170 P. 525 | Or. | 1918
delivered the opinion of the court.
“Hereafter any person or persons, firm or corporation, entering into a formal contract with the State of Oregon, or any municipality, county, or school district within said state, for the construction of any buildings, or the prosecution and completion of any work, or for repairs upon any building or work, shall be required-before commencing such work, to execute the usual penal bond with good and sufficient sureties, with the additional obligations that such contractor or contractors shall promptly make payments to all persons supplying him or them labor or materials for any prosecution of the work provided for in such contracts.”
The act provides that any person or persons who so furnish labor or material may obtain a copy of the contract and bond, and that such person
“shall have a right of action, and shall be authorized to bring suit in the name of the State of Oregon, or any county, municipality, or school district within such state for his or their use and benefit against said contractor and sureties.”
The position taken by the defendants is that the payment for the use of the caterpillar engine is not provided for in the contract and bond under the terms of the statute. In the expression of the statute it is quite likely that the lawmakers to a certain extent had in contemplation the various lien statutes providing for liens on buildings and other property both real and personal for labor and materials. However, the enactment under consideration has a different purport and broader meaning than the ordinary lien statutes; therefore, the construction of the latter affords but little assistance in arriving at the intent of the former. The lien statutes have usually been strictly held to cover only what is incorporated into the building or property against which the lien is claimed. Take for instance our mechanic’s lien statute, Section 7416, L. O. L., which provides in part that
“a person performing labor upon or furnishing material, or transporting or hauling any material of any kind to be used in the construction, alteration, or repair, either in whole or in part, of any building ’ ’
shall have a lien upon the same. Such lien statutes obviously cover only what goes into the building or structure and adds to the value of the same.
In American Surety Co. v. Lawrenceville Cement Co., 110 Fed. 717, 721, Judge Putnam states:
“However, this principle of discrimination is so strongly entrenched in the practical rules properly applicable to the construction of this statute that it needs no further exposition. It has, however, no necessary relation to repairs of an incidental and comparatively .inexpensive character, made on the plant during the progress of the work, representing only the ordinary wear and tear or the equivalent thereof. Such repairs, under some circumstances, are within*204 the purview of the statute, and are not always excluded hy any rules of construction which we must apply to it.”
Even this underlying equity which requires these lien statutes to he so limited in their application is not applied with absolute strictness; for instance, where a bill of lumber is sold to one erecting a building no distinction is made between the portions of such material which are actually incorporated into the parts of the buildings and those which are used in erecting temporary floors and stagings necessary to aid in the construction. When the Congress of the United States enacted the statute, from which the one under consideration providing for giving the bond in question was copied, it used a much broader expression than is employed in the lien statutes. Our law uses the following language:
‘1 Shall promptly make payments to all persons supplying him or them labor or materials for any prosecution of the work, provided for in such contracts.”
As declared by Judge Putnam in American Surety Co. v. Lawrenceville Cement Co., 110 Fed. 717, 721, “the statute in question concerns every approximate relation of the contractor to that which he has contracted to do.”
The line of demarcation must be drawn between labor and material furnished a contractor which are covered by such a bond and those without the pale of such an undertaking by taking into consideration the service and material in the particular case.
In National Surety Co. v. United States, 228 Fed. 577, 578, the syllabus says:
“Supplies furnished a contractor with the United States, which were specifically intended for current consumption directly on the work, such as drills and material for drills used in drilling machines, and made to be used up currently, and in fact used up in direct and immediate contact with rock removed as part of the contract, were covered by the contractor’s bond; the removal of such rock being a part of the ‘construction of the work.’ ”
By the explicit terms of the contract the use of the engine referred to and that of other similar appliances was made a part of the contract price. According to the averments of the complaint the energy of the instrument entered directly into the construction of the highway just as effectively as though it had been owned by the contractor or subcontractor and evidently served, to a large extent at least, as a substitute for manual labor. There is no chance for a double allowance for the service claimed.
This case is somewhat analogous to and within the reasoning of the so-called powder cases and coal cases: See Schaghticoke Powder Co. v. Greenwich etc. R. Co., 183 N. Y. 306 (76 N. E. 153, 111 Am. St. Rep. 751, 5 Ann. Cas. 443, 2 L. R. A. (N. S.) 288), which is a lien case, and City Trust etc. Surety Co. v. United States, 147 Fed. 155, (77 C. C. A. 397). The statute
Statutes like the one in question have usually been and should be given a liberal construction so as to carry out the legislative intent and effect the purpose contemplated by the law: United States v. American Surety Co., 200 U. S. 197 (50 L. Ed. 437, 26 Sup. Ct.
In the case at bar, if the work mentioned had been performed by the exercise of the muscles of laborers there would have been no question but that the same was protected by the statute. With the hard surface road pavement coming into vogue, new methods of road construction utilizing high power machinery, equipment and appliances have superseded the old mode of construction with pick and shovel. It seems to us that it was intended by the enactment, as expressed by the lawmakers, that the construction of an improvement, such as a paved highway, should be paid for; that in order to carry out the intent of the law it was the right and duty of the county officials to require a bond protecting the payment of obligations incurred for labor or material approximating the construction work. Plainly the contract and bond in question made such provisions and nominated the item sued for. The language of the statute indicates that the lawmakers had in mind the modern conditions prevailing at the time of the enactment. By the recitation in their contract and bond the parties to the
The judgment of the lower court sustaining the demurrers to the complaint is reversed and the cause will be remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent herewith. ' Reversed and Remanded.