This is a proceeding in prohibition, arising from the denial of Relator Springfield Underground, Inc.’s Motion to Dismiss and Motion for Summary Judgment. Springfield Underground maintains that the trial court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to proceed with the underlying mechanic’s lien foreclosure action because the plaintiff seeks to enforce its lien against the wrong tract of land. The Court of Appeals, Southern District, summarily denied Springfield Underground’s petition for a writ of prohibition, and, thereafter, this Court issued a preliminary writ. The writ is now made absolute.
I.
Springfield Underground conducts a quarry operation on five separate tracts of land, all located within the city limits of Springfield, Missouri. In September 2000, Springfield Underground contracted with Seseo Conveyors & Engineering, Inc. to erect conveyors on “Tract I.” Seseo in turn contracted with Pittsburgh Steel & Manufacturing, Inc., plaintiff in the underlying action, to provide labor, supplies and materials for the erection of the conveyors.
After payment for services rendered was withheld, Pittsburgh Steel sought to secure a mechanic’s Men on Springfield Underground’s property. As required by the mechanic’s lien statutes, Pittsburgh Steel served a timely “Notice of Intent to File a Mechanic’s Lien” on an officer of Springfield Underground. The notice described the lien property as 3107-J East Chestnut Expressway, the location of Springfield Underground’s corporate offices. However, Springfield Underground does not own that property, nor is that property the site on which the conveyors are located.
Pittsburgh Steel then filed a “Statement of Mechanic’s Lien” with the circuit clerk of Greene County, Missouri. The parcel of land described therein is not Tract I, the property on which the conveyors are located, nor is it the same property referenced in the Notice of Intent to File a Mechanic’s Lien. Instead, the Statement of Mechanic’s Lien describes “Tract V,” a completely different part of Springfield Underground’s property.
Shortly thereafter, Pittsburgh Steel attempted to enforce the lien by filing a petition for foreclosure in the circuit court. In response, Springfield Underground filed a Motion to Dismiss/Motion for Summary Judgment requesting that Pittsburgh Steel’s petition be dismissed because the Statement of Mechanic’s Lien did not contain a true description of the property upon which the lien was intended to apply, in accordance with section 429.080, RSMo 2000. After conducting a hearing, the motion was overruled.
II.
As a preliminary matter, the parties dispute the propriety of issuing a writ of prohibition to remedy the improper denial of a motion for summary judgment. Though prohibition is generally unavailable if an appeal would provide adequate relief, this Court has recognized that a
Mechanic’s hens exist solely by virtue of legislative enactment; therefore, compliance with the legislative enactment is essential to securing the lien.
Patrick V. Koepke Construction, Inc. v. Woodsage Construction Co.,
As a general rule, statutes relating to mechanic’s hens should be liberally construed in favor of hen enforceability.
Breckenridge Material,
Here, the land described by Pittsburgh Steel in its Statement of Mechanic’s Lien was not the land upon which the erectors were placed, but an entirely different tract. Even under the traditionally liberal interpretation of mechanic’s hen statutes, such a complete misstatement is in no way adequate to identify the property subject to the hen. If the legislature’s express requirement of a “true description” of the hen property, or one “so near as to identify the same,” is to have any meaning, a description that is flawed in every regard simply cannot suffice. Because comphance
Nevertheless, respondent maintains that Pittsburgh Steel’s failure to satisfactorily identify the property subject to the lien does not necessitate dismissal of the foreclosure action, as deficiencies in the property description can be cured by amendment anytime prior to judgment. However, the statutorily prescribed time for filing a hen with the correct description expired on the same day that Pittsburgh Steel filed its petition for foreclosure in the circuit court. As the lien claimant, Pittsburgh Steel bore the responsibility of ensuring proper jurisdiction within the statutory time limitation period,
see
sec. 429.080;
Cent. Wholesale Distribs., a Div. of Topeka Lumber, Inc. v. Day,
Respondent cites three cases in support of the claim that the petition can now be amended, but all are inapposite. These cases,
Hill Behan Lumber Co. v. Dinan,
III.
In conclusion, Pittsburgh Steel’s Statement of Mechanic’s Lien failed to substantially comply with the requirements of section 429.080 and thereby deprived the circuit court of jurisdiction over the foreclosure action. Accordingly, the preliminary writ of prohibition is made absolute. Respondent is directed to vacate his order denying the motion to dismiss/motion for summary judgment, and enter judgment in favor of Springfield Underground.
