142 Mo. App. 656 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
(after stating the facts). — I. It is conceded in the argument and briefs of counsel that the lien accounts which were filed by plaintiff, state the date of the first commencement of the work and furnishing of material by this plaintiff as October 27th on one account, November 7th on another, and November 28th on the third, all in the year 1906. The lien notices themselves are not set out in the abstract, as they should be, but there is no sug-gestion in the record that any date prior to the dates here mentiond is set out in the lien notices as filed, or that any right was set up to carry the lien back of those dates to the date of commencement of the building. We must, therefore, assume that these dates mentioned in the lien notices filed as the dates when the materials were first furnished and work first done by this plaintiff and his assignor for the construction of the building, are the earliest dates given for the inception of the lien claim.
In Bruns v. Braun, 35 Mo. App. 337, Coe v. Ritter, supra, is referred to, and Judge Biggs, who delivered the opinion of this court, after referring to the ruling as announced in Coe v. Ritter, that the dates as specified in the lien account cannot be changed by matters in pais, says (1. c. 345) : “The reason of this rule is that when a party seeks to fasten a lien „or incumbrance on real property, the precise nature of the lien or in
Counsel for appellants in this case invoked this rule, asserting that there is no mention made in the lien notice filed of the date of the commencement of the construction of the building, and hence no fact stated in the lien notice on which the lien can be carried back of the - date given in that notice as the date on which the first material was furnished, and as that date is subsequent to the date of the deed of trust, the lien of the plaintiff; on the land is subordinate in right to the lien of the holders of' the notes secured by that deed of trust. We might dispose of the case on this point, as decisive, for we hold it Avell taken, but as that is not the main question counsel on either side have so ably argued and elaborately briefed, we have concluded not to dispose of the case on this point but on the main question.
II. Our Mechanic’s Lien Law (sec. 4203, E. S. 1889), after enacting that every mechanic and material-man, etc., doing work and labor or furnishing materials, etc., for the erection of buildings and improvements on lands, etc., shall have a lien upon the buildings, etc., and the land belonging to the OAvner, upon which they are situated, to secure the payment for such work and labor done or materials furnished, by section 4215, provides that this lien for the work, labor and materials “shall attach to the buildings, erections or improvements for which they were furnished, or the Avork AAras done, in preference to any prior lien or incumbrance or mortgage upon the land upon which said buildings, erections, improvements or machinery have been erected or put; and any person enforcing such lien, may have such building, erection or machinery sold under execution, and the purchaser may remove
We have been referred to Douglas v. Zinc Co., 56 Mo. 388; Reilly v. Hudson, 62 Mo. 383; Hall v. Mullanphy Planing Mill Co., 16 Mo. App. 454; Hydraulic Brick Co. v. Bormans, 19 Mo. App. 664; Hall v. St. L. Mfg. Co. 22 Mo. App. 33; McAdow v. Sturtevant, 41 Mo. App. 220; Reed v. Lambertson, 53 Mo. App. 76; Hammond v. Darlington, 109 Mo. App. 333, all Missouri cases. It is true that in Hydraulic Brick Co. v. Bormans, this court holds that the statute is to be given a literal construction, but the rule as announced by our Supreme Court in Walden v. Robertson, 120 Mo. 38, l. c. 43, and Lumber Co. v. Clark, 172 Mo. 588, l. c. 598, now is that these are remedial statutes and to be liberally construed. But in the Hydraulic Brick Company case no question arose as to work done under a new contract, that under the old having entirely ceased, and a careful examination of all these cases has failed to furnish us with any one in Avhich the proposition here involved has been squarely presented for decision. True there are expressions and declarations in all of them, as in the Hydraulic Brick Company case, which standing alone might be said to settle this question; but
Probably the courts of no State have adhered more strictly to what is known as “the first spade rule” than
American Fire Ins. Co. v. Pringle, 2 Serg. & R. (Pa.) 139, is a case with most of its features common to the case at bar.- The Supreme Court there held that the lien dated from resumption of the work before then discontinued, and was subject to the lien of a mortgage given after the commencement of the building, but between the date of cessation of all work on it and subsequent resumption. To like effect is Stevenson v. Stonehill, 5 Wharton (Pa.) 301, and Hageman v. Fanj, 19 Co. Ct. Reps. (Pa.) 660. We see no essential difference between our lien law and that of Pennsylvania on this matter, and while of course the decisions of the court of that State are not controlling on us, they are by
On consideration of the question, our conclusion is, that section 4209 refers to the commencement of the construction under which the work was done, that is, the construction under the new and distinct contract, and not to the commencement of construction under the old and abandoned contract, a contract between which and the new contract there is neither privity of contract, of interest, nor of parties. There is no hardship or injustice in such a position; certainly none in this case. The plantiff knew that the buildings and improvements were not to be completed by the old contractor or under the old contract. He knew, either actually or by constructive notice from its record, of the existence of the deed of trust and that it was in force when he contracted to go on with his contract, so that he entered upon the work with his eyes open, and there is no suggestion of fraudulent concealment.
The foregoing is substantially the opinion filed in this case when it was first argued before us, and we concluded that opinion as follows: “We therefore hold in this case at bar, that the deed of trust is a lien on the lots, prior in right to the lien of plaintiff as contractor furnishing’ material and doing labor; that plaintiff is entitled to a general judgment against defendant Mode and to a lien on her equity of redemption in the lots, as also to a lien, prior in right to the other defendants, who are owners of the notes and deed of trust, on the improvements, with the further right, given by section 4205, to satisfaction out of those improvements by sale and removal thereof, if the debt is not otherwise made.” Accordingly we ordered that the judgment of the circuit court be reversed and the cause remanded with directions to that court to proceed in accordance with this opinion, Judge Goode concurring in it in full, Nortoni, J., dissenting from the first ground of reversal assigned but concurring in the bal
In the case of Schulenburg v. Hayden, 146 Mo. 583, Judge Marshall, who delivered the opinion of the court, holds, at page 594, that the true construction to be placed upon what is now section 4205, R. S. 1899, is “that if there is a mortgage on the land, and a contractor, under contract with the owner of the equity of redemption, builds a new house upon the land, he has a mechanic’s lien against the house, and the house may be sold, and may be removed from the land by the purchaser, for this preserves to the mortgagee all the
The line of argument and decisions in these cases leads to the result -tliab section 4205 covers the case of unimproved lots or land; lots and land without erections and buildings upon them when the mortgage lien
On the authority of these cases, as we understand them, and on our own interpretation of our statutes, Ave are compelled to hold that the decision of the learned trial judge was erroneous in holding that the lien of the materialman was superior in right to that of the holders of the secured notes, inasmuch as we have held that the making of these improvements, for Avhich the mechanic’s or materialman’s lien has been filed, Avas practically and in fact the entering upon a neAv construction under a neAv contract. The judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded Avith directions to the circuit court to enter up a judgment for the amount of the debt found against the defendant Kate Mode and awarding plaintiff special execution therefor with the provision that if no sufficient property of the said defendant Kate Mode be found to satisfy the judgment and costs, that the same or the residue thereof be levied on the equity of redemption or interest of the said Kate Mode in the property described,- subject to the prior lien secured by the deed of trust, and that judgment be entered in favor of the defendants Fisher and Robinson.