139 P. 572 | Or. | 1914
Department 2.
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiffs brought this suit to foreclose a mechanic’s and materialman’s lien upon a building and a parcel of land 45 feet by 50 feet in dimensions, in Westover terraces, in the City of Portland, upon which said building is situated. This building and ground are
At all times mentioned in the pleadings, P. A. Williams., the defendant, Grace B. Williams and E. Beckenridge were co-partners, doing business in the City of Portland under the firm name of the Pacific Heating-Engineering Company. The defendant P. A. Williams was business manager of said firm.
On July 23,1912, the defendant the Portland Central Heating Company, and the Pacific Heating-Engineering Company entered into a written contract, whereby the latter company undertook and promised to furnish all the material and all the labor for the construction and installation of a heating plant on the real premises above referred to, and, as a part of said plant, said company agreed to furnish all the material and labor and to construct for the company defendant a one-story power-house, according to certain plans and specifications, and, in the execution of said contract, and in all of the work of constructing said power-house, the Pacific Heating-Engineering Company was represented by the defendant P. A. Williams, as manager.
The Pacific Heating-Engineering Company, on August 15, 1912, entered into a contract with one Robert R. Sheay, whereby the latter undertook and promised to furnish all the material and labor, and to construct said power-house, for an agreed consideration. By said contract, said Sheay became a subcontractor for •the construction of the said power-house. On or about August 15, 1912, said Sheay entered into an oral contract with the plaintiffs, whereby the plaintiffs undertook and promised to furnish the material and perform the labor for the construction of, and to construct, the brick walls of said power-house, and the concrete footings thereof, for the sum of $1,700, and said Sheay agreed to pay the plaintiffs said sum for their work,
Before said building was completed, said Sheay is said to have absconded. Within 30 days after the completion of said building, the plaintiffs filed, and had recorded, upon said building and the real property referred to, a mechanic’s and materialman’s lien for said sum of $1,780; the whole thereof being unpaid. The claim of lien so filed and recorded is in due form, unless it is defective in that it fails to itemize the amount for which the lien is claimed.
The complaint is in proper form, and said Robert R. Sheay was made a party, but, being out of the state, he was not served with process. The defendants, the Portland Central Heating Company, and the said P. A. Williams filed a joint answer, denying much of the complaint, and setting up affirmative matter. A reply put in issue about all of the allegations of the answer. The court below held the plaintiffs’ lien to be invalid, and dismissed their complaint, and they appealed.
There are various objections made by the defendants to the said lien, and we will examine them separately.
“For labor performed and material furnished, as per contract, $1,780.”
Among other things, the claim of lien contained the following statements, showing for what said lien was claimed:
“That the claimants were employed by the said Robert R. Sheay to perform labor and furnish the material necessary and required in building the brick walls and concrete footings for said building, for which labor and material he agreed to pay the claimants the sum of $1,780, and that the said claimants did, in pursuance of said employment, and under and by virtue of said contract with the said Robert R. Sheay, furnish the labor and material in erecting and constructing said brick walls and said concrete footings, and did build, erect, and construct the said brick walls and concrete footings for said building, and furnish- the labor and material therein, in all respects as required by their contract with the said Robert R. Sheay, and that they did duly perform all the terms and conditions of said agreement on their part to be kept and performed. That the contract and reasonable price of such labor and material so furnished, used, and employed in the said work, as aforesaid, was and is $1,780, lawful money of the United States. That said sum of $1,780 is now due and owing to the said claimants for said work, labor, and material so performed and furnished in the erection and construction of said building, and that no part thereof has been paid; said claim and account therefor being hereinafter specifically set forth and stated. That the following is a true and correct statement of the claim and demand due the claimants herein, after deducting all just credits and setoffs: ‘For labor performed and material furnished as per contract, $1,780.’ ”
The foregoing extracts from said claim of lien show that the amount for which the lien is claimed is $1,780; that said amount is due the plaintiffs for labor and material that they furnished under a contract with
The statement of lien shows that the plaintiffs had the contract for the construction, not of the whole building, but of the brick walls and concrete footings thereof. The plaintiffs constructed all of the walls and concrete footings, but nothing else, and this is shown by the statement. Any competent man acquainted with such work could easily ascertain the amount of material that went into those walls and concrete footings, and the amount of labor that was required to do the work, and the reasonable cost of the material and labor. It was not necessary to set out in the claim the number of bricks, the number of pounds of cement and other material, and the number of days’ labor that went into the walls and the concrete footings of the building. It has been repeatedly held by this court that it is not necessary that the account be itemized, and that it is sufficient if it states in a general manner upon what it is based and the amount of the claim: Ainslie v. Kohn, 16 Or. 363 (19 Pac. 97); Curtis v. Sestanovich, 26 Or. 107 (37 Pac. 67); Chamberlain v. Hibbard, 26 Or. 428 (38 Pac. 437).
In Ainslie v. Kohn, 16 Or. 363 (19 Pac. 97), the claimant was a subcontractor, and the point made in this case was made there and rejected. Passing on this point, Justice Thayer said:
“The reason advanced by the counsel for requiring an itemized statement of their account to be made is that subcontractors and materialmen are entitled to no*75 more than the fair market value for their work and material furnished on the credit of the building, and hence the owner should be informed by the claim, so that he may make the necessary inquiries to satisfy himself of its justice as a lien on his property. This reason, viewed from a theoretical standpoint, appears specious; but practically it has no foundation whatever. The persons who supply labor and materials in such cases have ordinarily no opportunity to obtain an unjust lien upon the property.”
We hold that the statement of the claim of lien in this case is sufficient, and that it was not necessary to itemize the account, or make a more specific statement than was made.
“No subcontractor, or other person or firm furnishing material or labor to the contractor will be recognized, nor will the Portland Central Heating Company be responsible in any way for such claims of such person or firm, beyond taking a bond in the sum of $10,000, which in substance shall provide, that the contractor shall make payment promptly to all persons furnishing him material or labor. Persons so furnishing material or labor shall have the right of action on said bond in the name of the Portland Central Heating Company for their claim.”
The evidence shows that the plaintiffs never saw said provision or had any knowledge or notice of its existence or contents. They never in any manner agreed or assented to it. A copy of the plans for the building was furnished the plaintiffs, but they never saw the original contract or any copy thereof.
“Every mechanic, artisan, machinist, builder, contractor, lumber merchant, laborer, teamster, drayman, and other person performing labor upon or furnishing material, or transporting or hauling any material of any kind to be used in the construction, alteration, or repair, either in whole or in part, of any building, wharf, bridge, ditch, flume, tunnel, fence, machinery, or aqueduct, or any structure or superstructure, shall have a lien upon the same for the work or labor done or transportation or material furnished at the instance of the owner of the building or other improvement or his agent; and every contractor, subcontractor, architect, builder or other person having charge of the construction, alteration, or repair, in whole or in part, of any building or other improvement, as aforesaid, shall be held to be the agent of the owner for the purposes of this act.”
Under the foregoing section, the plaintiffs have a right of lien, unless they, in some manner, waived it, or did something that estopped them to claim it.
The extract from the specifications set out supra does not mention liens. It says no subcontractor or other person or firm furnishing material or labor to the contractor will be “recognized,” and that the defendant company will not be responsible in any way for claims of such persons or firms beyond taking a bond in the sum of $10,000, which will provide that the contractor shall make payments promptly to all persons furnishing material or labor. The right to a lien was created by statute, and it cannot be annulled by the owner’s giving notice that he will not “recognize” such right, or by saying, in the building contract, that he will not be responsible for the claims of persons furnishing material or labor for the building. A contractor, a subcontractor or a person furnishing labor or mate
In the case of Hume v. Seattle Dock Co., 68 Or. 477 (137 Pac. 752), this court reviewed the authorities on this question, and held that a materialman or a laborer, to be bound by a stipulation in the principal building contract against liens upon a building, must have assented thereto, or at least notice of the stipulation must have been brought home to him. It is not necessary to cite other authorities on this point. We refer to the authorities cited by Mr. Justice Eakin in that case.
The defendants allege that Robert R. Sheay absconded, but that, before he did so, he paid the plaintiffs a large part of what was due them and is included in said lien. But the evidence shows that he did not pay the plaintiffs any part of their claim.
The evidence shows that the plaintiffs’ original contract provided for the construction of the brick walls and the concrete footings of said building, and that the labor and materials that went into said walls and said concrete footings were worth $1,780, and that was what Sheay promised to pay them therefor. Afterward the plaintiffs did some extra brickwork on said building, by contract with said Sheay, and that was worth $80, and that Sheay promised to pay them that amount therefor.
It was held in Smith v. Wilcox, 44 Or. 323 (74 Pac. 708, 75 Pac. 710), that a subcontractor was within the scope of the statute. "We have no doubt that a subcontractor “in the second degree,” who furnishes labor or material for the construction of a building, is within the letter and meaning of our statute.
“That the plaintiffs ought not to be permitted to allege that they never received payment of either of said installments of $733, for the said Pacific Heating-Engineering Company, before paying said Robert R. Sheay said last installment, inquired of plaintiffs whether they were duly receiving payment for labor and material supplied by them, and said plaintiffs, with the intention of causing said Pacific Heating-Engineering Company to believe they were receiving payments as their work progressed, stated to said Pacific Heating-Engineering Company that they were receiving payment for all labor and materials furnished by them, and the Pacific Heating-Engineering Company believed said statements and relied thereon and were induced thereby to pay to said Robert R. Sheay said second installment of $733, and, if compelled to pay the same again, will be thereby damaged in the sum of $733.”
We have read the evidence and examined the authorities cited, and find that there is much conflict in the decisions of the courts of the different states in regard to the questions involved in this case, but some of this conflict is due to differences in the statutes. Liens of this character are creatures of statute, and it is the duty of the court to determine what rights our statute has created, and what the rights of the litigants are, measured by this statute.
We find that the plaintiffs are entitled to a decree for the recovery of $1,765, and interest on said sum at the rate of 6 per cent per annum from the 22d day of October, 1912, for $1,20 for filing claim of lien, and for $200, as attorneys’ fees in this court and the court below, and for costs and disbursements, and decreeing said sums to be a lien upon said building and all of the ground described in the complaint, in accordance with said claim of lien, and for a decree foreclosing said lien upon said building and ground, and for the sale thereof in the manner provided by law, to obtain funds with which to pay and satisfy said several sums of money, interest and accruing interest, and costs and disbursements, and barring the rights and interests of the defendants in said building and land; but no personal decree for the recovery of said money will be entered against either of the defendants, excepting for costs and disbursements, the right to make said sums of money, excepting for costs and disbursements, being confined to what can be realized from a sale of said building and lands.
Reversed : Decree Rendered. Rehearing Denied.