Block v. Love

1 P.2d 588, 136 Or. 685, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 145
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1 P.2d 588 (Block v. Love) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Block v. Love, 1 P.2d 588, 136 Or. 685, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 145 (Or. 1931).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J.

This suit was filed September 25, 1929, to foreclose a mechanic’s lien. It is admitted that plaintiff is and was legally engaged in the plumbing business under the assumed name of Alberta Plumbing Company, in Portland, Oregon; that he performed labor and furnished materials as an original contractor on a building known as 454 Buffalo street, Portland, on lot 18, block 5, El Tovar, an addition in and to the city of Portland; that his contract was for the complete installation of all the plumbing in said building for the sum of $320.50; that he began work on his contract previous to the eighth day of July, 1927, at which time defendant Otis E. Love, with whom he had the contract, was the owner of the lot and building; that the whole of said lot is necessary to the convenient use and occupation of the building; that without fault on his part *687 lie did not complete his contract because the owner abandoned the construction of the building'; that the last work actually performed, or material furnished on the contract, was not later than March, 1928; that he filed his lien August 5, 1929, and paid $1.25 for recording it. It is also admitted that defendant, the Niadi Company, is and was a duly organized corporation, and loaned the defendant Otis E. Love the sum of $1,800, which loan was secured by a mortgage on the lot on which plaintiff seeks to foreclose his lien; that said mortgage was recorded July 9, 1927, and after the construction of the building was begun; that the mortgagor defaulted and said mortgage was duly foreclosed by a suit and the property sold, under execution on said foreclosure, to the plaintiff therein, the Niadi Company, at sheriff’s sale and afterwards the sale was confirmed on July 18, 1929; that a sheriff’s deed was executed on July 31, 1930, to the Niadi Company; that neither plaintiff herein nor the defendant A. T. Moselle, the other lien claimant and cross-complainant was made a party to the mortgage foreclosure suit; that cross-complainant A. T. Moselle was the painting contractor on the same building. The facts as to his lien which he seeks to foreclose are materially different from those that apply to plaintiff.

All defendants, except A. T. Moselle, the Niadi Company and Otis E. Love, defaulted. The trial court foreclosed both liens and entered a decree accordingly. Defendants Niadi Company and Otis E. Love appeal.

It is undisputed that defendant Otis E. Love was engaged in having constructed buildings for sale during the year 1927, and that plaintiff herein was the plumbing contractor on five or more of said buildings during that year. Included in the number óf said build *688 ings was one on an adjoining lot to lot 18, block 5, El Tovar. Notice of lien, as filed, alleged “that Otis E. Love was the reputed owner of said building.” The notice of intention to foreclose this lien was duly sent •to Otis E. Love more than seven days before the filing of the instant suit. The defendant Otis E. Love was the record owner of the property until July 31, 1930. The building had reached that stage of completion that plaintiff in the performance of his contract was enabled to and did what is known as “roughing in” of •the necessary plumbing, and that he could not further proceed with his contract until certain other construction work,- over which he had no control, was completed. In the early spring of 1928, defendant Otis E. Love became financially embarrassed and was unable to proceed.

This record presents no new question of law. The law on each proposition advanced has been well settled by this court. The only questions in dispute are .ones of fact. The main dispute is the date of abandonment of construction by the owner.

“In order to constitute a permanent abandonment of. the construction of the building, so that the same would take the place of the completion mentioned in the statutes, there should be cessation of operation and an intent on the part of the owner and contractor to cease operations permanently, or at least for an indefinite period, or some fair notice to or knowledge of the abandonment by a lien claimant, either actual or implied”: Stark-Davis Co. v. Fellows, 129 Or. 281 (277 P. 110, 64 A. L. R. 271); Tait and Co. v. Stryker, 117 Or. 338 (243 P. 104); Eastern-Western Lumber Co. v. Williams, 129 Or. 1 (276 P. 257); Pac. Coast Steel Co. v. Uhrbrand, 130 Or. 225 (279 P. 848).

*689 Plaintiff could file no lien until his contract had been completed.

“It shall be the duty of every original contractor, within sixty days after the completion of his contract * * * to file * * * a claim * * Oregon Code 1930, § 51-105.

Permanent abandonment of construction of the building on the part of the owner, or cancellation of lien claimant’s contract is equivalent to completion as affecting the time of filing the notice of lien. The circumstances strongly tend to show; that defendant Otis E. Love had hoped and intended to complete his contract until the Niadi Company foreclosed their mortgage and the property was sold. It was during the period of foreclosure that he gave the plaintiff the information that he could proceed no further.

The evidence shows that actual work ceased about April 1, 1928, the owner at that time being short of funds to further proceed. He took up other employment, but his evidence is rather hazy as to the time he gave up the intention of completing the building. He took no steps to release plaintiff from the contract. The claim is made in the brief and the argument of appellant that he left the state of Oregon and took up his residence in California, but the evidence does not so show.

“Q. Where did you go, Mr. Love?
“A. During the summer I was working the western part of Oregon in this vicinity; and through in Washington, and then went east of the mountains in August to Walla Walla and worked that territory through there,-then eastern Oregon and over into Idaho.
“Q. Did you during that time meet Mr. Moselle or Mr. Block?
“A. No; I did not.
“Q. Or talk to them about it?
“A. No; I had no communication with them at all.
*690 ‘ ‘ Q. After you. came back in the spring, April you say, of 1929, did you meet either of these gentlemen?
“A. Mr. Block called me up once.
“Q. Called you up once?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And on that occasion you had a conversation that you related to the court here. Is that right?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Now I want to know whether you ever told Mr. Block after you left here that you intended to finish up this building?
“A. No; I told Mr. Block my circumstances, and of course he knew them as far as that was concerned.
“Q. Well, what did you tell him your circumstances were?

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Bluebook (online)
1 P.2d 588, 136 Or. 685, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/block-v-love-or-1931.