is made that any such persons may become parties at any time before final judgment, the court in North Side Sash & Door Co. v. Hecht, supra, indicated that the section was simply declaratory of the right to amend and it did not purport to authorize an amendment that would be effective as against the plea of the Statute of Limitations from the beginning of the original suit.
Appellant in this case has cited in support of his position the case of Krunfus v. Winkelhake, 44 Ill App2d 124,
In considering the case, the Appellate Court reviewed many principles which we have indicated are applicable alike to mechanic’s lien cases. In referring to the Krunfus case, the Court stated that that case based its conclusion in part at least on the proposition that enforcement of the time limit prescribed by section 90 of the Probate Act “would cause a direct conflict with the provisions of section 46 and the mandate of section 26 of the Civil Practice Act.” Section 26 provides that no action is to be dismissed for misjoinder of party or for non-joinder of parties without first affording reasonable opportunity to add them as parties; that new parties may be added and parties misjoined may be dropped by order of the Court at any stage of the cause before or after judgment as the ends of justice may require and upon terms which the Court may fix. The Court in the Nupnau case stated (53 Ill App2d 81, at 98) that if section 26 were to be considered a mandate of sufficient authority to override the limitation period of Section 90 “then the same authority would be sufficient to nullify all other statutes imposing any type of time limitation. It is our understanding of this section that it was intended to give way in confrontation with specific limitation provisions, and that it does not confer on the Court a discretion to decide that adding of parties is ‘reasonable’ or required by ‘the ends of justice’ when limitation statutes have commanded that it shall not be done.”
The Court also pointed out that the Krunfus opinion’s interpretation of section 46 was wrong. Section 46 provides that amendments may be allowed on reasonable terms before final judgment adding any party and discontinuing as to any defendant changing the cause of action or defense and adding new causes of action or defenses which may enable the plaintiff to sustain the claim for which it was intended to be brought or defendant to make a defense or assert a cross-demand. We have heretofore set forth the essential provisions of section 46(4) of the Civil Practice Act which was designed to overcome the objections raised in Fitzpatrick v. Pitcairn, 371 Ill 203,
The Court in that case also pointed out that the Court in Fahey v. Production Steel Co. of Illinois, 16 Ill App2d 312, at 316,
The Court in the Nupnau case after pointing out that a denial to a newly added defendant of his right to defend on the ground of expiration of a statutory time limit would possibly infringe on his constitutional right, then goes on to state that the Krunfus interpretation impedes rather than accomplishes implementation of public policy as expressed in the statute, and the Court states (53 Ill App2d 82, at 103):
“No valid reason occurs to us why such a plaintiff should be permitted to pick and choose from among the necessary parties, leaving it up to the defendants or the court to bring in for him those parties he might decide to leave out; or be permitted to bring them in himself whenever he might see fit, either before or after the time limit established in the statute. In every case in which parties would be added after expiration of the statutory period there would, of necessity, be some delay (long or short) as compared with the same case if all parties had been brought before the court within the time limit; and by just so much would the purpose of the statute be defeated in effectuating the public policy favoring expeditious settlement of estates.”
Similar public policy expressed in the Mechanics’ Liens Act would likewise be defeated since that Act and the interpretations of that Act favor expeditious disposition of all the various interests of parties by an action originating purely in statutory legislation and required to be filed within a two-year period after completion of improvements.
We must, therefore, conclude that the Trial Court properly found that none of the provisions of the various acts or the precedents operated to deprive defendant of the defense of the statute imposing a time limit of two years for filing of actions as against the spouse and, on the basis of the cause as submitted to us, the action of the Trial Court was proper and should be affirmed.
The order of the Circuit Court of Kankakee County will, therefore, be affirmed.
Affirmed.
