We have granted defendant’s application for interlocutory appeal to decide whether gasoline, diesel fuel and petroleum are products within the “ordinary meaning” of the term “material” for which a mechanic’s lien may be filed under Iowa Code sections 572.1(2) and 572.2 (1993). The district court concluded these products, for which plaintiff filed a mechanic’s lien against defendant, were materials within the meaning of the statute and denied defendant’s motion for summary judgment. We reverse the district court ruling and remand for an order dismissing the case.
Plaintiff, Farmers Cooperative Company (Farmers Co-op), supplied gasoline, diesel fuel, and petroleum to an excavator who used some of these products while working for the defendant, A.J. DeCoster, on the DeCoster property. The excavator failed to pay an amount owed to Farmers Co-op who then filed a mechanic’s lien and subsequent foreclosure action against the DeCoster property.
DeCoster filed a motion for summary judgment claiming the products provided by Farmers Co-op to the excavator did not come within the meaning of “material” for which a mechanic’s lien could be filed under chapter 572. The district court concluded the products were encompassed by the “ordinary meaning” of the term “material” under section 572.1(2) and denied summary judgment. On interlocutory appeal DeCoster argues the meaning of “material” can be ascertained by comparing section 572.1(2) with a companion statute, Iowa Code section 573.1(2) (Labor and Material on Public Improvements). Section 572.1(2) provides:
“Material” shall in addition to its ordinary meaning embrace and include machinery, fixtures, trees, evergreens, vines, plants, shrubs, tubers, bulbs, hedges, bushes, sod, soil, dirt, mulch, peat, fertilizer, fence wire, fence material, fence posts, tile, and the use of forms, accessories, and equipment.
Section 573.1(2) has a similar provision: “Material” shall, in addition to its ordinary meaning, embrace feed, gasoline, kerosene, lubricating oils and greases, provisions and fuel, and the use of forms, accessories, and equipment, but shall not include personal expenses or personal purchases of employees for their individual use.
(Emphasis added.) DeCoster contends that gasoline, diesel fuel and petroleum were not intended to come within the ordinary meaning of material in section 572.1(2) because the legislature listed these items as being “in addition to” the ordinary meaning of material in section 573.1(2).
Our scope of review is on error.
Farm & City Ins. Co. v. Anderson,
Sections 572.1(2) and 573.1(2) use similar language and cover the same subject matter. Both chapters 572 and 573 secure or protect the persons performing work or providing materials toward the improvement of property belonging to another.
See Sinclair Refining Co. v. Burch,
When statutes relate to the same subject matter or to closely allied subjects they are said to be in pari materia and must be construed, considered and examined in light of their common purpose and intent so as to produce a harmonious system or body of legislation.
Rush v. Sioux City,
Section 10270(4) (mechanic’s lien): “Material” shall be construed as if followed by the words “machinery or fixtures”.
Section 10299(4) (public improvements): “Material” shall, in addition to its ordinary meaning, embrace feed, provisions and fuel.
It is significant the legislature listed fuel as additional to the ordinary meaning of material in section 10299(4) while limiting the meaning of material to machinery and fixtures in section 10270(4). This indicates the legislature’s intent was not to include fuel in the ordinary meaning of material.
In particular, it is assumed the legislature’s use of terms was in the accepted judicially established context unless there is clear evidence to the contrary.
Jahnke,
Material furnished for the lubrication of, or as fuel for the operation of, the machinery and equipment used in the construction ... does not come within the provisions of the [public improvement] statute.
Thus, the court in
Aetna
stated, “if appellant is to be allowed protection for its lubricating oils, greases, kerosene, and barrels, it must be under and by virtue of the added words ‘feed, provisions, and fuel.’ ”
Aetna,
The legislature expanded the list of additions to the ordinary meaning of material under the public improvement statute* in 1929 to include “gasoline, kerosene, lubricating oils and greases.”
See
1929 Iowa Acts ch. 244, §§ 1, 2. When a legislature enacts a provision, it has available all the other provisions relating to the same subject matter whether in the same statute or in a separate act. 2B Sutherland
Statutory Construction
§ 51.01 (5th ed. 1992). Thus, it is reasonable to presume the definition of material in the mechanic’s lien statute was noted by the legislature in 1929. Moreover, we presume a legislature does not deliberately enact inconsistent provisions when it is cognizant of them both, without expressly recognizing the inconsistency.
Id.
Also, we do not presume the legislature intended words in a statute be given a redundant meaning.
State v. Sullins,
The need for uniformity becomes more imperative where the same word or term is used in different statutory sections that are similar in purpose and content. 2B Sutherland
Statutory Construction
§ 51.02.
*539
Identical statutory language in different statutes should be given much the same meaning.
City of Burlington v. Turner,
We conclude gasoline, diesel fuel and petroleum are not included within the “ordinary meaning” of “material” under section 572.1(2). Therefore, these items are not lien-able. Our interpretation is consistent with the general approach that, in the absence of an express provision, no lien may attach for coal or other fuel consumed by machines used in construction. 53 Am.Jur.2d Mechanic’s Liens § 97. DeCoster’s motion for summary judgment should have been granted. We reverse the district court judgment and remand for an order dismissing the case.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
