110 Cal. 627 | Cal. | 1895
The plaintiff under an employment by the defendant performed labor upon certain reservoirs, dams, and ditches belonging to the defendant, at different times between May 27, 1892, and June 23, 1893, amounting in the aggregate, according to the agreed rate of compensation, to the sum of eight hundred and sixty-eight dollars and seventy-five cents, of which he was paid the sum of three hundred and seventy-eight dollars and eighty-two cents. He brings this action to recover from the defendant the balance thereof, viz., four hundred and eighty-eight dollars and ninety-three cents, and to have that sum adjudged to be a lien upon the property of the defendant. Judgment by default was rendered in his favor, and the defendant has appealed.
1. The appellant urges that the judgment is void by reason of there being no proof of service of the summons upon the defendant. The service was made by a private individual, and, in his affidavit, he states that “he personally served the same upon J. H. Elledge, the managing agent of the above-named defendant, Eagle Lake Land and Irrigation Company, a corporation, on the thirteenth day of January, 1894, by delivering to said J. H. Elledge, the said managing agent of said defendant (corporation), personally, in the county of Lassen, state of California, a copy of said summons attached to a true copy of the complaint, .... and that he knows the person so served to be the person acting as managing agent for said defendant (corporation) named in said action.” It is objected that this affidavit merely shows that the service was made upon Elledge, and does not show that it was made upon the corporation. It
2. The appellant does not contest the amount for which judgment was given, but contends that the judgment was erroneous in declaring that the plaintiff is-entitled to a lien therefor upon its property. The plaintiff relies in support of the judgment upon the act passed March 31,1891. (Stats. 1891, p. 195.) That act is as follows:
“ Section 1. Every corporation doing business in this state shall pay the mechanics and laborers employed by it the wages earned by and due them weekly or monthly; on such day in each week or month as shall be selected by such corporation.
“ Sec. 2. A violation of the provisions of section 1 of this act shall entitle each of the said mechanics and laborers to a lien on all the property of said corporation for the amount of their wages, which lien shall take preference over all other liens, except duly recorded mortgages or deeds of trust.”
By the terms of the first section of this act, it does-not apply to all corporations, but only to. those who, while doing business in this state, employ laborers and mechanics by the week or month, whose wages, under the terms of their employment, are payable weekly or
The plaintiff did not acquire any right to enforce a lien by reason of the notice of mechanic’s lien filed by him. As he was employed by the corporation, if he would rely upon the lien given by the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, his notice of lien should have been filed within thirty days after the completion of the work or improvement on which he had expended his, labor. As it appears from.the notice of lien attached to his complaint that the works were incomplete at the time it was filed, his notice was premature, and failed to confer a right of lien. (Davis v. MacDonough, 109 Cal. 547.) It is conceded by the plaintiff that this notice of lien was insufficient, within the requirements of the mechanics’ lien law, but he contends that his lien exists by virtue of the act of 1891. That act, however, makes no provision for filing a claim of lien, but purports to create the lien upon the violation by the corporation of section 1.
As the plaintiff is not entitled to avail himself of the provisions of the act of 1891, that provision of the judgment allowing him counsel fees was unauthorized.
Garoutte, J., and Van Fleet, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.
Beatty, C. J., dissented from the order denying a hearing in Bank.