48 P. 703 | Or. | 1897
after stating the facts, •delivered the opinion of the court.
The principal question suggested by the controversy is touching the assignability of claims of laborers, the preferment of which the enactment is designed to promote. No contention is made but that the claimants might each for himself have prosecuted an action in his own name of the nature here adopted to establish his individual claim; but it is insisted that the preference which the law raises is a privilege strictly personal to the claimant, and one
With the right or preference thus clearly established, it remains to examine the manner of its enforcement, and to determine to what extent the remedy must be pursued as a personal privilege. Manifestly, the statute comprehends only such debts as are owing to the laborers or employees at the date of the seizure or assignment, and these debts are denominated “claims for wages.” Now, it is provided that any such person desiring to enforce such a claim shall, in case of an assignment, present a statement, made out and verified in the form and manner prescribed, to the assignee, within thirty days after the property has been placed in his hands, and serve a copy upon the debtor. Such is the method by which a claimant may avail himself of his preference. Thus far it would seem that the privilege is personal to the laborer or employee, as he may adopt the remedy if he desires, within the statutory period, or he may waive it as a debtor may waive the exemptions from seizure upon execution, by not claiming them in due season from the officer having the property in charge. When a claim is thus presented, a duty is devolved upon the assignee to report it to the court, and upon the court to direct its payment out of the proceeds of the sale of the property, first after the payment of the costs and expenses of the assignment. But it is further provided that any person interested may contest such a claim by filing exceptions thereto, and thereafter it is made incumbent upon the claimant to establish the
The question whether statutory liens are assignable, or, if so, whether the action should be prosecuted in the name of the assignor, has but little to do with the present case. It is merely a question here whether a preferred claim of the class created
The agreement and the notice of lien were properly admitted in evidence. The issue was whether the settlement was fraudulent, having been, among other attendant circumstances, negotiated in the absence of the attorney who was, under the agreement, directly charged with the supervision of the distribution of the proceeds after collection. The agreement tended to show the plaintiff’s position and authority in the premises, and it and the notice of lien were pertinent to disclose the relations and interest of the attorney in the transaction. And it appearing that the defendant had knowledge of the existence of these instruments, and even of their contents, prior to the alleged settlement, they were significant in this connection as tending to show an apparent disregard of the rights of interested parties. Nor was the instruction objectionable. In Russian v. Milwaukee R. R. Co., 56 Wis. 335 (14 N. W. 453), Taylor, J., says: “We think that no release obtained from the plaintiff after an action has been commenced and counsel employed, in the absence of the plaintiff’s counsel, and without his con
Aeeiemed.