184 Iowa 1109 | Iowa | 1918
This is an action to foreclose a mechanics’ lien filed by plaintiff against lots on which a building had been erected. The plaintiff furnished an elevator at the price of $345 to the New-Lite Manufacturing Company, and seeks to foreclose its mechanics’ lien for that amount. To understand the precise issue, it will be necessary to state the facts somewhat in detail.
On October 9, 1914, the Boone Commercial Association entered into a contract with the New-Lite Manufacturing Company, by the terms of which the company undertook to move its manufacturing plant and business from Newton to Boone, upon the completion of a building erected at the latter place in which to carry on said business, — said building to cost not to exceed $7,500, and to be located on Lots 4 and 5 in Block 17 in Fairview Addition to Boone, Iowa. The company was to repay the $7,500 to the party furnishing the same, with interest thereon at 7 per cent per annum, at not less than $100 per month until fully paid, and was to receive a warranty deed to said lots upon completion of said payment, together with abstract showing merchantable title free of iñcumbrance, and was to pay the taxes and keep the building insured. Upon the 30th of October following, the New-Lite Manufacturing Company entered into an agreement with the defendant, L. F. Fehleisen, reciting that the agreement previously mentioned had been entered into, and providing for the erection of a building, by the terms of
On the 18th of November following, one Henry, as party of first part, and the defendant, Fehleisen, and the New-Lite Manufacturing Company, party of the second part, entered into a contract, by the terms of which Henry undei’took to provide all materials and perform all work in the construction of the factory building contemplated by the previous contracts, “as shown on the drawings and described in the specifications prepared by O. C. Dawson of Des Moines, Iowa, which drawings and specifications are identified by the figures of the parties hereto, and become hereby a part of this contract.” Under Article 9 of this contract, it was “agreed between the parties hereto that the sum to' be paid by the owner to the contractor for said
“Every person for whose use or benefit any building, erection or other improvement is made, having the capacity to contract, including guardians, shall be included in the word ‘owner’ as used in this chapter.”
If the elevator was for the use or benefit of the vendor, he, too, then, must be regarded as owner. Were the elevator acquired and installed without the consent or au
“Under such circumstances, of course, the lien of the mechanic would only attach to such title as the purchaser held, and the vendor could not be required to part with his title until the purchase money was paid. But the case made by this record is entirely different, and must be controlled by other principles. Here it was understood in the contract of sale between the vendors and purchaser that the latter should go on and build upon the premises; and, for the purpose of a consummation of this understanding, a clause was inserted in the contract of sale by which the vendors agreed to advance the purchaser $875, to assist him in the erection of a building on ,the premises, as the building progressed. The only reasonable and fair construction to be placed on this clause of the contract is that the purchaser was authorized and empowered by the vendors to enter into contracts with builders to furnish material and erect a building on the premises to which they held the legal title. If, therefore, the Hendersons authorized and empowered Sharp, the purchaser, to cause a building to be erected on property where the legal title was in them, upon what ground can they now, after the labor has been expended and materials furnished, claim that the mechanic who furnished the labor and materials which they, by the contract, authorized, shall look alone to the*1114 title held by the purchaser?' Certainly, no principle of equity or fair dealing would sanction a precedent of that character. Had the contract of sale contained no provision looking in the direction of any improvement on the property, and had Sharp, the purchaser, gone on upon his own responsibility, and assumed a liability with a builder, then we would have no hesitation in holding that the lien of the mechanic must be confined to the interest of the purchaser in the premises, as was done in the Hideous case; but such was not the case here. The vendors, by their contract, have subjected their title to the property to the lien of the petitioner, and the decree properly, in our opinion, authorized a sale of the legal title and a priority of payment to petitioner.”
In Hill v. Gill, 40 Minn. 441 (42 N. W. 294), the Supreme Court of Minnesota, in dealing with the same subject, said:
“The lien adjudged by the court in this instance, being an incumbrance upon the title and interest of Mrs. Gill, the owner in fee simple, could alone be created, and can only be sustained, by determining that she consented to and authorized it. It is upon this ground solefy that liens can be supported. The basis of the right'to enforce a claim of lien is the consent of the owner. O’Neil v. St. Olaf’s School, 26 Minn. 331 (4 N. W. 47). And it is fundamental that, as liens are incumbrances upon the owner’s property, they can only be created by his consent or authority. Meyer v. Berlandi, 39 Minn. 438 (40 N. W. 513). It must be admitted that, upon the furnishing of these materials, the plaintiffs had, under Section 1, Oh. 90, supra, the right of lien upon the building about to be erected, and upon whatever interest Barker then had in the real estate, and that his surrender of the premises could not deprive them of this clear legal right. But the court went further than to direct a sale of Barker’s interest, and adjudged that Mrs. Gill’s*1115 rights in the land and its appurtenances should be sold to satisfy a debt incurred by her vendee, in which she had no voice, except by implication, and as one of the parties to a contract in which she imposed upon the other party an ob-. ligation to build upon realty to which she held the legal title. It is this feature of the decree which is complained of. In Laird v. Moonan, 32 Minn. 358 (20 N. W. 354), the principle is announced that all who have contributed to increase the value of property by consent of the owner, or in pursuance of a contract with him for that purpose, should have an interest in it for the satisfaction of their claims, and we think the proposition fully as sound and just when applied to the circumstances of this case as it was when stated in an action involving the right of a subcontractor to enforce the lien secured him by Section 2, Oh. 90, supra. This case should not be confounded with one wherein a vendor has in no manner authorized or directed an improvement upon realty which he has agreed to convey.”
See, also, White v. Kincade, 95 Kan. 466 (148 Pac. 607); Miller v. Davis, 26 Colo. App. 483 (145 Pac. 714, 715); Lee v. Gibson, 104 Tenn. 698 (58 S. W. 330); Paulsen v. Manske, 126 Ill. 72 (18 N. E. 275); Bohn Mfg. Co. v. Kountze, 30 Neb. 719 (46 N. W. 1123).
To bind the vendor’s interest or title in the land, then, the improvement must have been made by his inducement or on Ms authority, express or implied; and we are of opinion that such consent and authority are clearly shown by the record. It will be observed that the plans and specifications were attached to and made a part of the contract for the construction of the building, and that this contract was signed by the defendant. The evidence discloses that the building to be erected was designed and built so as to necessitate the installation of an elevator of a charactei
“A penthouse was erected on the top of the roof, so as to allow the space for the drums and things up above the roof, and allow ceiling room below in the second floor. The construction of the penthouse was with the idea of installing an elevator, — there could be no other purpose for its erection. The hatchway openings were provided for in the original blue print; but we left those out until Mr. Ogg. the president of the New-Lite Manufacturing Company, had bought the elevator and cut it to the size he wanted, and cut out the openings to fit the elevator. * * * Mr. Fehleisen used to drop round the building quite frequently, and saw how we were getting along, — probably every other day, on an average,- — and during the time of the elevator installation, as well. I installed the elevator under Mr. Ogg’s instructions. I filed a mechanics’ lien on the property about May, 1915, for a part of the work over and above the contract. It was afterwards settled, and was assigned to Mr. Fehleisen, who is the owner of the lien and property at this time. Provision .for the penthouse and hatchway was shown on the original blue prints. * * * The building was pretty well finished when I commenced to install this elevator. * * * I don’t remember whether we nailed or bolted the heavy timbers to which the timbers were fastened to the penthouse. It was a frame penthouse, and did not come with the elevator. There is a pit two feet deep, so that the elevator platform comes level with the floor. If taken out on the second floor, it would leave an opening about a foot wider than the elevator. The entire penthouse and timbers to which the timbers of the elevator were bolted, would be of no use. The shaft of the elevator was run by an electric motor; the machinery that ran the elevator up and down was connected to the shaft by belting that ran upon the ceiling of the first floor to the motor.*1117 The drum up to the penthouse was operated by cable, which ran over it. The way that building is constructed is for the purpose of a factory. The only way to get heavy materials or weighty matter from the first to the second floor and from the second to the first floor without the use of the elevator, is to take them up a stairway. They were not built for that purpose. If any large, bulky articles were to be manufactured in the building in the future, there is no other way to get them up and down, except by the elevator or through the elevator.”
The contractor, Henry, then, was required to so construct the building as to leave a place for thé elevator; and as so made, the elevator became necessary for use of said building for the manufacturing purposes for which defendant and the New-Lite Manufacturing Company erected it Though defendant was not consulted with reference to the purchase of the elevator, and was not to contribute toward payment therefor, he saw it, when delivered and being installed, and made no objection thereto. But he did know that it was the intention of the New-Lite Manufacturing Company to put an elevator in, and that, in the construction of the building, an elevator was contemplated and required for its use and enjoyment. Moreover, he paid the contractor, Henry, for services in installing the elevator, though taking over an assignment of the mechanics’ lien he had filed. It is impossible to avoid the conclusion that defendant, in contracting for the construction of the building, had in view the purchase and installation of the elevator, and that he was party to an arrangement by which this was exacted of the New-Lite Manufacturing Company. The latter undertook to move its manufacturing plant and entire business from Newton, Iowa, to Boone, Towa, upon the completion of the building to be erected for such purpose, “and to operate said business continuously in Boone, Iowa, thereafter.” Defendant undertook to furnish $7,500 toward
A vendor of real estate, who induces one who has a contract to purchase same, to expend labor and material in improving the same, cannot defeat the claims for a lien by those who contribute their labor and material to enhance the value of his property. Tn such a case, in the absence of a controlling agreement, he cannot insist that the mechanics’ lien shall be subordinate to his title or interest in the realty.
We are of opinion that the trial court erred, and thaf decree of foreclosure should have been entered, as pleaded. —Reversed.