80 Wis. 170 | Wis. | 1891
We think the testimony sustains the finding of the court to the effect that Nicholas Bros, furnished the boiler and other fixtures for the abattoir of the defendant company as a principal contractor with that company, and that the plaintiffs furnished the materials in question therefor under a subcontract with Nicholas Bros. We also think it quite immaterial that plaintiffs did not know, when they furnished such materials, that they were entitled to a lien for the unpaid price thereof upon the property of the defendant. Being subcontractors under Nicholas Bros., and having furnished the materials to be used (and which were used) in defendant’s building, they may avail themselves of all valid statutory remedies to enforce payment for such materials, whether they knew or did not know the extent of those remedies when they parted with their property. We are further of the opinion that the rights of the plaintiffs'to enforce the lien claimed is not impaired or destroyed by the fact that they sold and delivered such materials in another state. The statute is general, and does not restrict the right of lien to cases where the materials are sold and delivered in this state. The case of Birmingham Iron Foundry v. Glen Gove Starch Mfg. Co. 78 N. Y. 30, which is relied upon to sustain a contrary doctrine, was decided under a statute more restrictive in its terms than ours, and for that reason the case is not a guide to correct judgment in the present case.
The testimony and findings of fact bring the case within the provisions of sec. 3315, R. S., as amended by ch. 333, Laws of 1889 (S. & B. Ann. Stats, sec. 3315). If, therefore, the amended section 3315 is a valid law, the plaintiffs are entitled to the lien which the judgment gives them. Hence the controlling question in the case is whether the amended section is or is not a valid law.
Under the lien laws as they existed before the enactment of ch. 333, Laws of 1889, the property upon which a lien was
The theory of the law giving to laborers and material-men specific liens upon the property upon which their labor was performed or their materials used, seems to be that, because the value of such property has been enhanced thereby, it is just that the property should be specifically
When the statute restricted the lien of a subcontractor to the amount which the owner of the property owed the principal contractor when the claim for a lien was served upon such owner, and to any indebtedness of the owner to such principal contractor accruing after such service, there was no room to question its perfect fairness and justice to the owner of the property sought to be charged with the lien. But when these restrictions for the protection of the owner were swept away, and his property subjected to a lien charge for the amount of any claim of a subcontractor against the principal contractor for labor or material used in the building or improvement, without regard to the state of the account between such principal contractor and the owner, it must be conceded that there is much room to question the reasonableness and justice of the statute which thus adds to the responsibility of the owner. But statutes which the courts may think are opposed to a sound public policy, or which may operate unjustly in certain cases, may not always be invalid. Before they can be so declared, it must clearly appear that they violate some fundamental principle of constitutional law. Is any such principle violated by the amended sec. 8315 ?
True, that section may operate to charge a lien upon property for the claim of a subcontractor which the owner of the property never agreed to pay, and which is in excess of the sum which he agreed to pay the principal contractor for the improvement which is the basis of the lien. "Were this all of the statute, its injustice would be obvious. But the statute contains the further provisions above mentioned, the effect of which is to make the owner merely the surety
It was entirely competent, n~ doubt, for the defendant company, in the absence of any statute on the subject, to bind itself, not only to pay Nicholas Eros, a stipulated price for the fixtures purchased of that firm, but also to bind itself to stand as surety of the firm for the payment of its indebtedness to a subcontractor for materials furnished'to be used in the manufacture of the purchased articles. Instead of contracting in that form, the defendant agreed to pay Nicholas Eros, a certain sum for those articles; and the statute adds to the contract the incident — writes in it, so to speak, the stipulation — that the defendant shall thereby become such surety, but at the same time giving it a remedy by action against Nicholas Eros, to recover any sum it has been compelled to pay beyond its indebtedness to that firm.
It was said by Dixon, C. J., in Streubel v. Mil. & Miss. R. Co., 12 Wis. 67, that “ the power of the legislature, as to all future transactions, to regulate and control contracts by prescribing the manner in which they shall be made, , . . by declaring what future voluntary acts of parties in relation to a particular subject-matter shall be deemed a contract, and, if it pleases, by creating implications from such acts from which certain declared obligations shall flow, cannot be denied or doubted.” The learned counsel for defendant, in his very able and discriminating argument, chal
Many decisions of courts elsewhere for and against the validity of statutes somewhat similar to the statute under consideration have been cited and much discussed by the respective counsel. These decisions seem to be in conflict, although perhaps a critical examination of the statutes upon which they are founded might suggest a method of reconciling them with each other. Lien statutes of the different states differ greatly in their provisions. Our statute in many particulars is quite unlike that of any other state. Hence the adjudications in other states upon the statutes of those states are not controlling — frequently not valuable — in determining the validity of our statute. Eor these reasons, and because our judgment herein is based largely upon former adjudications of this court which we are not at liberty to overrule or disturb, we deem it unnecessary to discuss the cases in other states cited by counsel.
By the Court — The judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.
The question presented is whether the defendant, after having fully paid Nicholas Bros, the whole of the contract price, without any notice of any claim against them by the plaintiffs or any one else, is still bound to pay to the plaintiffs, as subcontractors, the sum of $917.38 and interest. If such claim can be maintained, then upon the same principle the defendant would have been bound to pay such claim even had the contract required the defendant to pay in advance, and the amount
I frankly concede that, if the enactment was within the power of the legislature, then the courts are bound to enforce it, regardless of their notions of its wisdom. It is, moreover, very obvious that the act did not impair the obligations of the defendant’s contract, since the contract was made subsequent to the time when the act went into effect. To my mind the act is repugnant to that provision of the constitution .of the United States which declares that “ no state shall . . . deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” Sec. 1, art. XIY, Amendm. That provision was ordained and established for the very purpose of taking away from every state and its legislature every one of the powers thus prohibited. Streubel v. Mil. & Miss. R. Co. 12 Wis. 67, cited
The act enables the contractor to limit his own duties, obligations, and liabilities by contract, and at the same time enables him, through the agency of a subcontractor, to bind the owner, without limitation, for all materials and labor that go into the structure. The subcontractor is not even limited to the specifications contained in the original contract, for by the terms of the act he may compel the owner to pay for what he never contracted for. It not only makes the owner, without his consent, responsible for the contractor’s contracts with subcontractors, but also for his frauds. It authorizes the subcontractor to com pel the owner
Such legislation is a recent invention. It seems to belong to that class which Herbert Spencer had in mind when, according to a recent interview, he said: “ Since' I began to write, there has been a clear reaction against individual liberty. "We are certainly tending towards state socialism, which will be a worse form of tyranny than that of any government now recognized in civilization.” If we have no constitutional barriers against such legislation, then Mr. Spencer’s opinion, that such reaction and tendency endanger the American states as well as the European, would seem to rest upon a solid basis, instead of being mere speculation, as might otherwise be supposed.
It seems to me that a man cannot reasonably be' said to have due process of law, and equal protection of the laws, under an act which enables his contractor to.bind him con.clusively without his consent or knowledge arid contrary to the express terms of their written contract, and merely permits him, when sued thereon, to answer' to the effect that by the terms of the act he has become so bound and was unable to prevent it. • On the contrary, before any conclusive statutory liability should be imposed upon any person, he should be guilty of some tort, or give his consent, or be in default, or have such notice as would enable him to' protect himself against gross injustice, otherwise the creation of such liability is an arbitrary and unjustifiable imposition.
So it has been said by Justices Beadlev and Matthews, each speaking for the whole court, that, “ in judging what is due process of law, respect must be had to the cause and object of the taking,— whether under the taxing power, the power of eminent domain, or the power of assessment for local improvements, or none of these; and, if found to be suitable or admissible in the special case, it will be adjudged to be ‘due process of law;’ but if found to be arbitrary, oppressive, and unjust, it may b& declared to be not ‘ due process of law.’ ” Davidson v. New Orleans, 96 U. S. 107; Kentucky Railroad Tax Cases, 115 U. S. 331. In Chicago, M. & St. P. R. Co. v. Minnesota, 134 U. S. 418, the act of the legislature gave to the commission therein
A statute similar to the one in question was held void in Spry Lumber Co. v. Sault Sav. Bank Loan & Trust Co. 77 Mich. 199. In the opinion of the court in that case, by the late and learned Chief Justice Campbell, it is said: “ It strikes at the foundations of all property in land. There is no constitutional way for divesting a man’s title except by his own act or default. Here his own act is not required, and his freedom from default is no defense. He may pay in full, in advance or otherwise, for all he has contracted for. He may contract for a house built in a certain way and of certain materials, and may have to pay for what he never bargained for and what his building contractor had no right to put off upon him. The original contract plays no part in the matter, except as a fact which binds no one and has no significance. Such a gross perversion of all the essential rights of property is so plain that no explanation'
It is true the opinion of the majority of the court is supported, not only by the decisions of this court therein cited, but also of other state courts of high standing, the latest of which is by the supreme court of Tennessee, in a case not cited by counsel. Cole Mfg. Co. v. Falls, 16 S. W. Rep. (Tenn.), 1045. But such cases either fail to meet the objection upon which this dissent is based, or, meeting it, fail to give any satisfactory reason for excluding such statutes from the prohibitions mentioned. It may be that the supreme court of the United States will eventually sanction such legislation, but until they do so I am forced to withhold my assent.