Cascade Electric Co. v. Associated Creditors, Inc.

224 P.2d 146, 124 Mont. 370, 1950 Mont. LEXIS 46
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1950
Docket8960
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 224 P.2d 146 (Cascade Electric Co. v. Associated Creditors, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cascade Electric Co. v. Associated Creditors, Inc., 224 P.2d 146, 124 Mont. 370, 1950 Mont. LEXIS 46 (Mo. 1950).

Opinion

ME. CHIEF JUSTICE ADAIR:

This is an appeal from a judgment of dismissal entered in a suit seeking to establish the validity of an alleged mechanic's-lien and to recover from defendants ■ the amount claimed due thereon.

Montana Fish Meal and Oil Corporation, a corporation, hereinafter called the fish corporation, undertook to extract oil from rough fish to be captured in the waters of Montana, and to make meal therefrom for use in feeding livestock. The enterprise was new to this state and involved considerable experimentation.

At the outset of the undertaking the officers of the fish corporation leased from the Montana Power Company approximately 1.14 acres of land on the bank of the Missouri Eiver near Great Falls, Montana. The lease was for the term of one year. It provided that it could be terminated by the lessee upon 90 days written notice to the lessor. It contained no provision for any renewal of the lease upon the expiration of the one-year term provided.

At first the fish corporation considered constructing a building, but later decided to delay such contemplated project until it could be determined whether or not sufficient quantities of fish could be caught at the site and if not the operations were to be moved to some other location on the Missouri river, for which reason it was determined that any plant used should be so designed that it could be moved when and if it should be deemed necessary or advisable.

Accordingly the fish corporation laid on top of the ground some 12"xl2" timbers on which it caused to be laid and nailed 2" planks thereby making a platform about 28 to 30 feet wide and about 50 feet long. The platform had neither foundation nor roof. On the platform the fish corporation placed various machines and appliances, including a hammermill, cooker, dryer, *372 boiler and 10 to 12 electric motors, some of which were fastened to the platform by means of screws or bolts.

After the platform had been built and the machines and appliances placed thereon, certain electrical work and wiring was necessary to connect the machines so they could be operated .by electrical power. To install such wiring the fish corporation employed the plaintiff, Cascade Electric Co., Inc., a corporation.

The work of installing the wiring was commenced April 11, 1947, and completed June 12, 1947.

When plaintiff commenced its work it constructed on one side of the platform a wall about six or seven feet high and from fifteen to twenty feet long, which served as a sort of instrument board, where plaintiff attached certain electrical equipment including some electric switches, and to support it and prevent its being blown down by the wind, braces made of 2x4s were nailed thereto to give it added strength. There being no roof to protect the electrical equipment and switches from the rain and elements, some were, covered at times with canvas. The electrical wiring installed, by the plaintiff could readily be disconnected from the various machines and appliances to which it was connected.

By the time plaintiff completed its work, the fish corporation had run out of money so that it could not and did not pay plaintiff for the labor and materials supplied and on August 15, 1947, plaintiff filed in the office of the county clerk and recorder of Cascade county, a purported notice of lien wherein it stated that for the work and labor so performed the fish corporation became and is indebted to it in the sum of $1,239.57.

The fish corporation was likewise indebted to numerous other creditors for equipment and merchandise purchased and for money borrowed. Six of such creditors assigned their respective claims totaling $5,333.37, to the defendant, Associated Creditors, Inc., which assignee corporation on August 26, 1947, commenced suit against the fish corporation thereon.

Pursuant to a writ of attachment issued in the suit, a levy was *373 made upon the machinery, appliances and other personal property of the fish corporation and subsequently judgment was rendered and entered against the fish corporation for the principal sum of $5,025 and costs amounting to $357.09. A writ of execution issued on the judgment by virtue whereof the defendant, D. J. Leeper as sheriff of Cascade county, levied upon, and, on October 28, 1947, sold at public auction for $6,046.59 all the machinery of the fish corporation. The property sold included a hammermill, cooker, dryer, boiler and various electric motors all taken from the large wooden platform on which they had been placed or from smaller movable platforms. The large wooden platform was not taken away. At the sheriff’s sale, the property was sold to the defendant, Associated Creditors, Inc., as the high bidder, and later by it disposed of to various persons.

At the time the Associated Creditors, Inc., commenced its action on August 26,1947, there was pending in the same district court, another action brought by the plaintiff, Cascade Electric Co., Inc., against the fish corporation to foreclose the claimed mechanic’s lien here involved. Subsequently however at the time of filing its reply herein on December 30, 1948, the plaintiff Cascade Electric Co., Inc., voluntarily dismissed the foreclosure suit.

On June 2, 1948, plaintiff instituted this suit against the defendants Associated Creditors, Inc., and D. J. Leeper as sheriff of Cascade county, complaining that in levying upon and selling the property of the fish corporation defendants had deprived the plaintiff of its right to realize upon its lien to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $1,239.57 for which amount it prays judgment against defendants and also that its claimed lien be declared valid. The Montana Pish Meal and Oil Corporation was not made a party nor has it since become a party to the instant law suit and on December 6, 1947, the fish corporation was dissolved by its board of directors upon the ground that it had no assets and no intention of resuming operations.

Following a trial of the issues without a jury the court made *374 and filed written findings of fact and conclusions of law. The court found as facts:

“I. That all of the goods, wares and merchandise furnished and delivered by the plaintiff and all the services alleged to have been performed by the plaintiff were furnished and performed for and on behalf of the Montana Pish Meal & Oil Corporation. That the contractual indebtedness for said goods, wares and merchandise or services has never been established in any action against said Montana Pish Meal and Oil Corporation and that the Montana Pish Meal & Oil Corporation is a necessary and indispensable party to this action.
“II.

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Bluebook (online)
224 P.2d 146, 124 Mont. 370, 1950 Mont. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cascade-electric-co-v-associated-creditors-inc-mont-1950.