Brown v. Liggett

141 So. 409, 19 La. App. 637, 1932 La. App. LEXIS 175
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 4, 1932
DocketNo. 4124
StatusPublished

This text of 141 So. 409 (Brown v. Liggett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Liggett, 141 So. 409, 19 La. App. 637, 1932 La. App. LEXIS 175 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

CULPEPPER, J.

Plaintiff brought suit to recover $851, with legal interest from judicial demand for labor performed for defendant by him and certain others who had assigned their claims to plaintiff for purposes of this suit. In addition to the claims for labor actually performed, plaintiff also sues for statutory penalties on the various amounts of each laborer’s daily wages, from their respective dates of discharge by defendant until the wages earned shall have been paid. It is alleged that plaintiff and his said eolaborers were discharged without having been paid their wages.

It is alleged that the services which plaintiff and his assignors performed for defendant, and for which the wages are claimed, was “in the drilling and operation of certain oil and gas wells on a lease owned by the said defendant,” situated on lands in Webster parish,. full description of the land being set out in the petition.

It is also alleged that, to secure the payment of said wages and penalties, plaintiff has a lien and privilege on “the oil and gas wells located on the above stated lease, drilling rigs, and machinery, appurtenances, appliances, equipment and tools that were used in the said operations, above alleged, also has a lien' and privilege on the oil and gas lease.” Writs of provisional seizure were caused to be issued by plaintiff, and the returns of the sheriff thereon show the following property was seized: “Oil and gas wells, drilling rigs, machinery, appurtenances, appliances, equipment and tools used in the operation of said oil and gas wells on the following described property.” (Here follows the description set out in plaintiff’s petition.)

No appearance was made by defendant, therefore judgment by default was rendered;' for plaintiff as prayed for on September 19, 1930. Service upon defendant having been domiciliary, notice of the judgment was sought to be had, but failed, because defendant had in the meantime moved from the state. Whereupon service of notice was made upon D. W. Stewart, Jr., attorney at law, appointed to represent the absent defendant, after which the seized property was advertized for sale under the judgment.

Pending the advertisement, O. C. Howell filed an intervention and third opposition, alleging ownership of a portion of the property seized, consisting of certain of the machinery, tools, and appliances, denied the existence of a lien in favor of plaintiff upon the property, and obtained a rule upon the sheriff and plaintiff, and defendant, to show cause why same should not be released from seizure. The Merrick Oil Company, Inc., also intervened, claiming ownership of other portions of the seized machinery and drilling outfit, also denied any lien in favor of plaintiff in suit. Stevens Machine & Boiler Works intervened, asserting a superior lien to that of the plaintiff upon the seized property, alleging that it had “performed certain shopwork, labor and repairs on the drilling rig, equipment, machinery, casing, pipes and tools, and general repairs and upkeep of said drilling rig, etc. of said James B. Liggett, between the dates of July 10th and August 25, 1930.” This claim is for $688.05. D. A. Cul-berson intervened, alleging that he was entitled to a lien and privilege superior to that of all other persons upon the seized property, by reason of the fact that he “did and performed certain work and labor on the drilling rigs, derricks, equipment, machinery, casing, pipes and tools, in the matter of dismantling, moving and rebuilding same, belonging to James B. Liggett between the dates of July 22, 1930 and September 5, 1930.” This claim is for $680. H. R. Hayes Lumber Company intervened, alleging that it sold and delivered to defendant Liggett and J. S. Martin, between the dates May 2, 1930, and June 22, 1930, certain lumber, paint, nails, cement, and other building materials aggregating $645.17, which defendant used in the construction, operation, and drilling of “what is known as the Taylor Nos. 1 and 2,” located on the lease lands; that said amount had not been paid; and that it is entitled to a lien and privilege upon the seized property over that of all other persons.

The sale was withheld and the issues as thus made up were submitted to the court [411]*411upon the following short agreed statement of facts:

“It is admitted by all parties concerned that the ownership alleged by the Merrick Oil Company and O. C. Howell represents true ownership of the property alleged in the petition, which ownership is admitted.

“And the amounts of the liens of the Stevens Machine & Boiler Company, D. A. Cul-berson and H. S. Hayes Lumber Company are admitted as correct but the rank of all liens to be determined by the court.

“And the right of Frank B. Brown and all lienors to exercise their lien and privilege upon the property of O. C. Howell and the Merrick Oil Company is a question of law left for the determination of the court. Also the question of whether or not penalties constitute a lien is also left for the court’s consideration.”

' Apparently the court reconsidered the issues involved between plaintiff and defendant in the original suit and on which the default judgment was rendered, as the court on the trial of the interventions decreed “that the judgment previously rendered * * * * maintained and enforced” as to the amount of labor actually earned ($S51), recognizing and enforcing a superior lien and privilege upon the seized property to secure its payment, but rejecting the demands for penalties.

There was judgment for Stevens Machine & Boiler Works, for $688.05, with legal interest from November 26, 1930; for D. A. Culberson for $680, with legal interest from December 15, 1930; and for H. R. Hayes Lumber Company for $646.17, with legal interest from November 29, 1930. A lien and privilege of equal rank was recognized upon all of the seized properties in favor of these three intervenors, but of inferior rank to that of plaintiff in suit; and all of the alleged liens were recognized regardless of the owner or owners of the properties. The demands of O. C. Howell and Merrick Oil Co., Inc., were rejected. These two last-named interveners alone have prosecuted appeals. H. R. Hayes Lumber Company, Stevens Machine & Boiler Works, and D. A. Culberson took orders of appeal, but did not perfect same.

It is our view that plaintiff in suit, Frank B. Brown, has no lien or privilege on the property under seizure, for the following reasons: He alleges that the labor for which he claims a lien was performed in the “drilling and operation of the wells.” It is not alleged, nor does the testimony show, how much or what part of the labor was performed in the work of drilling, nor what part in the operation, if any, of the so called wells after they were completed and became producing wells, if they ever did become such. This information is essential for the court to have. Act No. 171 of 1928 is the only statute granting a lien and privilege on oil and gas well rigs, machinery, appurtenances, and appliances connected with such wells, to laborers thereon, to secure their wages. It creates a lien and privilege only when the labor or services are performed in the operation of oil or gas wells. It does not create a lien for services performed in the work of drilling such wells. Such has been the construction placed upon the statute by this court in a number of recent decisions, the first of which was the case of Wesson v. John Woodley, Inc., decided Feb. 16, 1932, and reported in 139 So. 676. A number of other similar cases have since been decided, not yet reported.

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Bluebook (online)
141 So. 409, 19 La. App. 637, 1932 La. App. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-liggett-lactapp-1932.