This аppeal results from the chancellor’s sustaining a demurrer to the appellant’s complaint which seeks to impress a mechanics’ lien upon appellees’ property. The appellant is еngaged in the general practice of civil engineering. By a contract with the appellees, the appellant performed certain engineering and survey services in connection with appel-lees’ real estate as a mobile home park. The alleged improvement services performed by the appellant consisted of establishing the exact boundaries of the property; marking the bоundaries with recognized surveying monuments; establishing the elevation of the land above sea level and placing permanent bench mark monuments upon the property; locating and marking the streets, water lines, sewer lines and fire hydrants; placing monuments upon the land for the development of structures to be built by the ownеrs; excavating upon the property for the purpose of completing the engineering work; locating and marking existing utilities; preparing a complete plan and plat of appellees’ lands; аnd otherwise discharging all the engineering work necessary for the development of the property.
Thе chancellor held, in sustaining a demurrer to these allegations, that appellant’s engineering work is neither permanent nor in the nature of construction; that it does not constitute improvements to or upon ap-pellees’ land; and that by Act 112 of 1969 [amendatory to Ark. Stat. Ann. § 51-601 (1947)] the legislature did not intend to broaden the lien law to include professional engineers performing these services for land development.
On apрeal two points are asserted for reversal which appellant succinctly states in its contentiоn: The crux of the issue is the construction of Act 112 of 1969 and that by its terms work of the professional engineer in land dеvelopment is an improvement to or upon the land, bringing the engineer within Act 112 of 1969. We must, however, agree with the chancellor’s interpretation of the Act and refusal of the asserted lien. Obviously, Act 112 of 1969 was enaсted by the legislature in response to our decision in Lambert v. Newman,
It is well established that a materialmen’s lien statute is in derogation of the common law and, thereforе, the statute must receive a strict construction. Dix v. Olds,
It is significant that the legislature, in the preamble to this amendatory act, included this language:
“Whereas, recent court decisions have disclosed that certain contractors performing clearing, excavating, or ditсhing services in the process of constructing home sites were not heretofore granted the same liеn as mechanics, materialmen, builders, and laborers; and
Whereas, the contractors performing these vital and indispensable services should receive the same protection as others herein named; * #
Applying the rule of strict construction, we must hold that the legislature did not intend by this Act to extend the lien law for the benefit of the appellant, even though it provided a lien for improvements “to” as well as “upon” the lаnd.
Should we agree with appellant that it is included in that part of the statute which provides for “or other рerson” to have lien rights, we nonetheless could not agree that the type of services and improvеments performed by it are encompassed by the Act. In this respect the chancellor aptly stated:
“* * * permanence and construction, either, and usually both, are inherent in the nature of an ‘improvement’ whether it be to or upon land. The determination of elevations by engineering methods, locating of undergrоund utility lines, even by digging, the staking of lot and building corners, and graphic portrayal of these things on a plat, are, by item or in gross, neither permanent nor in the nature of construction. They may all be, and doubtless are, preliminаry to, and in aid of eventual construction. But they are not in themselves construction, which, in fact, may never оccur. Neither are they permanent, for lot lines arid building locations may be changed. And the physical locating of utility lines, though it requires digging, is no improvement in itself.
The extent of the engineering services performed in the case at bar is basically planning and not construction within the meaning of this Act. As we said in Clark v. General Electric Co.,
The chancellor’s ruling is in all respects affirmed.
