54 Kan. 455 | Kan. | 1894
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The question arising on the merits of the case is, whether parties who furnished the machinery necessary for the completion of the sugar factory, in accordance with the original design, are entitled to a lien dating from the commencement of the building, or only from the time when such machinery was actually furnished. The law covering the case is § 1, chapter 141, of the Laws of 1872, which reads as follows:
“Section 1. Any mechanic or other person who shall, under contract with the owner of any tract or piece of land, his agent or trustee, or under contract with the husband or wife of such owner, perform labor or furnish material for erecting, altering or repairing any building or the appurtenances of any building, or any erection or improvement, or shall furnish or perform labor in putting up any fixtures or machinery in or attachment to any such building or improvement, or plant and grow any trees, vines and plants or hedge or hedge fence, or shall build a stone fence, or shall perform labor or furnish 'material for erecting, altering or repairing any fence or any tract or piece of land; shall have a lien upon the whole tract or piece of land, the building and appurtenances, in the manner herein provided, for the amount due to him for such labor or material, fixtures or machinery. Such lien shall be preferred to all other liens and incumbrances which may attach to or upon such lands, buildings or improvements or either of them subsequent to ■ the commencement of such building, the furnishing or putting up of such fixtures or machinery, or planting and growing of such trees, vines or plants or hedge or hedge fence or stone fence, or the making of any such repairs or improvements; and if any promissory note bearing not exceeding 12 per cent, interest per annum shall have been taken for any such labor or material, it shall be sufficient to file a copy of such note, with a sworn statement that said note or any part thereof was given for such labor or material used in the construction of any such building or improvement, in the office of the district clerk, and it shall be necessary to file a list of items used, and the lien shall be for the principal and interest aforesaid, as specified in said note.”
The trial court held that a lien for machinery dated only
It is contended that the language used in Mortgage Co. v. Weyerhaeuser, 48 Kas. 335, upholds the construction of the statute claimed by the defendant in error. It was said in that case by Simpson, C., in the opinion:
“Liens, under our law, date from the commencement of the building, when one is constructed; from the making of repairs, when a building is altered or improved; from the furnishing or putting up of fixtures or machinery, when they are attached to or put in any building.”
The language used hardly indicates an opinion on the point involved in this case. Unquestionably, where machinery or fixtures are furnished for a building which was a completed structure prior to the time when they were so furnished, the lien would date only from the time when they were so furnished. It would be manifestly wrong to make the lien superior to a mortgage which had been given covering a completed structure. In this case, the court makes a distinction between what is called the building proper and the machinery placed in it in accordance with the original design for a sugar factory. The court found that the defendant N. F. Frazier, to whom' the mortgage was originally given, knew at the time of its execution, and prior thereto, that it was the
The materials and machinery furnished by the plaintiff in error were used in the construction, and became a part of the sugar works in accordance with this original plan, which was known to Frazier and the bank. The court, in its decree, has ordered a sale of the land and the sugar works thereon, which will unquestionably carry to the purchaser title to the materials furnished by the plaintiff in error, as well as to the land, and what is termed the building proper. How can it be said that the machinery and fixtures — which become a part of the realty, because placed in and attached to the building, to be used in connection with it, and which are necessary and essential to the structure originally designed — are a part of the building for the purpose pi a sale in satisfaction of the bank’s mortgage, yet are not a part of the building for the purpose of securing payment to the plaintiffs in error for furnishing them? The Douglass Sugar Company erected sugar works. Its original purpose when it broke ground for the building was to build a sugar factory, and not to build a mere skeleton of a building which might be used for any purpose.
Under the statute, if a lien for machinery which goes in as a part of the structure originally planned dates only from the time when it is furnished, the same rule must be applied to fixtures. Were we to attempt to follow this rule, we should find ourselves in a maze of interminable difficulties. It would be sufficiently difficult, often, to determine what is machinery. But to determine what is a fixture, within the meaning of the statute, would lead to endless refinements. Bouvier defines “fixtures” as “personal chattels affixed to real estate, which may be severed and removed by the party who has affixed them, or by his personal representative, against the will of the owner of the freehold.” He adds:
Can it be that the legislature intended that the lumber merchant who furnishes shingles for the roof, the carpenter who nails them on, the merchant who sells the paint and oil, and the painter who paints the finished structure, shall have liens dating from the commencement of the work on the foundation, but that the dealers and mechanics who have furnished and placed in and upon the building window blinds, door locks, grates, mantelpieces or furnaces required by the architect’s plan, which become attached to and a part of the realty, as between the owner and the mortgagee, must be postponed and placed in a separate and inferior class of lien holders? We do not think any such discrimination was intended. Every provision of the act can be given effect without such a construction. The language of the section giving a lien for the labor performed or material furnished is very broad, including all cases where buildings are erected, altered, or repaired, or the appurtenances of any building, or any erection or improvement is made. In determining prefer(nces, the statute says:
“Such lien shall be preferred to all other liens and incumbrances which may attach to or upon said lands, buildings or improvements or either of them subsequent to the commencement of such building, the furnishing or putting up of such fixtures or machinery, or the making of any such repairs or i mprovements.”
The judgment is reversed so far only as it affects the priority of liens between the plaintiff in error and the Merchants’ Bank, with the direction that the lien of the plaintiff in error be adjudged prior to that of the bank, and ordered paid out of the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged property before any part thereof be applied to the payment of the claim of the Merchants’ Bank.