139 P. 104 | Or. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
The statute, prescribing the time within which a suit to foreclose a mechanic’s lien must be instituted, reads: “No lien provided for in this act shall bind any building, structure, or other improvement for a longer period than six months after the same shall have been filed unless suit be brought in a proper court within that time to enforce the same”: Section 7422, L. O. L. This suit was commenced 4 months and 8 days after the plaintiff’s notice was filed, and as to all the defendants named in the original complaint, the enforcement of the lien was undertaken within the time prescribed.
In Osborn v. Logus, 28 Or. 302, 310 (42 Pac. 998), Mr. Justice Wolverton, discussing the subject says: ‘ ‘ The owner, of course, is an indispensable party, and his absence would be fatal to the proceeding; a decree without him would be a nullity.” Speaking of this excerpt, an author in a note ‘ observes, ‘ ‘ owner' an indispensable party dictum”: Bloom, Law Mechanics’ Liens, § 663. The language there criticised was employed in construing the words “shall” and “may” as made by the statute applicable to parties who were either necessary or proper in a suit to foreclose a mechanic’s lien: Section 7424, L. O. L. The question embraced in that case was whether in such a suit the-contractor was a necessary party, and it was determined that he was not. What was there said about the owner being an indispensable party was evidently intended to be used by way of illustration and comparison. But however that may be, it is believed that the language so employed is a correct declaration of the
“Suits to enforce the liens created by this act shall be brought in the Circuit Courts, and the pleadings, process, practice, and other proceedings shall be the same as in other cases. * * The proceedings npon the foreclosure of the liens created by this act shall be, as nearly as possible, made to conform to the proceedings of a foreclosure of a mortgage lien upon real property”: Section 7424, L. O. L.
If upon a sale of land under a decree foreclosing a mortgage thereon the sum of money received is more than sufficient to satisfy the plaintiff’s demands, the remainder is applied in discharging or on account of subsequent liens in the order in which they respectively attached to the premises. When, however, a sale is made pursuant to a decree foreclosing mechanics’ liens, in case the proceeds are insufficient to discharge all such liens, the lien claimants are to be paid pro rata: Section 7424, L. O. L.
In Title Guarantee Co. v. Wrenn, 35 Or. 62 (56 Pac. 271, 76 Am. St. Rep. 454), it was held that the filing of an answer by the holder of a mechanic’s lien in a
The decree should therefore be reversed as to such owner, and this suit dismissed as to it; and it is so ordered. Reversed.