145 F. 458 | 4th Cir. | 1906
On the 23d day of September, 1903, the Tennis Bros. Company filed its bill in equity in the United States Circuit Court for the Northern District of West Virginia, against the Wetzel & Tyler Railway Company, to enforce its mechanic’s lien for the amount of the agreed price of certain labor actually performed by the plaintiffs in behalf of the defendant in the construction of its railway pursuant to a contract theretofore entered into between them, and also for the recovery of damages for breach of contract in not permitting the plaintiff to wholly perform such contract. To this bill a demurrer was filed and overruled by the court; a'nd thereupon the defendant railway company duly answered, denying generally the allegations of the bill, and particularly that there had been a modification made in the contract after its execution, relating to the supervision and construction of certain car barns, powerhouse, and supplies furnished therefor; and also that said plaintiffs had failed to keep the contract on its part; the defendants contention being that C. C. Tennis had not personally supervised the construction of the road as was contemplated; that the work done was negligently performed; that the track as completed was imperfect and defective, caused by the failure of the plaintiff to personally supervise the same as aforesaid; to employ competent men for the work, and to furnish sufficient and suitable implements and • materials for the same. A general replication was duly filed to this answer, and issue joined thereon; and thereafter, on the 23d day of June, 1904, a cross-bill was filed by the railway company praying for affirmative relief against the plaintiff, the Tennis Bros. Company, and asking damages in the sum of $50,000, against it for its failure to properly perform the contract entered into by it in connection with the construction of said road, and on account of which the railway was forced into the hands of a receiver subsequent to the institution of this suit. To this cross-bill the Tennis Bros. Company demurred, which demurrer was overruled; and thereupon an answer was duly filed denying generally the averments of said bill. To such answer, a replication was made, and issue joined thereon, and, without reference to a master, a mass of evidence was taken by the parties respectively, and the cause submitted to the court for hearing on the riierits; and a final decree was duly entered on .the 23d day of August, 1905, from which both parties appealed.
The decision of the lower court was, in effect, that no recovery could be had upon the cross-bill, and the same was dismissed; that the plaintiff, the Tennis Bros. Company, were entitled to recover only for the amount of labor and work done under their contract of the 15th of April, 1903, up to the time of the cancellation thereof by the defendant, to wit, for the sum of $12,898.45, being principal and interest due as of the date of the decree; and that no recovery could be had
At the threshold, we deem it proper to say that we fully concur in the action of the lower court in its ruling upon the four questions specifically passed upon by it, namely, in the dismissal of the cross-bill ; the ascertainment thal the plaintiff was only entitled to recover, under the circumstances of this case, for the actual work and labor done and performed under its contract, as distinguished from what it claimed on account of estimated profits; that nothing should be allowed it on account of its rights arising from the so-called “modified contract” respecting the construction of the car barns and powerhouse of the defendant company; and that the amount decreed the plaintiff was properly ascertained by th'e lower court. Wc shall likewise not attempt to give reasons in detail for these conclusions; or review the voluminous evidence contained in the record, but will content ourselves in this regard upon these four questions, by a reference to the able and convincing opinion of the learned judge of the court below, as containing our views thereon.
Coming to the right of the plaintiff to recover at all by reason of the contract, and die mechanic's lien claimed pursuant thereto, it is earnestly insisted that the plaintiff corporation is not entitled to the benefit of the mechanics’ liens act of West Virginia; that it had no standing in court to maintain such a suit, if entitled to such relief, because of its failure properly to qualify itself as a corporation to do business under the laws of the state of West Virginia; that it had forfeited its right to a mechanic’s lien by reason of the agreement to accept bonds in lieu of money, in part payment of the amount to become due; that it did not have the first lien upon the property of the defendant company; and in no event, should the lower court in this proceeding have decreed in its favor, because of the pendency of a suit in the federal court sitting in the state of Pennsylvania, and in which the property of the defendant company was being administered. These questions we will consider in the order named:
First. It is earnestly insisted that the Tennis Bros. Company is not entitled to a mechanic’s lien, because it is a corporation; that only individuals are given such lien under the West Virginia statute; and that in no event can a lien be sustained for a claim arising under the contract of employment involved here, or for the character of service contemplated by the contract. The lien is claimed under sec
“Every workman, laborer, or other person, who shall do or perform any work or labor, by virtue of any contract, for any incorporated company doing business in this state, shall have a lien for the value of such work upon all the real estate and personal property of said company, and such lien shall have priority over any lien created by deed or otherwise on such real estate, or personal property, subsequent to the time when the said labor was performed, but there shall be no priority of lien as between the parties claiming under the provisions of this section; provided, that no lien shall be created under this section for labor performed more than nine months before such lien was recorded.”
The lien was duly claimed under the statute, and no contention is made on that account; but it is insisted that the same cannot be maintained for the reasons above stated. Can a corporation claim the benefit of this statute, and secure a lien thereunder ? This depends upon the interpretation to be given to the language “or other person” in the act, and whether corporations are embraced therein for a claim otherwise entitled to the benefits of the act. The Code of West Virginia, 1899, § 17, c. 13, subd. 9, says:
“The word ‘person’ includes corporations, if not restricted by the context.”
There is nothing in the context of the act under consideration, section 7, c. 75, Code, supra, that would either preclude a corporation from claiming the benefit of the act, or indicate that the words, “or other person” were used in a,ny narrower or restricted sense. The word “person” used in the statute has not unfrequently been under review .by the courts'; and certainly so far as the states of Virginia and West Virginia are concerned, the use of such word “person” includes a corporation. This is undoubtedly the rule in civil proceedings. Quesenberry v. People’s B. & L. Ass’n, 44 W. Va. 512, 30 S. E. 73; Railroad Co. v. Gallahue, 12 Grat. (Va.) 655, 663, 65 Am. Dec. 254; Miller v. Commonwealth, 27 Grat. (Va.) 110; Portsmouth Gas Co. v. Sanford, 97 Va. 125, 33 S. E. 516, 45 L. R. A. 246, 75 Am. St. Rep. 778. And in the courts of the states of New York, Georgia, Nebraska, and Utah, the word “person” used in the mechanic’s lien acts of those states, has been specifically held to include corporations. Gaskell v. Beard, 58 Hun, 101, 11 N. Y. Supp. 399; Loudon Assur. v. Coleman, 59 Ga. 653; Chapman v. Brewer, 43 Neb. 890, 62 N. W. 320, 47 Am. St. Rep. 779; Doane v. Clinton, 2 Utah, 417. At common law, a corporation is deemed a “person” when the circumstances in which it is placed, are identical with those of a natural person, which, irrespective of the statute, and the construction placed thereon by the court, under the. circumstances of this case, would include such a claim as the one sought to be enforced here. It is true that in this case, the claim is in behalf of a corporation; but it is for work of an individual character, as distinguished from corporate service; and it is quite clear that the real purpose and intent of the contract was to have the personal supervision and service of C. C. Tennis, and such of his corps of general engineering and office force, as was necessary to intelligently “supervise the construction for the party of the second
Counsel for the defendant referred to quite an array of authority bearing upon persons entitled to claim the benefit of the mechanic’s lien laws, which the court has not failed to carefully note, including the case from West Virginia of Richardson v. Norfolk & Western Railroad Co., 37 W. Va. 641, 17 S. E. 195; the contention being that only employés of the corporation should be entitled to the benefit of such lien, as distinguished from persons having contractual relations therewith. These, however, will not affect this case; for here, the plaintiff, in the very language of the act, is a “person,” who by virtue of a contract, performs work and labor for the defendant company; the work being of a character for which a right of lieu existed. Architects, engineers, and others who superintend the erection and construction of buildings, have frequently been held entitled to the benefit of the mechanic’s lien law; and we think it quite clear that a person doing similar work of a personal character on the construction of a railroad, is entitled to a like lien. Phoenix Co. v. Hotel Co. (C. C.) 66 Fed. 683; Couper v. Gaboury, 69 Fed. 7, 16 C. C. A. 112; Mulligan v. Mulligan, 18 La. Ann. 20; Wangaustein v. Jones, 61 Minn. 262. 63 N. W. 717; Stryker v. Cassidy, 76 N. Y. 50, 32 Am. Rep. 262; Willamette v. Remick, 1 Or. 169.
Second. The right of the plaintiff to maintain this suit is seriously controverted, because of its failure to qualify under the laws of the state of West Virginia, as a corporation to do business in that state. Code W. Va. § 30, c. 54, as amended by section 31, c. 35, p. 108, of the Acts of 1901. It is admitted that at the time of performing the work, taking out the mechanic’s lien, and the institution of the suit, the corporation had not conformed to the law in this respect; and that prior to the determination of and entry of the final decree therein, it had so qualified. We are asked to pass upon the effect of this failure. In the view we take, it is not essential that we cío so, so far as this suit, upon its pleadings, is concerned; diough we think it is quite apparent that this omission on the part of the plaintiff does not operate to end a suit otherwise regularly instituted, or to destroy a right in other respects validly existing (Toledo Co. v.
■ Third. The contention that the right.of lien was lost by the Tennis Bros. Company, because of- the agreement to receive one-half of the amount to be paid it under the contract, in first mortgage bonds of the defendant company, at 90 cents on the dollar, is, to our minds, clearly untenable. This privilege on the part of the defendant to pay one-half of the amount agreed on in bonds at a reduced rate, instead of money, was an optional one, which was not availed of by it; but, on the contrary, instead of tendering bonds, it canceled the contract with the plaintiff, deprived it of the right to ’further. carry out the contract, and at the same time denied all liability either because of any
Fourth. It is finally insisted that the plaintiff is not entitled to the first lien upon the property of the defendant company; and that in no event should the lower court in this proceeding have decreed in its favor, and for the sale of the property, because of the pendency of the suit in the federal court in Pennsylvania, in which the affairs of the defendant company were being wound up, and its estate administered. So far as the first lien is concerned, while the opinion of the court does say that the right to the first lien existed in behalf of the plaintiff, the decree does not specifically so adjudicate; but merely that there exists a lien, and directs sale of the property. We think that so far as this record shows, this plaintiff was entitled to a first lien upon the property sought to be subjected to its lien; but that the court below was right in decreeing in favor of the plaintiff, and for a sale of the property to pay the indebtedness adjudged to be due, there can be to our minds no serious question. What might have been the duty of the court respecting the ascertainment of liens, or the consideration to be shown to the pendency of the suit in the federal court in Pennsylvania, is a matter that we do not feel called to pass upon; since the question of the existence of other liens, and the determination of rights arising under them between the holders of the same, and the plaintiff, was
The decree of the lower court will be affirmed, with costs.
Affirmed.