6 Wash. 190 | Wash. | 1893
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The respondents Brodelt and Schlessinger and one Nugent planned the erection of a building upon land at the northwest corner of South Third and Washington streets, in the city of Seattle. The land embraced lot
The appellants filed lien claims for labor and materials furnished for the Brodek and Schlessinger part of the building only, and this appeal is prosecuted from a judgment dismissing their several complaints in actions for foreclosures. The nature of the cases requires their separate examination and determination.
1. In the matter of the liens of the Stetson & Post Mill Co. and W. C. Stetson, but one point need be noticed.
“All of lot 6 in block 9 of D. S. Maynard’s plat of the town (now city) of Seattle, except the west 20 feet of said lot; and that said building is known as the Brodek-Schlessinger building, and is on the northwest corner of Third and Washington streets, in said city, King county, State of Washington.”
This claim, it will be observed, located the building correctly, and it excluded Nugent’s part; but it did not include within the description of the land sought to be charged the south half of lot 6, which the Brodek-Schlessinger part actually occupied.
The statute requires that the lien claim shall contain a description of the property to be charged with the lien “ sufficient for identification. ’ ’ Gen. Stat., § 1667. And so far as the claim is concerned, .no property could be identified with more certainty to a reader of the record copy. It is lot 5, block 9, Maynard’s plat, excepting the west 20 feet of the lot. But the difficulty which the court below found to be insurmountable was, that when the evidence was in it was found that the building covered an additional distinct parcel of land upon which no claim had been filed at all, viz.-, the south half of lot 6. Appellants see the force of this proposition, and claim to be relieved by the reference to the name of the building and its location at the northwest corner of the two streets. It is said in the lien claim that this building is known as the “Brodek-Schlessinger building, ’ ’ and to such persons as might have seen it and have been familiar with the locality that would undoubtedly be a sufficient identification, although unless they were also acquainted with the separate'ownership of Nugent it would not have informed them that under the same roof, and without any apparent distinction of title, there were, in fact, two buildings, upon one of which no
Tredinnick v. Mining Co., 72 Cal. 78 (13 Pac. Rep. 152), was a case where a lien was properly sustained upon the ‘ ‘ Red Cloud Mine, situated in the Bodie mining district, Bodie township, in Mono county.” The inception of a mining title is usually by means of a location notice, in which the name is the most prominent feature, and all conveyances follow by the name only. A public record, in that case, identified the property in the first place; but there is no such record of buildings.
The location at the corner of the streets also helps to identify, and we do not desire to be understood as holding that such a description, without any designation of a lot or block, would not be a sufficient identification if the quantity of land were also- identified, as for example, if the size of the building on the ground were stated.
In De Witt v. Smith, 63 Mo. 263, the description was of ‘‘lots 19 and 20, in block 2, in Ashburn’s addition to Kansas City, ’ ’ and the corner of the street was given. But in fact the block was not block 2, but block 20. Under the facts the clerical error in omitting a figure was held not to invalidate the lien. In Caldwell v. Asbury, 29 Ind. 451, the case was something like this one, for the description was ‘ ‘ house and lot on the southwest corner of Fourth and Oak streets. ’ ’ A foreclosure upon one lot was sustained, although it was held that the claim was not sufficient to
But in Willamette S. M. Co. v. Kremer, 94 Cal. 205 (29 Pac. Rep. 633), under a statute like ours, in substance, the description was “lot 6, in block 28, of the Heber tract, at the northeast corner of Hope and Eighth streets;” and although the building extended over onto lot 7, the lien was sustained.
In De Witt v. Smith, supra, there was something upon the record which would have served to warn any one, even though he did not know of the existence of a house, viz., the plat of the addition, at a certain street corner on which the building was said to have been erected. Unless, in that case blocks 2 and 20 cornered at the same street intersection, it would not be likely that a searcher of the record would be deceived. But in Willamette S. M. Co. v. Kremer, supra, the court, upon the theory of liberal construction, and that the owner was not misled, and regarding the statute as authorizing a lien upon the ‘ ‘ property, ’ ’ which it interpreted to be the house, sustained the lien, although no mention was made in the claim of lot 7.
This court has held that a lien upon a building is ineffectual unless the land, or some interest therein, be included in it. Kellogg v. Littell & Smyth Mnfg. Co., 1 Wash. 407 (25 Pac. Rep. 461).
Phillips on Mechanics’ Liens says, § 379:
“The best rule to be adopted is, that if there appears enough in the description to enable a party familiar with the locality to identify -the premises intended to be described with reasonable certainty, to the exclusion of others, it will be sufficient.”
The claim in this case fully meets this requirement, but the trouble with it, and with the rule as applied to it is, as we think, that its very exactness tended to mislead the public.
But to the last two classes that description added to the designation of lot 5, block 9, would be a complete trap, in case they should become purchasers during the life of the lien. A more sensible and effectual administration of this law could be had if there were some provision by which a claim in such a case could be amended where no one could be injured by it; but we must take the statute as we find it, and in this case neither the actual building nor the land having been described the liens must fail.
2. Whittier, Fuller & Co. furnished all the glass for the building erected by Brodek and Schlessinger and Nugent, jointly. This they did under a sub-contract with one Pierson, who had a sub-contract from the principal contractors for all the glass work. Their agent was misled into supposing that the entire building was owned by Brodek and Schlessinger, by hearing it spoken of as the Brodek-Schlessinger building, and by the fact that Pierson had but one contract for all of the glass woi'k. But their counsel, whom they employed to prepare and file their claim, were aware, through knowledge acquired otherwise, that the Brodek-Schlessinger building proper did not include Nugent’s part, so that from the memoranda furnished
The court, upon the ground that the glass used in Nu-gent’s part of the building was a non-lienable item, refused to allow the remission, and upon the authority of Dexter Horton & Co. v. Sparkman, and Same v. Wiley, 2 Wash. 165, 171 (25 Pac. Rep. 1070, 1071), sustained an objection to the claim.
In the first case referred to Kemery filed a claim for a debt due another person and assigned to him, for which he could have no lien under the law. Sparkman claimed a lien for labor on lumber and shingles at wages of §3 per day. In the other case liens upon lumber and shingles were confused in the same way. In none of the shingle cases was it possible to determine, either from the lien claims or the evidence, how much was properly a lien upon the lumber. The rule laid down in these cases went no further than to declare that a demand for which the law gives no lien cannot be confused with one which is lienable without vitiating the whole. The law imputes notice to every one of its terms, and when a claim is asserted for a lien to secure a demand for which no lien is allowed, the act is
This glass was all lienable. The several owners of the building, by their conduct in making practically one structure of it, opened the way to any one furnishing materials, which were distributed about and used indiscriminately by the contractors, to claim a lien on the whole of it, leaving the owners to settle proportions between themselves. At least it would so seem, although the point is not necessarily in the case for decision. On the other hand, appellants having, as they supposed, furnished glass for the entire building as the property of Brodek and Schlessinger, no less furnished it for the part of the building which actually belonged to Brodek and Schlessinger to the extent they could identify it as having been so used therein.
In the same manner they could have a separate lien upon the Nugent building for the glass which they could identify as having been used in it. Now by the most natural mistake between them and their attorney, when they came to make out their claim they, without any fraud, or attempt to overreach, included the Nugent glass in their claim, a mistake which they voluntarily offered and asked to rectify at the first opportunity after it was discovered. By all means we think they should have been permitted to make the correction.
Upon another ground objection was sustained to this lien claim, viz., insufficiency of description. The land is described twice, and in the first description, on the first page of the claim, it is made to read: “The south one-half
The judgment is affirmed, except as to the claim of Whittier, Fuller & Co., who will take a reversal. The cause is remanded to the superior court for a re-trial of the case as to their claim, in accordance with the law as herein held.
Hoyt and Anders, JJ., concur.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). — Lack of time prevents me from entering into an extended discussion of this case, but, briefly stated, I am unable to distinguish the case of Whittier, Fuller & Co. from the case of Dexter Horton & Co., Bankers, v. Sparkman, 2 Wash. 165 (25 Pac. Rep. 1070). It makes no difference in principle that the lien in that case was filed on material that the law does not allow a lien on, for the law will not under any circumstances allow a lien on one man’s house for material which goes to another man’s house, and the material is as much non-lienable under the statute, for the purposes of this case, as though it were absolutely non-lienable. I do not think the fact that the same contractor built the two houses, or that the two houses were built with a joint partition wall, affects the case at all. They were two separate contracts, and it devolves upon the material man when he seeks to charge, a
Scott, J., dissents.