Parks v. Crockett

61 Me. 489 | Me. | 1873

PeteRS, J.

The questions presented in this case will be satisfactorily solved by a reference to the statutes and decisions in this State upon the subject of a laborer’s lien on logs.

The first act giving a lien on logs and lumber for laborers’ *492wages was in 1848. The only remedy provided by tbe act was that any person having tho lien might secure the same by an attachment. No forms or details were prescribed. It was an innor vation upon the rules of the common law to attach the property of one person upon a process against another. Extreme difficulty was imposed on the court to give a sensible and practical construction to the legislative requirement so as not to disregard fundamental rules of law and, at the same time, preserve the spirit and equity of the statute.

In Bicknell v. Trickey, 34 Maine, 273, and McCrillis v. Wilson, Ib. 286, the first reported decisions in cases arising under this statute, it was settled that a lien claim would be lost if absorbed in a judgment with a non-lien claim ; and, to meet the difficulty, that separate actions might be maintained upon the two kinds of claims contained in an account that was in other respects an entirety. Questions, which arose afterwards, involving a more definite construction of the statute, as to the form of proceedings in such actions, weye not presented by counsel in those cases, nor considered by the court. In the opinions, however, it was declared that proceedings under this statute are to be viewed in a double aspect; so far as the debtor is concerned as in personam, and as to the general owner of the property, not the debtor, as in rem.

Subsequently, in Cunningham v. Buck, 43 Maine, 455, it was decided that a declaration in common form, on an account containing no allegation of ahy claim'upon the logs, or authority to attach them only as the goods or estate of the debtor, judgment and execution corresponding, would not authorize a sale of the logs upon such execution to satisfy a lien claim thereon. Perkins v. Pike, 42 Maine, 141, is to the same effect. But the result reached in those cases did not clear the difficulty. Their tendency was to require, virtually, an in rem proceeding assimilated to a proceeding in admiralty. This was objectionable, because it exposed the court to the necessity of granting what was apparently a valid judgment, but really an invalid one, as against a person *493not the debtor, who was an owner of the logs. Such a proceeding was injurious to the officer who undertook to execute the mandate of the court, or to the owner, when he was not the debt- or, upon whoso property it -was executed. If the officer was not protected by his process, injurious to him ; if lie was, then injurious to the owner. The difficulty arising from an in rem proceeding without notice to all concerned was thus adverted to in Perkins v. Pike by the court: “ The practical difficulty in cases of lien by statute arises from an omission on the part of the legislature to make provision for notice to all persons interested, so that the judgment rendered should bo concluded upon all. In admiralty the process is in rem, and notice being given the judgment binds the rights of all. Until provision is made for general notice the judgment may conclude the parties to the suit, but cannot bind others.”

In 1855, the remedy thus alluded to was provided in the following act: “ In all suits brought to enforce the lien given by the act to which this is additional such notice shall be given to the owners of the lumber as the court shall order, and the owner may come into court and defend such suit.”

Thereupon the decisions have been that a notice must be given to the owners of logs or a judgment in rem cannot be obtained, and that it was necessary that the process, judgment, and execution must correspond in all essential respects to a libel in rem and proceedings thereon in admiralty. The following leading cases are illustrations of different phases of the practice as settled by the court after the act of 1855. Redington v. Frye, 43 Maine, 578; Holyoke v. Gilmore, 45 Maine, 566; Annis v. Gilmore, 47 Maine, 152; Campbell v. Smith, Ib. 148; Thompson v. Gilmore, 50 Maine, 428; Bean v. Soper, 56 Maine, 299; and the case of Sheridan v. Ireland, ante.

A question has been heretofore mooted as to what kind of notice to the owners of logs should be given. A practice has to some extent prevailed of allowing persons, claiming to be owners, to appear without notice and defend the suit. It is obvious that, *494under such a practice, a real owner may sometimes fail to receive either actual or constructive notice of the pendency of a proceeding which results in a judgment against his property. In the case of Sheridan v. Ireland and logs, 61 Maine, ante, this court has lately decided that in every case before a judgment of lien can be granted against logs there must be some form of general notice, like publication or posting, to be ordered by the court, which will be sufficient and conclusive notice against all persons concerned.

In 1862, c. 131, it was enacted as follows: “ And in all cases where the house or building, or the logs or lumber, on which the labor was performed, have been or shall be attached, the proceedings shall be deemed sufficient to effectuate the lien, if the writ, officer’s return of attachment, and the judgment recovered in the suit are or shall be in the usual and common forms of the common law, as heretofore understood and practiced in all other actions of assumpsit, the declaration disclosing that the suit is brought to enforce the lien.” In R. S., c. 91, § 36, this provision is consolidated into these words: “ The declaration must show that the suit is brought to enforce the lien ; but all other forms and proceedings shall be the same as in ordinary actions of assumpsit.” It will be observed that the mode, provided in the act of 1862, is a' permissible one, and not exclusive, while in the revision of the statute it is made mandatory. But as the act was remedial, and was intended to add, and not to take away, a form of remedy, the word shall in the revised statutes must be construed as meaning no more than may. Hughes v. Farrar, 45 Maine, 72.

It will be seen thati the necessity of notice required by the act of 1855 is not dispensed with by the act of 1862, so that in no form of proceeding can a lien upon logs be made effectual without it. If, however, the writ is in the appropriate form as required by the act of 1862, and the statutory notice has been given, a judgment and execution in the common form will be sufficient to make the lien claim available. When the officer is commanded in such execution to seize and sell the property of the judgment debtor, he will be justified in taking the property attached on the original *495precept, although not belonging to such debtor. It will be regarded as his (the debtor’s) goods and estate for the purposes of satisfying such execution, and the general owner, whose property is legally encumbered with such lien, will be bound by it. The idea of the legislature, undoubtedly, was that such proceedings, if pursued as a remedy, might have substantial correctness enough for practical purposes.

But it is evident that there will be an essential difference in the value of the two kinds of judgments that may be obtained. In the one case a conclusive judgment in rem is had, binding upon all parties, available without further proceeding or proof, an end of the litigation. In the other ease the facts to show that the claim recovered is a lien claim that may be enforced against the property attached will not be established by the record itself, but must be shown by proof aliunde. If the owner sues an officer for taking his property upon execution, the officer will be compelled to prove facts not contained in the record in order to complete his justification. Two suits are thus necessary to complete the litigation instead of one. As the officer would not be protected by his process, as in the other case, he would be justified in refusing to serve the execution without indemnity; and it may be questionable whether an officer would be compelled to serve an execution against the property of one not the judgment debtor, without any command in such execution therefor, even with indemnity. The owner, moreover, would have the advantage of postponing the commencement of his action as long as he pleased within the period of the statute of limitations. Of course the officer would be allowed, in a suit against him, to supply any deficiencies of fact apparent on the record, that may be necessary for his justification, by evidence contained in any special findings or verdicts, if such exist. In any view, however, it is obvious that a proceeding, which accords only with the requirements of the act of 1862, would be disadvantageous to the creditor in comparison with the mode of getting an adjudication strictly in rem.

The only conceivable advantage in the act of 1862 would be *496that where a plaintiff in a suit, through inadvertence, bj some irregularity or omission, fails to obtain a valid in rem judgment, to which he was entitled, but takes, instead, a judgment in the common form, the lien is not thereby extinguished and lost, but may still be effectual by proof of the necessary facts in ulterior proceedings. A great mass of lien claims, in early cases, were lost by non-conformity to the forms required by the construction given by the court to the statute,1 and to this may be imputed the origin of the act referred to.

In the case at bar a demurrer is filed by the owners of the logs, and this opens an inquiry as to the pleadings to be permitted in such cases. The rule of the common law in this regard does not seem to have been dispensed with. In McPheters v. Lumbert, 41 Maine, 469, it was declared that the owners could not be permitted to try the question whether there was a lien claim or not; but this declaration was not necessary to the decision there, and has not been adhered to. In Lumbert v. Lumbert, 44 Maine, 85, it was afterwards decided that the owner could contest the lien claim; that both the defendant and owner could not plead the general issue; that there could be but one general issue, otherwise two general verdicts would be required ; that there could be but one general issue, and under that and appropriate brief statements one verdict and special findings, under the direction of the court, would be sufficient to establish the rights of all parties. Cutting, J., adds: “For instance, on such an issue the jury might return a verdict for the plaintiff against the defendants, and at the same time find specially that the lien claim did or did not attach, which findings and verdict would be incorporated into the judgment, and thereby enlarge or limit ulterior proceedings.”

We can see no reason why the log owners may not demur to the plaintiff’s writ and declaration. This is a form of pleading incident to every kind of judicial proceeding. It need cause no complication here. The result of it will settle the controversy, as far as such -owner is concerned, one way or the other. The allegations of the plaintiff could be adjudged to be insufficient for a *497judgment in rem, but sufficient for one in personam. When the owner comes into court, in obedience to its mandate, lie has a right to have all questions affecting him settled as speedily as possible.

The counsel for the log owners, under the demurrer, urges several objections to the declaration in this case. The writ is unskillfully framed, but still the meaning of the allegations may be easily enough understood. It must be regarded as sufficient for a lien-claim writ if it comes within the requirement prescribed by the act of 1862, which dispenses with the necessity of any allegations outside of the common forms of the common law, except that the declaration must disclose that the suit is brought to enforce a lien upon the property attached. It is apparent enough that the first count, aided by the general words following the second count, which are designed to apply to the action and not to that count, comes within the rule.

It is contended that the second count is for an independent cause of action, distinct from the claim covered by the first count, and not a lien claim, and therefore that, as far as the log owner is concerned, the action is .not maintainable. But it is evident that the claims described in the two counts are identical. If it were otherwise the objection would be unanswerable. The owner is summoned in to answer “ to the suit,” and not to a part of it, or to one claim in it, when there are more claims than one. His property should not be subjected to the costs and delays of a controversy in which he has no interest whatever. Even in admiralty a joinder of a claim in personam with a different claim in rem is never admissible, and at common law independent causes of action can be comprised in one suit only when they are of the same general nature and the mode of trial upon them is the same. The language of R. S., c. 91, § 36, is: “ The declaration must show that-the suit is brought to enforce the lien.” How can it be said to be brought for that purpose if it is brought also for another purpose ? An account can be divided, and separate actions main*498tained, where a portion is secured by a lien and a portion not secured. Bicknell v. Trickey, ubi supra.

It is earnestly urged that the owners should not be subjected to what is claimed to be an exorbitant charge of costs by the officer for keeping the logs attached. The apparently extraordinary sum charged in this case cannot be allowed without clear proof of its necessity. That, however, cannot be determined here. The owner, upon notice, can be heard elsewhere and his rights preserved.

It would be well if the court had power to settle all questions of costs and to apportion them in cases like this, as in equity cases, a power conferred already by R. S., c. 91, § 15, in cases of lien upon vessels.

It does not appear by the case whether the defendant in this action is still in court or not. Therefore the result must be as follows : Exceptions overruled. Judgment in rem for the amount claimed in the first count to be entered for the plaintiff as against the logs; to be final unless the sum is reduced or the action defeated upon an issue between the plaintiff and defendant.

Appleton, C. J.; Cutting, Walton, Dickerson, and Barrows, JJ., concurred.
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