43 Ky. 61 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1843
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Graham & Co. lumber merchants, and P. N. Jarvis, a carpenter, filed this bill, asserting liens under the statute, for lumber furnished by the formei and work done by the latter, on a house built byD. Holton a lot in Louisville, leased by him from Rudd, of which leasehold Breden has since become the proprietor. On the hearing, the bill as to Graham &. Co. was dismissed, without prejudice to any other remedy on the note taken by them for the balance of their account, and the claim and prayer of Jarvis for a lien, &c. was also dismissed. A writ of error is prosecuted to reverse this decree.
As to the claim of Jarvis, we are of opinion that the decree was right, because at the time when this work was done by Jarvis, Holt had counter demands against him, more than sufficient to discharge the fair price of this work, and which, in effect, left no debts due from him to Jarvis for this work; and even though, by a subsequent change in the state of the accounts, the balance may have turned in favor of Jarvis, and so existed at the filing of the bill, which, however, does not satisfactorily appear in this case, and though it were conceded that under the circumstances, the lien accrued in the first instance, still it would seem to be inequitable to enforce it for this particular demand, when the interest of Holt in the subject of the lien had, in the mean time, been transferred to Breden, an innocent purchaser.
But we do not concur with the Chancellor as to the lien of Graham & Co. It appears satisfactorily, though not conclusively, that lumber io the value of their claim, as charged in their account G, was furnished by them to .•Holt, and used in the house mentioned in the bill as the
But the question in this case is, whether the lien given by the statute for the price of the lumber furnished by Graham & Co. is lost by reason of the note being taken, assigned away, negotiated at Bank and taken up by the payees though remaining still unpaid by the maker? If it is not, then having been properly asserted by bill filed within a year from the time the lumber was furnished it should have been enforced.
The taking of the note has no other effect upon the lien than to suspend its enforcement until the credit given in the note has expired. It is not in itself the security, the taking of which prevents the lien from attaching, or destroys it under the 4th section of the statute. It is but the personal obligation of the debtor, evidenced in a form more convenient and useful to the creditor than the original simple contract. In giving the lien, the statute did not intend to destroy the personal obligation of the debtor, nor to prevent its being evidenced in the form of a note. The security which will prevent or destroy the lien is something in addition to this personal obligation and in aid of it, and which, so far as it is realized for the benefit of any holder of the debt, will discharge the debtor’s ob. ligation to pay it. Construing the statute literally, this
Conceding that every assignor is in some sense surely . ° , » , , . or security tor the payment of the note assigned, and that jn ^¡8 case> a][ the indorsers were securities to the Bank for the payment of the note — still we say, the debt intended to be secured by the statutory lien was the debt due to Graham & Co. for their materials used in Holt’s building. The security which will prevent or destroy the lien, must be a security which is intended to come in place of the lien and to secure payment for the materials; something which, as far as it is available, may avail towards the payment of that debt. It is not such security as the creditor himself may furnish, in order to enable him to realize at once, by negotiating the note of his debtor, the price of his materials. Though he may thus obtain the money, the debt for materials remains unpaid, and his responsibility for the payment of the note to the assignee does not come in place of the lien, and could not have been so intended or regarded, for his payment under this responsibility will leave the debt for. the materials still unpaid, and will leave him a creditor therefor, as he was before the assignment. For the same ora similar reason, it is not such securify as any subsequent assignor or indorser, to whom the original payee is responsible, may furnish to his assignee, or such as any assignee may take, leaving the responsibility of the payee unaffected. For unless the avails of the security taken would, if realized, go in discharge of the responsibility, either of the original debtor or of the original creditor, or both, it cannot operate to the same end as the lien given by the statute, and therefore, cannot be regarded as such security as will, in view of the statute, displace the intended lien. There is no such security in this case.
It is contended, however, that the statute gives the lien to the mechanics and material men only, and that it is destroyed by the assignment of the note for the debt which it was intended to secure. We do not concede this to be a legitimate conclusion from the premises ° r stated, nor from the additional fact that the statute provides only for the enforcement of the lien by those persons to whom it is given. The question is not to whom
We conclude, therefore, that Graham & Go. had not lost their lien by reason of any of the facts above stated, but that it was still subsisting and should have been recognized and enforced in the usual mode.
Wherefore, the decree dismissing their bill, without pre