48 Iowa 619 | Iowa | 1878
■ On the 28th day of November, 1876, the plaintiff, Christian Bear, filed his statement for a mechanic’s lien, and on the 30th day of November, 1876, he commenced this action:
1. The material was furnished and the labor was performed on the 25th day of September, 1874. The statement for a mechanic’s lien was not filed until two years, two
2. It is urged by plaintiff that the B., C. R. & N. Ry. Co. had notice of plaintiff’s claim, because the bills payable book, in possession of E. F. Winslow, the receiver, afterward, at the organization of the B., C. R. & N. Ry. Co., elected its vice-president and general manager, and in possession of J. C. Brocksmit, auditor of the B., C. R. & M. Ry. Co., and of the B., C. R. & N. Ry. Co., shows there was due plaintiff eighty-
3. It is further claimed that the sale and purchase were not such a sale and bona fide purchase as contemplated by the statute. It is claimed that the title of the purchasers, the mortgagees, rises no higher than the mortgage, and that the lien of the mortgage was inferior to plaintiff’s lien. We have held, however, that a judgment creditor, purchasing at a judicial sale, stands upon the same footing, and is entitled to the,, same protection, as any other purchaser. Gower v. Doheney et al., 33 Iowa, 36.
4. It appears from the agreed statement of facts that in November, 1873, the B., C. R. & M. Ry. Co. made default in the payment of interest on its mortgage bonds, and that the bondholders funded their interest coupons for eighteen months, and allowed the railway company to remain in possession and appropriate the income of the road. Under the provisions of the bonds and mortgages it was competent for the bondholders to take possession of the road if default in the payment of interest should continue for six months after maturity and demand of payment. It is now claimed that the bondholders, 'in neglecting to take possession of the road and funding the •interest, constituted the B., C. R. & M. Ry. Co. their trustee and agent to operate the road, and that they ought in equity
1. Section 2130 of the Code is as follows: “Every mechanic or other person who shall do any labor upon, or furnish any materials, machinery, or fixtures for, any building, erection or other improvement upon land, including those engaged in the construction or repair of any work of internal improvement, by virtue of any contract with the owner, his agent, trustee, contractor or sub-contractor, upon complying with the provisions of this chapter, shall have for his labor done, or materials, machinery or fixtures furnished, a lien upon such building, erection or improvement, and upon the land belonging to such owner on which the same is situated, to secure the payment of such labor done, or materials, machinery or fixtures furnished.” Section 2139 of the Code is as follows: “The liens for labor done, or things furnished, shall have priority in the order of the filing of the accounts thereof as aforesaid, and shall be preferred to all other liens and encumbrances which may be attached to or upon such building, erection or other improvement, and to the land on which the same is situated, or either of them, made subsequent to the commencement of said building, erection or other improvement.” The mortgages, under a foreclosure of which the main line and the Muscatine branch in question were sold, were executed after the construction of the main line and the
This case, however, involves a different principle, for, to use the language of appellants’ counsel, “it will be observed that¡ all the work was done and all the material was furnished by each of these plaintiffs after the roads upon which the lien is claimed were wholly completed. It now remains to be; determined whether a railway is subject to a mechanic’s lien for repairs which shall be superior and prior to a mortgage made after the commencement of the road, and before its completion. Unless this proposition can be maintained, the two last cases are at an end.” It is clear that section 2130 gives a lien for repair of a work of internal improvement; but this section furnishes no rule for determining the priority between such a lien and an existing mortgage. In Getchell & Tichenor v. Allen, 34 Iowa, 559, where a mortgage existed upon a lot upon which was a building, it was .held that the lien of a material man who furnished lumber, subsequently to the execution of the mortgage, which was used in the erection of a third story to the building, was junior and inferior to the lien of the mortgagee. It is claimed, however, that that case is not in point, because an entirely new part of the building was superadded, while in this case new piers and abutments were erected to supply the place of old .ones which had decayed and become unsafe. Counsel for appellant, conceding that the case of Getchell & Tichenor v. Allen was decided correctly, insist that a different principle must be-applied to the case at bar, because the work done by plaintiffs
In Getchell & Tichenor v. Allen it was held that this section does not apply where improvements enter into and form a part of a building covered by a mortgage.
In O’Brien v. Pettis, 42 Iowa, 293, it was in effect held that the right to a lien under this section depends upon the question whether the improvement for which the lien is claimed is so far an independent structure as to be capable of removal without materially injuring what would remain. In this case the stone piers were constituted in the place of wooden piles covered by the mortgage. When so placed in the road they became a part of it, as the third story in the ease of Getchell v. Allen became a part of the building, and the mortgage attached to them. They cannot, we think, be removed, nor ■can plaintiffs’ lien be enforced under section 2141.
III. The lien of the plaintiffs, Higley & Bro., was filed’ November 5, 1875, and is for various articles of hardware furnished the B., C. R. & M. Ry. Co., from the 2d of January to the 17th day of May, 1875, to be used in the repair of its lines of railway, amounting in all to nine hundred and fifty dollars and three cents. The disposition made of the claim ■of O’Hanlan & O’Hara is decisive of the claim of these plaintiffs.
The judgment is
Affirmed.