14 Minn. 145 | Minn. | 1869
The Court below found that on the 20th October, 1866, Kate 0. Howe held and owned a school land certificate, and that at that time she with her husband and co-defendant Lewis S. Howe, was in possession of the land described in such certificate, against a part of which the plaintiff seeks to enforce a lien ; that E. and E. Whitcomb at said time sold and delivered to Kate C. Howe 24,270 brick, for which she agreed to pay $194.20; that said brick were used by said Kate to build a house on the land aforesaid, and that said house was built for, and occupied as a homestead of said Kate and Lewis; that on or about March 8th, 1867, said Whitcombs made an account in writing of said brick as required by law, and filed the same duly verified in the proper office, where it was recorded; that on the 20th day of June, 1867, said Whitcombs duly sold and assigned to the plaintiff said account and lien; that said Kate is indebted to the plaintiff, by reason of the premises, in the sum of one hundred and twenty-seven dollars and twenty pents, with interest, a part of the account having been paid; that on the 26th day of February, 1867, said Kate and Lewis sold and assigned to the defendant Heaney said school land certificate, together with their right, title and interest in the land aforesaid. As a conclusion of law, it is found that the plaintiff is not entitled to alien upon the land. On what particular ground the Court based its conclusion of law, we are not informed, but the respondent claims that the conclusion is right: first, because there is no evidence to support the finding, that the brick were sold and delivered to Kate O. Howe, and that she agreed to pay for them. Now, notwithstanding there was evidence, that in making the contract with the Whitcombs, Lewis S. Howe, the husband, made no mention of his wife, and that she never expressly directed or authorized the purchase of the
It is further contended by the respondent’s counsel, that “ The lien under the statute is a personal right given to the materialman alone, for his protection.” In other words, that the lien is not assignable. We do not agi’ee to this. Sec. 14 of the Lien Act, Ch. 90, Gen. St., provides that “Executors and administrators, under this chapter, have the same rights, and are subject to the same liabilities' that their testator or intestate would be or might have if living.” See also, Sec. 1, Chap. 77, Gen. St. It is a settled general rule, that whatever rights of action, or of property, survive to an executor, or administrator, are assignable. The Peo
• Applying this rule, it would follow, that under our statute the lien of a material man or mechanic is assignable, and by Sec. 26, Ch. 66, Gen. St., the assignee, as the real party in interest, would be entitled to enforce the lien in his own name. There is nothing in our statute to prevent us from applying the rule of assignability referred to, to cases of this kind. Seo. 8 of the lien Act, expressly provides that “ Every person holding such lien, may proceed to obtain a judgment,” &c. It is true that the cases cited by counsel in 10th Wis. and 36iA Mcome, appear to deny the assigna-bility of liens, but the denial does not appear to rest on satisfactory reasons, and our statutory provisions in regard to liens differ somewhat from those of Maine and Wisconsin. Dawbigny vs. Duval, 5 T. R., 603, cited by respondent’s counsel, is authority only for the proposition, that a factor has no right to pledge the goods of his principal. And as to this case, see Story on Bailments, Sec's 325, 326, 327. On the other hand, liens of this kind appear to be held assignable in Goff vs. Papin, 34 Missouri, 178.
We can conceive of no reason, in the nature of things, why an assignment of the debt, or account, and the lien, such as was made in this case, should not be valid, so that the as signee can enforce the lien in his own name.
The claim of the material man, and the lien, are certainly the property of the material man, and why should he not have the right to dispose of both ? There is nothing in the lien right of the nature of a personal trust. The lien holder is not entrusted with the possession of the property bound by the lien. Ilis lien is a security. What difference can it make to the lienor who holds the lien ? His duty is to pay the debt. If he pays it, his property is discharged. If
So far as considerations of this kind are concerned, we are unable to see why the quality of assignability should not be attributed to a mechanic’s lien, as well as to a judgment lien, a lien by mortgage, or the special property of a pawnee. The lien law is designed for theprotection of the material man, the mechanic and other persons performing labor upon buildings. As an assignment is not prohibited, and there is nothing in the nature of a lien which would render its transfer improper or injurious,, and as the lien is wholly a creature of statute, the statute should be so construed (if it fairly may be) as to make the protection which it designs to afford as valuable and effectual as possible. And upon these grounds, we think the assignability-of mechanics’ liens ought to be sustained if fair construction will permit it, for it is apparent that the right to dispose of his lien, to realize from it, without waiting for the slower process of the-law, may be of great advantage to the lien holder, and cannot possibly injure the lienor.
The last point made by the respondent in support of the conclusion of the Court is based on this state of facts. It appears that the school land certificate held and owned by Nate C. Howe, covered the whole of a lot, known as lot 4, containing two and a half acres; that the house was situate on the north-west part of it, ’about one hundred feet from the north-west corner of said lot. It also appears that the "Whitcombs claimed their lien upon a part of said lot, commencing at the north-west corner thereof, such part being twenty rods in length, from east to west, and eight rods in width, from north to south, and including the house. That is to say, the Whitcombs claimed a lien upon one acre of
The respondent insists that the conclusion of the Court was right, because it was not in the power of tire lien claimants to carve put one acre from the larger tract in a form to suit themselves, and that the owners, as homestead claimants, should be consulted. Admitting that Heany, the only defendant appearing, and who claims no homestead right for himself, can be heard to make an objection of this kind, we are of opinion that the objection is untenable. The lien •law gives no direction as to how the acre shall be carved out of the larger tract. The lien given is upon the building, and upon the right, title and interest of the owner of the building, in and to the land upon which the same is situated, not exceeding in extent one acre. As the statute gives the lien upon one acre only, it is necessary that the acre (if part of a larger tract) should'be described in the lien claim required to be filed, in order that all persons may have notice of what land is affected by it. And as there is no provision of law by which the lien claimant is authorized to call upon, or compel the owner of the land to designate the acre, we see no reason why he should not be permitted to designate it himself. If his designation might sometimes unnecessarily prejudice the rights of the land owner, it is equally true that a designation by the land owner might seriously affect the value of the lien. As far as the homestead right is concerned, it is to be borne in mind, that it does not appear in this case that the premises were a homestead at the time when the lien right accrued. The lien right is certainly paramount to any homestead right acquh’ed subsequent to its inception. But if it be necessary (as we construe it to be) for the lien claimant to dcsig-
"We are therefore of opinion, that as the statutes now ■stand, the lien claimant having a lien anterior and superior to a homestead, may enforce the same without any reference whatever to such homestead right, and that the homestead claimant cannot be permitted to exercise a right of selection of the land which he regards as his homestead, so as to interfere with the enforcement of the lien.
These are all the points which we are called upon to consider in this case, and from the views expressed, it follows that the Court below erred in its conclusion of law.
The judgment must therefore be reversed, and the case remanded for further proceedings, in accordance with this opinion.