129 P. 1069 | Idaho | 1912
— This action was instituted for the foreclosure of a mechanic’s lien against the property of the city of Lewiston for labor performed and material furnished to J. O. Maxon and C. Henry Payne, original contractors with the city of Lewiston. Maxon and Payne entered into a contract with the city, of Lewiston on the 7th day of September, 1910, wherein and whereby they agreed to construct an extension to the intake pipe to the pumping plant of the water system of the city of Lewiston for a stipulated sum. It appears that the city was the owner of and maintained a waterworks sys
In this case the claim is for labor done and performed in the construction of the coffer-dam. The other cases are for materials furnished. A number of questions are presented, and we will deal with them briefly in the order in which they arise.
(1) This action was prosecuted under the provisions of sec. 5111 of the Rev. Codes, which provides as follows:
“Every subcontractor, laborer or other person, who performs labor, or furnishes material, for any original contractor or subcontractor, to be used in the construction, alteration or repair of any building, machinery or other structure, for any county, city, town or school district, has a lien upon such building, machinery or structure, and all the provisions of this
See. 5110 of the Rev. Codes defines the right to a lien, and names the persons and conditions under which liens may be had, while see. 5111, as above set out, extends the right of lien to buildings, machinery or structures owned by any “county, city, town or school district.” Appellant contends, however, that the foregoing section was repealed by implication by act of March 13,1909 (1909 Sess. Laws, p. 165), which act provides that where any person enters into a contract with the state, any county, city, town, school or irrigation district, or any quasi-public corporation in the state, for the construction, alteration or repair of any public building, public work or quasi-public work, the contract price of which exceeds the sum of $200, he shall be required before commencing such work to execute the usual penal bond in a sum equaling sixty per cent 'at least of the contract price, etc. Then follows the detail of procedure and order of preference and payment of any claim or judgment obtained on such bond.
It is contended by counsel for appellant that this latter act providing another remedy necessarily repeals the provisions of see. 5111. The contention, however, does not appear sound. The statute of 1909 in no way conflicts with the former statute. It rather seems to be a mere additional and cumulative remedy, and was especially intended to protect the state, city or other municipal corporation. We are bound to assume that when the legislature passed the act of March 13, 1909, they were aware of the provisions of sec. 5111 of the Rev. Codes. Notwithstanding this fact, they embodied no repealing clause in the act of 1909. There is no difficulty about construing the two provisions harmoniously and giving force and effect to both. In such case, the court is not justified in holding the former act invalid or repealed.
The supreme court of California dealt with a somewhat kindred question in Bates v. Santa Barbara County, 90 Cal. 543, 27 Pac. 438, and French v. Powell, 135 Cal. 636, 68 Pac. 92, and held the acts thereunder considered to be merely additional and cumulative remedies.
In Phillips v. Salmon River etc. Co., 9 Ida. 149, 72 Pac. 886, it was held that a description of the mining claim contained in-a notice of lien in the following language was sufficient: “The mining claim known as the ‘Salem Bar,’ situated on the Idaho side of the main channel of the Snake river one-half mile north or down the river from the mouth of the Grande Ronde, in Nez Perce county, Idaho.” The authorities abundantly sustain us in this view. (Hotaling v. Cronise, 2 Cal. 60; Tibbetts v. Moore, 23 Cal. 208; Tredinnick v. Red Cloud Con. Min. Co., 72 Cal. 78, 13 Pac. 152; Emerson v. Gainey, 26 Fla. 133, 7 So. 526; Durling v. Gould, 83 Me. 134, 21 Atl. 833; Phillips on Mechanics’ Liens, sec. 379; Bloom on Mechanics’ Liens, sec. 404.)
(3) It is contended that since all the work that was done and all the material that was furnished were swept away by the flood or' freshet in the Clearwater river, and there is nothing left either of the work or material, that no lien claim can be sustained. In this connection it is also contended that materials furnished and labor performed in preparatory work, such as false works and a coffer-dam, as was done in this case, and which do not constitute a part of the real work or
“It seems to us, however, that as these laws have come to be extended to mines and mining properties, this line of reasoning has to a great extent become faulty. To say that the laborer who goes into the placer mine and washes out all the gold it contains, or into a quartz mine and extracts and removes the values it contains, has added to the value of the mines, is not a course of reasoning that appeals to us very forcibly.
“The legislature in enacting these laws did not have in mind the protection of the mine owners, but rather the protection of the laborers. They were not contemplating, when they enacted this law, the probability of the laborers enhanc
Counsel for respondents, after reviewing the general purpose and policy of these statutes, has aptly summed the whole matter up in the following sentence: “The law rests on the policy that one who initiates work and may by slight precaution avert injury to innocent persons affected thereby, shall be charged with the duty of taking that precaution.” This states the ultimate purpose intended. The person or corporation owning property and desiring to make alterations or improvements or erect structures thereon has it in his or its power to absolutely and unqualifiedly protect men who perform labor or those who furnish material in or about such works, and it is the purpose and policy of the law to charge such owner with that duty to the extent of the value of the property on which such structure, repair or- improvement is placed. The lien statute operates in rem and not in personam; it creates no personal charge against the owner of the property, but rather a charge against the property to the extent of its value. Now, the fact that the improvement or structure or the work done is carried away by the elements or destroyed cannot relieve the property owner, nor can it pay the man who has furnished his labor or material in carrying on the work or destroy the lien given him by statute. So far as we have been able to examine the authorities cited by appellant holding that there is no lien where the property has been lost or destroyed, they are dealing chiefly with an original contractor, and under that principle of law that one who contracts to erect and complete a building or structure and deliver it in the completed
This principle, however, can have no application to the laboring man and the materialman; the man who is laboring on the building has no control over it, neither does the man who furnishes the material for its construction have the control or custody of the building. The original contractor, however, may take out a builder’s insurance and protect himself as he progresses with the work.
It is further argued in this connection that the building of a coffer-dam was no part of the contract in this ease, and that the city would have no use for that after the work was completed; that this was only an incident to the placing of the piping and cage that were to be constructed for the intake to the water-pipe and system. It is insisted that the contractors might have employed some other method of doing this rather than the construction of a coffer-dam, and that this material and labor was not a part of the contract. This may be legally and technically correct, but the application of such a course of reasoning would go wide of giving substantial justice. When the city contracted for the laying of this pipe and the doing of this work, its agents and officers knew at the time that it would be necessary to construct a coffer-dam or use some other means or method that would accomplish the same result in order to do the work and make the repair that the contract called for. If this be true, and it undoubtedly is, then we fail to see what difference it makes to the city whether this labor and material was employed and used in building the coffer-dam or in procuring some other means or contrivance through and by which the work should be carried on and completed. When a man contracts to have a building erected, he knows that the contractors and builders will be obliged to have scaffolding and other material that does not actually go into the building, but which may practically be used and consumed and destroyed in the course of the work. Such material and the labor incident thereto is 'as much a part of the
These views have been very ably set forth and sustained by Mr. Chief Justice Winslow in the supreme court of Wisconsin in Barker & Stewart Lumber Co. v. Marathon Paper Mills Co., 146 Wis. 12, 130 N. W. 866, 36 L. R. A., N. S., 875, and this authority has been approved and the same view ably set forth in Darlington Lumber Co. v. Westlake Construction Co., 161 Mo. App. 723, 141 S. W. 931. See, also, Valley Lumber Co. v. Nickerson, 13 Ida. 682, 93 Pac. 24; Weeter Lumber Co. v. Fales, 20 Ida. 255, 118 Pac. 289.
(4)- Considerable has been said both in the briefs and the oral argument as to the extent,of lien to be allowed in this case should any lien be allowed at all. The extension pipe and intake were to be constructed out in the bed of the Clear-water river. The work was done there.. No work was actually and literally done upon any of the pipe or machinery or any part of the present water system, and so it is insisted that whatever lien there is. can only attach to .the bed of the stream where the work was carried on. This contention overlooks the fact that the contract called for a repair or alteration to the water system and pumping plant which would attach itself to and become a part of the system. The contract called for extending the pipe out into the stream, setting a steel cage there to inclose the intake to the pipe and certain works necessary and essential to the completion of this repair or alteration. This would have been a part of the system had it been carried out and completed as the contract called for. This could not be Completed by the first load of material or the first day’s labor or the second day’s labor. The work may have been commenced in the middle of the stream or it may have been commenced at the end of the water pipe. This, however, is immaterial for the purposes of the lien. The test is the contract which they were working on, — the improvement or repair that was made. The liens of the laboring men and the materialmen were not dependent upon the ultimate completion of the contract in connecting up the repair with the original system, but the right
The-judgment of the district court is therefore affirmed, with costs in favor of the respondents.
Petition for rehearing denied.