25 Ind. App. 202 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1900
—Appellants were the owners of and operating a portable sawmill. Under a contract with appellee Royse, they moved their mill to his farm for the purpose of sawing lumber for him from trees furnished to them by him. Under their contract they sawed 122,000 feet of lumber for which Royse agreed to pay them $3.25 per thousand. Of this lumber appellee Royse sold appellees Morris & Morris 10,500 feet, and appellants objected to the removal of it until a balance of $191.80 due them for sawing had been paid; and it was agreed that tire firm of Morris & Morris should pay appellants said balance out of the proceeds of the money derived from the sale of such lumber. When this action was commenced, there yet remained in the mill-yard 15,000 feet of the lumber purchased by Morris & Morris. Appellee Royse was insolvent. These facts are gathered from the complaint.
The prayer of the complaint is for judgment; that the amount due be declared a lien on the lumber at the mill, and
The cause was put at issue by answer and reply; trial by the court, and a special finding of facts made, and conclusions of law stated thereon. As the only error assigned is that the court erred in its conclusions of law, we have not thought it necessary to refer to the pleadings at any length. The facts found by the court are: That appellants BierlyN and Dunn were partners, and were operating a sawmill; that, under a contract with appellee Eoyse, they moved the mill to his farm to saw into lumber logs furnished by him, and for such sawing were to be paid by him $3.25 per thousand feet, for all merchantable lumber, said payment to be made when the lumber was taken up from the mill-yard ; that in pursuance to said contract a large amount of lumber was sawed and measured and takén away by Eoyse; that all logs that were large enough were to be quarter-sawed; that appellees Eoyse and Morris & Morris entered into a contract on or about May 13, 1898, whereby the latter were to have all the lumber thereafter sawed on the Eoyse farm; that the lumber was to be measured and taken up in lots of 15,000 or 20,000 feet, and was to be paid for within sixty days from delivery, and the money, or so much thereof as was necessary, was to be paid in discharge of a certain judgment against Eoyse; that Morris & Morris were also to pay a sufficient sum to pay the expenses of manufacturing and delivering the lumber so sold to them; that appellants were not parties to this contract, and knew nothing of it except as they had been informed; that before the commencement of this action a member of the firm of Morris & Morris went to the mill-yard for the purpose of removing lumber so purchased of Eoyse, when he was informed that the saw bill had not been paid, and appellants forbade him removing said lumber until said bill was paid; that, thereupon, said member of said firm informed appellants that it had been arranged in the contract
Upon these conclusions of law, the court pronounced judgment as follows: “That appellants recover of the appellee Eoyse $178.25, together with costs; that appellants have a lien upon, and are entitled to the possession of, the lumber yet in the mill-yard in the sum of. $178.25, which lien is subject to satisfaction according to the terms of §§7268, 7269 Burns 1894; that appellees Morris & Morris shall pay to appellants the debt owing by them to Eoyse for the lumber upon the debt by said Eoyse owing to said plaintiffs the sum of $51.31 * * * which shall, when so paid, be a credit upon the above judgment, etc.” and that Morris & Morris are not liable for costs.
Appellants urge that they have a lien under §7268 Burns 1894, which provides: “Whenever any person shall intrust to any mechanic or tradesman materials to construct, alter or repair any article of value, such mechanic or tradesman, if the same be completed and not taken away, and his fair and reasonable charges not paid, may, after six months from the time such charges becamé due, sell the same;” etc. This section does not declare any lien, but merely provides a manner for enforcing a common law lien. Watts, Tr., v. Sweeney, 127 Ind. 116, 22 Am. St. 615. In that case, the Supreme Court, speaking of §5304 R. S. 1881 (being §7268 Burns 1894), said: “This section does not declare a lien, but provides the manner of enforcing a lien which the mechanic has at common law.” In this action, therefore, appellants were not seeking to enforce a statutory lien, for there is no statute in this State creating such a lien. That being the case, their rights are governed by §§5304, 5305 R. S. 1881, being §§7268, 7269 Burns 1894, and the lien that the common law gives them can only be enforced by a compliance with the statute. Watts, Tr., v. Sweeney, supra. By those provisions, the lien can not be enforced until six months after the “charges become due”, and then by sale after notice, etc.
The case of Holderman v. Manier, 104 Ind. 118, is in point. There appellee owned and operated a portable sawmill. One Klinehance contracted with Manier to move his sawmill to his farm, and to saw lumber out of logs furnished by him at an agreed price per thousand feet. Manier sawed a large amount of lumber, a part of which was moved by Klinehanee and a part piled up in the mill-yard by a man
Each paragraph of the complaint and the special findings show a voluntary surrender of the possession of the lumber on the part of the appellants, and hence, as we have shown from the authorities cited, they waived their right to assert their lien. As to the lumber that still remained in the mill-yard, appellants have a lien for the general balance due them under their contract, and may enforce it under the statute. Under the authorities, the complaint did not state any cause of action against the appellees Morris & Morris, but they have not assigned any cross-errors, and in the brief of counsel they say: “But defendants have not assigned cross-error, and are making no complaint of the judgment.” If there was any error committed by the trial court, it was against the appellees Morris & Morris, and of this appellants can not complain. Appellants were entitled to a personal
Judgment affirmed.