American Tank Co. v. Continental & Commercial Trust & Savings Bank

3 F.2d 122, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2416
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 23, 1924
DocketNo. 6526
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 F.2d 122 (American Tank Co. v. Continental & Commercial Trust & Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Tank Co. v. Continental & Commercial Trust & Savings Bank, 3 F.2d 122, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2416 (8th Cir. 1924).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

The main question in this case is the extent of a mechanic’s lien under the statutes of Arkansas xipon the leasehold estates to prospect and operate for oil and gas upon the Rowland farm and the Baker farm in that state. The materials for which the lien is claimed consist of oil tanks, their appurtenances and fixtures erected or furnished by the American Tank Company, a corporation, at the request of the Midco Petroleum Company, another corporation, between the 9th day of May and the 10th day of October, 1921. The controversy in this case at the present time is between the tank company and the Continental & Commercial Trust & Savings Bank and William P. Kopf, trustees for the creditors of the Midco Petroleum Company, secured by the mortgage or trust deed of that company dated November 1, 1920, which was not recorded and of which the tank company had no notice until after the tanks, materials, appurtenances, and fixtures were erected and furnished and the notice of mechanic’s lien therefor was filed. In a suit by the trustees against the Midco Company and others to foreclose the mortgage the trustees filed an ancillary bill, in which they alleged that the mortgage was superior in equity to the mechanic’s lien claimed by the tank company, and caused that company to be made a party to that suit and to answer that bill. The answer of the tank company denied the superior equity of the creditors secured by the mortgage, asserted the superior equity of its mechanic’s lien, and prayed that its lien be enforced in that suit. Upon final hearing the district court held that the mechanic’s lien of the tank company was prior in time and superior in equity to the lien of the trustees under the mortgage to the extent of the tanks, appurtenances, and fixtures furnished within 90 days prior to October 10, 1921, and enforced the lien to that extent by its decree.; but it held that a substantial part of the amount claimed could not be allowed its lien because it was not furnished more than 90 days before the lien was filed on October 10, 1921. Neither the trustees nor the Midco Company appealed from, this decree. The tank company, however, did appeal, and assigned the court’s refusal to allow it a lien for the tanks, etc., furnished more than 90 days prior to October 10, 1921, as error. As the court below has held that the trustees and other parties contesting the mechanic’s lien stand in the shoos of the Midco Company, and that decision is not assailed, that company will he henceforth for brevity treated as the representative of all contesting the mechanic’s lien and alone spoken of as the contestant in the subsequent discussion of this case.

The extent of the lien in controversy is conditioned by the correct construction of the statutes of Arkansas, which provide:

“Every mechanic, builder, artisan, workman, laborer or other person- who shall do or perform any work upon, or furnish any material, fixtures, engine, boiler or machinery for any building, erection, improvement upon land, or upon any boat or vessel of any kind, or for repairing same, under or by virtue of any contract with the owner or proprietor thereof, or his agent, trustee, contractor or sub-contraetor, upon complying with the provisions of this act, shall have for his work or labor done, or materials, fixtures, engine, boiler or machinery furnished, a lien upon such building, erection or improvement, and upon the land belonging to such owner or proprietor on which the same are situated, to the extent of one acre.” Crawford and Moses’ Digest of the Laws of Arkansas, § 6906.
“Every building or other improvement ereeted or materials furnished, according to the provisions of this act, on leased lots or lands shall be held for the debt contracted for or on account ox the same, and also the leasehold term for such lot and land on which the same is erected.” Section 6910.
“It shall be the duty of every person who wishes to avail himself of this act to file with the clerk of the circuit court of the county in which the building, erection or other improvement to be charged with the [124]*124lien is situated, and within ninety days after the things aforesaid shall have been furnished or the work or labor done or performed, a just and true account of the demand due or owing to him, after allowing all credits, and containing a correct description of the property to be charged with said lien, verified by affidavit.” Section 6922.

Between May 2, 1921, and the 27th day of November 1921, the Midco Company was the owner in possession of oil and gas leases upon, and leasehold estates in, the Rowland farm and the Baker farm in Arkansas. On October 10, 1921, the tank company filed a notice of a mechanic’s lien for $10,504.10 for work done, material and fixtures furnished, and erections and improvements made on the Midco Company’s two leasehold estates at the request and on the orders of the Midco Company. -The notice claimed a lien for $7,062.40 on the Rowland farm and $3,441.70 on the Baker farm. The court below entered a decree by which it allowed a lien on the Rowland farm for $3,441.70; but it refused to sustain the tank company’s claim for a lien for items of labor and material furnished on the Rowland farm on May 10 and June 1, 1921, aggregating $3,620:70, and refused to sustain a lien for materials and labor worth $3,441.70 furnished and erected on the Baker farm on June 1, 1921, because these items were not furnished within 90 days preceding October 10,1921, when the notice of lien was filed.

Counsel for the tank company insist, and counsel for the Midco Company deny, that a mechanic’s lien for these items was lawfully secured by the notice filed on October 10, 1921, under the provisions of section 6906, as that section has been construed by the Supreme- Court of Arkansas. The construction of that section by that court is clearly stated in Kizer Lumber Co. v. Mosely, 56 Ark. 544, 20 S. W. 409, and that construction has been repeatedly affirmed in its later decisions. Midland Valley R. R. Co. v. Maron Belt & Nut Mfg. Co., 91 Ark. 108, 111, 120 S. W. 396; Marianna Hotel Co. v. Livermore Fdry. & Mch. Co., 107 Ark. 245, 253, 254, 154 S. W. 952; Tenney v. Sly, 54 Ark. 93, 95, 96, 14 S. W. 1091; Burel v. East Ark. Lbr. Co., 129 Ark. 58, 61, 62, 64, 65, 195 S. W. 378, 10 A. L. R. 1017.

In the Kizer Lumber Company Case the action was brought to enforce a mechanic’s lien for numerous items of lumber furnished at different times for the construction of a building by the lienor to the amount of $184.10, only $21.26 of which was for lumber furnished within the 90 days before the filing of the notice of lien. The court declared the local law of Arkansas under section 6906 on the question under consideration here in these words:

“If the materials were furnished under one contract, he should file the account within ninety days after the last was delivered; but, if the materials*-were furnished under separate and distinct contracts, it should be filed under each contract, within the time limited. Livermore v. Wright, 33 Mo. 31; 2 Jones on Liens, §§ 1431-1434, and eases cited. If, however, he began to furnish ‘without any specific agreement as to the amount to be furnished,’ or the time within which they were to be furnished, and there was a ‘reasonable expectation that further material’ would ‘be required of him,’ and he was ‘afterwards called upon from time to time to furnish the same,’ he should .file it within ninety days after the last item was delivered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 F.2d 122, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-tank-co-v-continental-commercial-trust-savings-bank-ca8-1924.