66 P. 390 | Or. | 1901
Lead Opinion
On Motion to Dismiss Appeal.
delivered the opinion.
The respondents, except the Northwest Door Company, moved to dismiss the appeal herein, and they assign as a reason therefor that the transcript was not filed with the clerk of this court within thirty days from the- date on which the appeal was perfected. A notice of appeal, directed to John Manning, E. P. Morcum, W. T. Slater, and W. M. Kaiser, attorneys for all the defendants, showing due acceptance of service thereof by John Manning, “one of attorneys for said defendants and respondents,” on October 6, 1899, was, together with an undertaking on appeal, filed with the clerk of the court below October 7, 1899. Subsequently another notice was served, all of the defendants except the Northwest Door Company accepting service thereof November 7, 1899, by John Manning, their attorney, and the Northwest Door Company, by H. A. Cornell, its president. This notice, together with a new undertaking, was filed with the clerk November 9, 1899. No transcript was filed in this court until more than thirty days after the time for excepting to the sureties on the first undertaking. It is claimed that John Manning was never the attorney of record for the Northwest Door Company, and was without authority to accept service of the notice of appeal for said company, and, as a matter of fact, such acceptance was made through inadvertence, and it was for this reason the second notice was served. The question is presented, therefore, whether the appeal was perfected by the service and filing of the first notice and undertaking. If so, this appeal should be dismissed; otherwise, not: Nestucca Wagon Road Co. v. Landingham, 24 Or. 439 (33 Pac. 983). If the Northwest Door Company was a necessary party to the appeal =(and
Opinion on the Merits
On the Merits.
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a suit to foreclose an alleged mechanics’ lien. It is stated in the complaint, in effect, that about December 17, 1898, the plaintiffs entered into a contract with the defendants S. Tomlinson, Charles P. Strain, and Nettie V. Strain, by and
The testimony fails to disclose that Eoberts was an agent of or had authority from the defendants, or either of them, to order on their account the material supplied by the plaintiffs; and it conclusively appears that Eoberts did not have charge of the construction of any part of said building, and that he was not a contractor, subcontractor, architect, or builder in respect to the owners of the building, or of any person in privity with them. His letters to plaintiffs to the effect that he had secured the contract to furnish all the shop work, sash, doors, glass, etc., do not intimate that he was to place in the building, as a part thereof, any of the material ordered. He was, therefore, as the evidence clearly shows, only a material man, and it is unimportant whether he manufactured the material, or secured it from others who did so, or who kept it in stock for sale. A rule recognizing a manufacturer as the only person entitled to be denominated a “material man” would necessarily defeat the lien of middlemen for material used in’ the construction of a building, notwithstanding such material may have been purchased from the manufacturer and paid for by the dealer. So, too, if a manufacturer could assert a lien because he had not’ been paid for material sold and delivered to a retail dealer, which the latter, upon being paid therefor, sold to the owner of a building, who attached it to his estate,
It follows that the decree is affirmed. Affirmed.