152 Ind. 104 | Ind. | 1899
In 1890 a mortgage was executed to appellee on certain real estate in Evansville, Indiana, to secure a
It is provided in section 7256, supra, being section 2 of an act approved March 9, 1889 (Acts 1889, p. 257), that when land is encumbered by a mortgage, and a building is erected thereon, the mechanic’s lien on said building is superior to the lien of the mortgage thereon, and the building may be sold to satisfy the mechanic’s lien, and removed within ninety days by the purchaser. It is insisted by appellant that under said section the mechanic’s lien on the building erected on the real estate described in the mortgage and notice of mechanic’s lien was superior to the lien of said mort
It is not necessary for us to determine as to the correctness of this contention of appellant, for the reason that, if such right existed, he has not asserted it within the time required by the statute. The laws of this State require that, to enforce a mechanic’s lien, the action must be commenced within one year from the time of the filing of the notice in the recorder’s office, or, if credit be given, within one year from the expiration of such credit, and if not commenced within the time mentioned the same is null and void. Section 7259 Burns 1894, Acts 1889, p. 258; Union Nat., etc., Assn. v. Helberg, post, 139; Deming-Colborn, etc., Co. v. Union Nat., etc., Assn., 151 Ind. 463.
In Union Nat., etc., Assn. v. Helberg, supra, an action to foreclose a mechanic’s lien had been commenced within the time fixed by statute, and the same foreclosed. Afterwards said real estate was sold on said decree. After the expiration of the time-within which the law requires an action to foreclose a mechanic’s lien to be commenced, a person holding a mortgage on said real estate which was junior to said mechanic’s lien, but who was not made a party to the action to foreclose said mechanic’s lien, commenced an action to foreclose the same, and made the purchaser of said real estate, under said decree of foreclosure, a party defendant, and this court held that said mechanic’s lien was void, as against said mortgage lien, for the reason that no proceeding had been commenced to enforce said mechanic’s lien, as against -said mortgage, within the year fixed by statute. Deming-Colborn, etc., Co. v. Union Nat., etc., Assn., supra, is to the same effect. In this case appellant claims that the lien of appellee’s mortgage on said building was junior to the mechanic’s lien; but it will be observed that appellee, the holder of said mortgage, was not made a party defendant or otherwise, in
Other reasons are urged to 'sustain the action of the trial court, but, having reached the conclusion that the mechanic^ lien is null and void as against said mortgagee, it is not necessary that they be considered. Binding no error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.