OPINION
Respondents Master Asphalt Company (Master Asphalt) and Southside Electric, Inc. (Southside) commenced this action to foreclose mechanics’ hens for labor and materials furnished to develop commercial property owned by appellants, the Reinkes, and leased to the Farmers Market Annex (FMA).
Henry and Marion Reinke, residents of Illinois, own three parcels of commercial property located at Third Avenue North and Lyndale Avenue in downtown Minneapolis. During the spring of 1991, the Reinkes leased the property to FMA for use as a Farmers Market Annex. The lease agreement provided in pertinent part as follows:
Tenant shall not make any alternations, additions, or improvements to the Property without Landlord’s prior written consent * * *.
* * * Tenant shall give Landlord at least twenty (20) days’ prior written notice of the commencement of any work on the Property, regardless of whether Landlord’s consent to such work is required. Landlord may elect to record and post notices of non-responsibility on the Property.
After executing the lease agreement, FMA, without giving notice to the Reinkes, contracted with Voss Construction Company, *351 Inc. (Voss) to construct metal top canopies for use by purveyors of produce during Farmers Market hours. The construction included grading, levelling, paving, and electrical work on two of the parcels.
Voss subcontracted the electrical work to Southside, who commenced work on the project in July 1991 and completed it in October 1991. The work included installation of electrical service, meters, and wiring inside a warehouse located on the premises at an agreed price of $22,610.00 for the labor and materials. Voss subcontracted the grading, leveling, and asphalt paving work to Master Asphalt, who commenced work on the project on August 7, 1991 and completed it on August 26,1991. The agreed price for the labor and materials expended by Master Asphalt was $21,825.00. Voss subsequently declared bankruptcy and neither subcontractor was paid. This mechanics’ lien action ensued. 1
At trial, the court focused primarily on the question whether notice of non-responsibility was adequately posted at the FMA construction site. Ultimately, the trial court concluded that notice of non-responsibility was not adequately posted, and that determination is not challenged on appeal.
2
It is also undisputed that the construction work performed by respondents constituted permanent improvements to the property.
Knoff Woodwork Co. v. Zotalis,
The enforceability of the mechanics’ liens against the landowners therefore depends upon whether the Reinkes had actual knowledge of the improvements to their property. Henry Reinke testified that when he entered into the lease with the owner of FMA, James Bartlett, Bartlett informed him FMA intended to improve the property for use as a Farmers Market Annex. Bartlett apparently showed Reinke preliminary renderings of the intended improvements. Thus, Reinke knew that Bartlett would make improvements on the property, but he did not know when the improvements would be made or who would perform the work. As noted above, the Reinkes were not given notice of commencement of work on the premises as required by the lease, and first learned about the improvements when they received respondents’ notices of lien.
Citing
Anderson v. Harrison,
According to the court of appeals, the Reinkes were deemed to have authorized the improvements based on the lease agreement and conversations held with Bartlett regarding FMA’s intended use of the property prior to the lease’s execution. The court reasoned that the lease’s purpose would be frustrated unless the Reinkes had in fact authorized the improvements because the Reinkes knew a Farmer’s Market Annex could not be implemented without substantial alteration to the property.
*352 We granted appellants’ petition for further review to resolve the question whether general awareness that a tenant contemplates making improvements to the landowner’s property constitutes actual knowledge for purposes of Minn.Stat. § 514.06. We believe that it does not, and therefore, reverse.
The mechanic’s lien statute, Minn. Stat. § 514.06 (1994), provides in pertinent part:
When improvements are made by one person upon the land of another, all persons interested therein otherwise than as bona fide prior encumbrancers or lienors shall be deemed to have authorized such improvements, in so far as to subject their interests to liens therefor. Any person who has not authorized the same may protect that person’s interest from such liens by serving upon the persons doing work or otherwise contributing to such improvement within five days after knowledge thereof, written notice that the improvement is not being made at that person’s instance, or by posting like notice, and keeping the same posted, in a conspicuous place on the premises. As against a lessor no lien is given for repairs made by or at the instance of the lessee.
This court long ago determined that, pursuant to the mechanic’s lien statute, the property interests of a landowner who has no knowledge of improvements to his or her property cannot be subjected to a lien for those improvements.
Anderson,
This court has also clearly established that a landowner with actual knowledge that improvements have commenced on his or her property is presumed to have consented to those improvements unless he or she complies with the disclaimer notice requirements of Minn.Stat. § 514.06.
Anderson,
The first issue we must resolve is whether the court of appeals erred in holding that the Reinkes “authorized” the improvements pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 514.06, such that the notice and knowledge requirements of the statute are inapplicable.
In
Wallinder v. Weiss,
Here, the court of appeals focused on conversations between the Reinkes and FMA, as well as the terms of their lease agreement, to conclude that the Reinkes had authorized the improvements. Lease provisions that merely permit alterations at the tenant’s instance, evincing some general notion that improvements may be made by some unidentified contractor, at some unspecified cost, at some time in the future, also unidentified, do not constitute “authorization” of those improvements. Under such circumstances the court must then consider whether the owner had actual knowledge of the improvements.
Any other holding would work disastrous results to lessors or vendors who in many instances lease or sell with the understanding, express or implied, that the tenant or vendee, to enjoy the interest acquired, must necessarily make improvements or alterations. Such mere consent ought not irrevocably to subject the interest of the *353 owner to mechanic’s liens for tvork or material 'performed or furnished at the instance of a lessee or vendee.
Wallinder,
The question remains whether the Reinkes nonetheless had sufficient knowledge of the improvements to require compliance with the notice requirements of Minn.Stat. § 514.06.
First, we reject respondent South-side’s argument that because the Reinkes sought to rely on the notice posted by FMA at trial, they necessarily deemed FMA their agent such that FMA’s knowledge of the improvements is imputed to the Reinkes. “A lessee is not generally considered the agent of the lessor within the contemplation of the mechanic’s lien statutes merely by virtue of the relation of landlord and tenant. Nor is an agency relationship created merely by the consent of the lessor to the making of alterations and improvements upon the leased premises.” 53 Am.Jur.2d
Mechanics’ Liens
§ 132 (1970) (footnote omitted). Further, even if some sort of agency relationship for posting notice could be deemed to spring from the notice posting effort by FMA, it hardly renders FMA the Reinke’s agent for purposes of imputing knowledge of the improvements.
See Sandberg v. Palm,
Next, we turn to the pivotal issue on this appeal: whether a landowner’s general awareness that its tenant contemplates making improvements to the property constitutes “actual knowledge” of those improvements for purposes of Minn.Stat. § 514.06.
In
Anderson v. Harrison,
Minn.Stat. § 514.06 does not, by its plain language, require interested parties to post notice of non-responsibility after learning that improvements are merely contemplated.
See
Minn.Stat. § 514.06 (1994); 53 Am.Jur.2d
Mechanics’ Liens
§ 162 (1970). While a property owner may effectively post notice pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 514.06 before improvements have actually commenced, we have not required a property owner to do so.
See Bond Elec. Co. v. Mill City Plastics, Inc.,
Previously when the court has concluded that a landowner had actual knowledge of improvements to his or her property, the landowner had actual knowledge that the improvements were underway.
See, e.g., Bruer Lumber Co. v. Kenyon,
*354 The actual knowledge requirement of Minn.Stat. § 514.06 (1994) — in the sense of a landowner possessing sufficient information to justify the burden of posting notice to avoid attachment of a hen — requires more than general awareness on the part of the landowner that improvements to the property are contemplated by the tenant. We conclude that there was sufficient evidence for the trial court to conclude that the Reinkes lacked actual knowledge of the improvements to their property sufficient to meet the requirements of Minn.Stat. § 514.06.
Finally, we reject Southside’s argument that our holding effectively repeals by implication the pre-lien notice statute, Minn. Stat. § 514.011, subd. 4c (1994), 4 because it may require subcontractors to provide pre-hen notice to property owners such as the Reinkes in order to protect their hen rights. The property involved in this action is exempt from the pre-lien notice requirements pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 514.011, subd. 4c.
Section 514.011 was intended to protect homeowners and small businessmen who out of ignorance might be forced to pay first the contractor and then the subcontractor. Subdivision 4 in relevant part was the legislature’s designation of larger businessmen who do not require such protection.
Polivka Logan Designers, Inc. v. Ende,
Reversed.
Notes
. This case is distinguishable from its companion case, David-Thomas Cos. v. Voss, 517 N.W.2d 341 (Minn.App.1994), because here the subcontractors properly recorded their mechanic’s lien statements.
. FMA, the tenant, posted notice in four locations on the property before construction commenced. James Bartlett, owner of FMA, testified that he posted the notice gratuitously to "protect the interest of the property owner, Mr. Reinke and his wife.”
At least two of the notices were removed before Master Asphalt and Southside commenced work and testimony elicited at trial indicated that respondents did not see the other notices. The trial court concluded that ”[t]he credible evidence shows that a notice of non-responsibility was not posted continuously and conspicuously on either parcel between July 23, 1991 and October 22, 1991.”
. Respondents rely on language from Congdon to support their argument that the lease agreement between the Reinkes and FMA creates actual knowledge of the improvements sufficient to subject the Reinkes interests to a lien:
[t]he legal basis of the lien as against the owner is his consent to an improvement presumably beneficial to the property. He is directly interested in improvements which, in the case of ground leases such as this, are contemplated thereby; for, without them, the leased premises would be comparatively unproductive, and the rent could not be earned. The evidence justified the court in finding that the plaintiff had seasonable knowledge of the improvement * * *.
Congdon,
. Minn.Stat. § 514.011, subd. 4c (1994) provides: The notice required by this section shall not be required to be given in connection with an improvement to real property which is not in agricultural use and which is wholly or partially nonresidential in use if the work or improvement:
(a) is to provide or add more than 5,000 total usable square feet of floor space; or
(b) is an improvement to real property where the existing property contains more than 5,000 total usable square feet of floor space; or
(c)is an improvement to real properly which contains more than 5,000 square feet and does not involve the construction of a new building or an addition to or the improvement of an existing building.
We also reject Southside's argument that because Minn.Stat. § 514.011 imposes no affirmative duty upon subcontractors to provide notice of improvements to property owners like the Reinkes, it is immaterial whether the property owner has knowledge of the improvements. On the contrary, Minn.Stat. § 514.06, and long standing case law deriving in part from due process considerations, explicitly impose a knowledge requirement upon property owners.
See, e.g., Meyer v. Berlandi,
