24 Or. 40 | Or. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a suit brought by the plaintiff, The Willamette Steam Mills Lumbering & Manufacturing Company, against D. C. McDonald, J. F. Shea, and Dayton, Hall & Avery, as defendants, to foreclose a mechanics’ lien upon lot number eight, and the north half of lot number five, in Couch’s Addition to the City of Portland, the same being contiguous lots, constituting one entire tract. The facts, as found by the referee, substantially are, that the defendant J. F. Shea, being the owner of said premises, entered into a contract with the defendant D. C. McDonald, by the terms of which the said McDonald agreed, for a stipulated sum or price, to furnish the material and perform the carpenter work in the erection thereon of four separate dwelling houses. The defendant McDonald entered into a contract with the plaintiff for the lumber necessary for the building of said houses, and made a contract with the defendant firm of Dayton, Hall & Avery for the hardware required for the same. The plaintiff furnished the lumber and building material which were used in the construction of the said four houses, and upon which there was due, at the time of the commencement of this suit, the sum of seven hundred and seventy-seven
Upon this state of facts the contention for the appellant is that a separate notice of lien should have been filed against each house to acquire a valid lien, or, in other words, that the including of four dwelling houses in one notice of lien was void. This is predicated upon the principle that our statute by its terms contemplates only a separate lien on a single building, and not a joint lien on several buildings. The language of the statute is: “Section 3669. Every mechanic * * * or other'person performing labor or furnishing materials * * * to be used in the construction of any building * * * shall have a lien upon the same,” etc. “Section 3670. The land upon which any building * * * shall be constructed, together with a convenient space about the same, or so much as may be required for the convenient use and occupation thereof shall also be subject to the liens created by this act,” etc. “Section 3673. It shall be the duty * * * of every mechanic * * * or other person, within thirty days .after the completion, * * * to file with the county clerk of the county in which such building shall be situated a claim containing a true statement of his demand,” etc. As the words “building” and “land” are used in the singular, it is insisted that the lien given by the statute attaches only to the particular building
There is still another reason given in support of this rule or theory. In McGrew v. McCarty, 78 Ind. 498, Elliott, C. J., says: “The theory of the law is that credit is given to the identical building for which the materials are furnished, or upon which the work is done. Each building represents a distinct or separate security; one building cannot be made to stand as the security for another. In truth, each building stands as a several' debtor, and one can no more be made to discharge the debt of another building than one individual debtor can be made to pay a separate claim owing by somebody else to the same creditor. It is upon this principle that those cases may be sustained which hold that a joint claim cannot be supported by the proof of a separate right.” As sustaining this view, see Gorgas v. Douglas, 6 Serg. & R. 512; Fitzpatrick v. Thomas, 61 Mo. 512; Chapin v. Paper Works, 30 Conn. 461 (79 Am. Dec. 263); Steigleman v. McBride, 17 Ill. 300; Landers v. Dexter, 106 Mass. 531; Barker v. Maxwell, 8 Watts, 478; Simmons v. Carrier, 60 Mo. 581.
But it is observable under these statutes in which the word “building” is used in the singular, and which, by reason thereof, have been construed in some jurisdictions to confine the lien to a single building, or to authorize
It will be seen, therefore, while the plaintiffs in error
The case at bar, however, is distinguishable from The Dalles Lumber Co. v. Woolen Mfg. Co., in that it does not appear in the latter case (1) that the materials were furnished under one entire contract; (2) nor that the build
In Wall v. Robinson, 115 Mass. 429, the contract was for labor performed in the erection of three dwelling houses and one stable upon the same lot, and the contractors were to receive one hundred and forty dollars for each house, and thirty dollars for the stable. The lien was held valid, the court saying: “In the case at bar the petitioners have performed labor upon several buildings situated upon the same lot, under an entire contract, and for an entire price. We think such a case is within the purpose of the statute and the intention of the legislature. The parties by their contract have connected the several buildings, and treated them as one estate. Under the contract the labor performed on each building creates a lien upon the whole lot, and therefore upon all the other buildings. Although it cannot be said with strict accuracy that the labor for which the lien attaches was all performed on each building affected by it, yet it was all performed on one estate, and to deny the lien would defeat the spirit of the statute by a too literal adherence to its letter. * * * We are of opinion that when labor is performed or furnished under an entire contract, in the erection or repair of several buildings owned by the same person, and situated upon the same lot, a lien attaches upon the whole estate for the whole value of the labor performed, if the other conditions of the statutes are fulfilled.” To the same effect is Batchelder v. Rand, 117 Mass. 176, where Endicott, J., holds that the facts that the land was conveyed in separate lots, and the buildings were separate, one standing on each lot, do not affect the principle upon which Wall v-Robinson was decided.
In Doolittle v. Plenz, 16 Neb. 153 (20 N. W. Rep. 116), where A. erected three houses for B., one upon each of three adjoining lots, for an entire sum, it was held that the lien attached to all the lots and the buildings thereon,
In Carr v. Hooper, 48 Kan. 253 (29 Pac. Rep. 398), it was held, where work and material were furnished in the erection of five buildings upon a single lot, under an entire contract with the owner, that the lien attaches to the lot and buildings for all the materials and labor furnished. In Sergent v. Denby, 87 Va. 206 (12 S. E. Rep. 402), two houses were built on opposite sides of the street for an entire price, and the lien claimed was on both houses and lots. The defense was that the lien was void because the lien given by the statute is a separate and distinct lien on each building for the amount of the materials actually delivered for construction. The lien was held valid. In Fullerton v. Leonard, 52 N. W. Rep. 325, the facts are somewhat similar to the case at bar, except that the two lots upon which tLe buildings were erected belonged to separate individuals who joined in the contract. A sub-contractor furnished materials to be used in the erection of all the buildings, under an entire contract with the builder. The question was whether a joint lien could be enforced against two separate properties owned by different individuals, based upon a single account of lumber and materials furnished to both upon a joint contract. The court held that the lien could be enforced against, all the buildings and the two lots; that the contract was to govern, and that the buildings, having been united in one contract, must be regarded as one piece of work. The court says: “ It is true that the several lots or parcels of land were not owned
As we have seen there are some authorities which hold that where several houses are built together in one block, under an entire contract, the lien extends as a single lien to the whole block, but that they refuse to so hold when the buildings are separate and distinct. It does not seem to us there is any sound basis for this distinction, for
The question presented by this record has not hitherto been before this court, in consideration of which, and our own decisions, we have been induced to carefully examine the different adjudications and the reasoning by which they are supported, with the result that under the facts herein the liens attach to the lands and the houses as a whole. It follows that there was no error, and that the decree must be affirmed.