54 Me. 345 | Me. | 1867
John M. Wood, the original defendant in-this action, is dead, and his estate has been duly represented insolvent, and commissioners of insolvency have been appointed to examine the claims against the estate.
The case may, notwithstanding this, proceed to judgment, at all events, under R.S.,§ 17, c. 66 ; and as it is admitted, by the administrator, that a certain sum was due from Wood to the plaintiffs, and the plaintiffs claim to recover no more than that amount, judgment is to be rendered for the plaintiffs as upon a default, for the sum thus agreed upon.
It is to be determined under the agreed statement whether this judgment shall be enforced by execution as contemplated in R. S., § 21, c. 91, notwithstanding the acknowledged fact that the debtor is deceased and his estate represented insolvent.
If there is no valid lien secured by the proceedings here, in favor of the plaintiffs, they must proceed upon the rendition of judgment in the manner prescribed in R. S., § 17, c. 66, — that is to say, the judgment is rendered with the effect and satisfied in the manner provided in cases of appeal from the decision of commissioners of insolvency; no execution, except for costs, shall issue, and the amount of the judgment for the debt is to be entered by the Judge of Probate on the list of contingent debts entitled to dividends.
Unless the claim presented is a preferred, or a lien claim, the issuing of an execution in a case like the present would be contrary to law. It seems to follow that the question of lien or no lien, must, in such case, be settled in the suit in which the lien is claimed and alleged.
The whole duty of the administrator as to pending suits is not performed when he has represented the estate insolvent and procured the appointment of commissioners in the Probate Court. He is bound to appear, when summoned into the common law court, in order to make the representation of insolvency appear on the record there, either by plea or by motion for the stay of execution; and if he neglects this, and execution is. regularly issued in due course,
In Ballard v. Dame, Adm’r, 7 Pick., 239, the administrator filed a plea admitting the note sued to be due, but setting out the proceedings in insolvency in the Probate Court, and praying that no execution might issue against the estate of the intestate in his hands, but that judgment, if rendered for the plaintiff, might be rendered as against an insolvent estate. PARKER, G. J., in delivering the opinion of the Court, says, — " The plea shows sufficient cause to prevent execution, &c., though judgment is to be entered for the plaintiff, the cause of action being admitted by the plea.”
If, in such case, the facts, upon which the existence of the lien depends, are in dispute, a special verdict in relation thereto must be taken, and execution awarded or withheld in conformity therewith.
Under § 21, c. 91 of the R. S., the plaintiffs are entitled to execution as well as judgment, if it appears that they have taken the necessary steps to perfect a valid existing lien. By § 2, c. 131, laws of 1862, it is provided that, "in all cases where the house or building, or the logs or lumber on which the labor was performed, have been or shall be attached, the proceedings shall be deemed sufficient to effectuate the lien, if the writ, officer’s return of attachment, and the judgment recovered in the suit are, or shall be in the usual and common forms of the common law, as heretofore understood and practised in all other actions of assump-sit, the declaration disclosing that the suit is brought to enforce the lien.”
It is unnecessary to consider the various objections urged by the defendant to the validity and sufficiency of the attachment in this case, for we are satisfied that when this suit was commenced, there was no valid subsisting lien
The plaintiffs’ claim is for labor and materials furnished in the erection of a hotel under a contract made in 1855 with John M. Wood, and by the dates in their own bill of particulars, filed April term, 1866, it appears to be settled beyond controversy that this labor and these materials had all been furnished in or prior to January, 1858. By the terms of the contract, payment was not to be considered as due until the completion of the hotel, which remained unfinished at the time of the conversation between one of the plaintiffs and Wood, in 1862, shortly before the commencement of the action. This conversation is relied upon by the plaintiffs to" establish the claim of lien. It seems to have been held purposely to afford evidence of the existence of such lien. In it Wood waived the stipulation in his favor, as to time of payment. Considering the long lapse of time during which the hotel had remained unfinished, without fault on the part of the plaintiffs, so far as appears, we might hold that the original contractor could lawfully waive this provision and consent to immediate proceedings for the enforcement of the lien, without thereby defeating it, and that .the lien would still attach to the contract, as thus modified and varied by the original parties to it, if the law, by force of which the lien existed, had remained as it was when the contract was entered into. By the law, as it then stood, the lien continued for ninety days after payment became due, according to the terms of the contract, and might be enforced by attachment within that time, no matter how distant the payday agreed on. But warned by the frequent controversies which arose between lien claimants and subsequent bona fide purchasers, ignorant of the incumbrances thus created, the Legislature in 1858, added to the section creating the lien the following proviso : "but such lien shall not continue more than ninety days after such labor is performed or materials furnished, unless an attachment is made, or a memorandum of the contract recorded in the manner provided by law for record
It is claimed in behalf of the plaintiffs that this proviso ought not to be suffered to affect a lien arising upon a contract which was made previous to its enactment. But the statute in terms covers existing lions as well as those thereafter to arise. The lien is the creature of the statute. It is no part of the contract, but a merely incidental accompaniment, deriving its validity only from positive enactment and liable always to be controlled, modified or taken away by subsequent enactment, and such modification or removal cannot be considered as in any degree impairing the obligation of the contract itself. The lien is but a means of enforcing the contract, a remedy given by law, and likm all matters pertaining to the remedy, and not to the essence of the contract, until perfected by proceedings whereby rights in the property over which the lien is claimed have become vested, it is entirely within the control of the lawmaking power, in w’hose edict it originated. Bangor v. Goding, 35 Maine, 73; Bray v. Carleton, 35 Maine, 481.
Again, it is said on the part of the plaintiffs, that there is evidence in Wood’s statement that the labor and materials were furnished within ninety days before the commencement of the action and the attachment.
But it is not competent for a debtor to create upon any portion of his property a lien which shall have precedence of all other attachments and incumbrances, made after the lien attached, and shall even, in case of the insolvency of the debtor’s estate, have the effect to sequester a portion of his property for the payment oí a particular creditor, by admissions that are manifestly inconsistent with actually existing facts. Nor can the debtor, by making such admissions, restore a lost lien. No memorandum of the contract appears to have been recorded, as the law of 1858 requires. The plaintiffs’ own bill of particulars shows the labor and materials to have been actually furnished more than four years before the commencement of the suit. And Wood’s
Defendant defaulted for amount agreed upon.
Judgment as against an insolvent estate.
No execution to issue except for costs.