Charles K. Spaulding Logging Co. v. Ryckman

6 P.2d 25, 139 Or. 230, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 283
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 6 P.2d 25 (Charles K. Spaulding Logging Co. v. Ryckman) 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
Charles K. Spaulding Logging Co. v. Ryckman, 6 P.2d 25, 139 Or. 230, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 283 (Or. 1931).

Opinion

RAND, J.

The Chas. K. Spaulding Logging Company commenced this suit, seeking to enforce a lien for lumber and material furnished to the defendants Ryckman and wife for use in the construction of an apartment house then owned by them. Nelson Bros., Inc., also claimed a lien against the building for labor and material furnished. It answered the complaint, setting up its lien and praying for its foreclosure. During the course of construction, Ryckman and wife mortgaged the building and premises to the Inter State Fidelity Building and Loan Association, hereinafter referred to as the Loan Company, and later sold and conveyed the premises to the defendant Susan Martin. The owners defaulted by failing to pay certain stipulated interest instalments and, under an acceleration clause, all sums payable under the mortgage had ber come due and collectible. The Loan Company jointly *232 with the Ryckmans .and Martin answered,, denying the validity of plaintiff’s lien and setting np the' mortgage and praying that .it be foreclosed,.and, in'another answer, the Loan Company denied the validity of the lien of Nelson Bros., Inc. The two other deféndants •failed to appear and are in default. The cause was tried and a decree entered in the court below foreclosing the . mortgage and the lien of Nelson Bros;, Inc., but refusing to foreclose plaintiff’s lien, holding it to be invalid and unenforceable. From that part of the decree so holding, plaintiff appealed. The Loan .Company also appealed from that part of the decree foreclosing the lien of Nelson Bros., Inc., and now contends that the lien is invalid and, therefore, is not entitled to priority over the mortgage.

Hence,'the sole question for decision is: Áre both or either of the liens valid?

The objection to the validity of plaintiff’s lien grows out of the following admitted facts: The plaintiff’s claim of lien was properly prepared'and verified and contained a true statement of plaintiff’s claim. It was filed for record and a part of the filing fee paid within the time allowed by law, but the balance of the fee was not paid and the claim was not recorded until after the expiration of the time fixed for the filing of the same. It is contended that, under these circumstances, the lien is invalid.

The only competent evidence, the testimony offered by the county clerk being purely hearsay and incompetent, was that of the deputy county clerk who received the instrument and indorsed it as filed and accepted a part of the filing fee. In respect to this matter, she testified that she first saw the instrument on May 8, 1929, when it was presented and left with her for fil *233 ing by Houser, the sales manager of plaintiff. In detailing the transaction which then occurred, she says:

“I expect I asked if he wanted to have it filed and recorded, I usually do, I can’t say what I said to him; he wanted to know how much the recording fee was, and I said I would have to figure it up, and he said he believed he wouldn’t wait, but I should file it, and I said I would figure it first anyway, as I remember it, and when he did let me know, I would remember it, which I did. He paid 50 cents filing fee and I filed it as I do any instrument.”

She .further testified that after filing the paper, she placed it with other chattel liens in the office where it remained unrecorded until July 15, 1929, when the balance of the filing fee, amounting to $7.70, was paid and the lien was recorded. The law requires that liens of this character shall be both filed and recorded: Sections 51-105 and 51-106, Oregon Code 1930. Under the first section, the time in which the claim of lien must be filed for record is fixed and unless so filed for record within the time prescribed the right to a lien is lost, but after it has been filed for record, the duty of recording it rests upon the county clerk, who alone is charged with the duty of its performance. The question, therefore, is whether a claim of lien filed within the time allowed is invalidated by reason of the fact that only a part of the filing fee was then paid, the amount being then unknown and the balance having been paid after the time for filing had expired. Section 27-3013, Oregon Code 1930, prescribes that the fees for filing and recording an instrument of this character “shall be collected in advance * * * and none of the services therein mentioned shall be rendered until the fee therefor has been paid to and received by the officer; and said officer shall enter *234 an account of the fees provided for by this act in books kept in his office, and pay all such fees to the treasurer of the proper county each day for the use and benefit of such county.” It is clear from these provisions that, since the fee for the filing of this instrument was paid in part only, the authority for the filing of the instrument did not exist and the act done in respect thereto is nugatory unless the effect of this provision is overcome by some other section of the code. But section 27-3022 provides that “if the officers named in section 27-3021 [the county clerk is one of the officers so named] neglect or fail to collect in advance all fees * * * which by the provisions of this act are to be paid to the county treasurer of said county, such officers shall be held liable on their official bond for the amount so remaining uncollected, and such amount shall be deducted from the salary of the officer failing to collect or pay the same- over.” It will be noted that under the provisions of the section last quoted, this section neither expressly nor impliedly prescribes that if the fee is not paid in advance the officer shall not act or that if he does so act the thing done is to be of no force and effect. On the contrary it prescribes that if he acts in a matter where a fee is chargeable therefor and which when paid belongs to the county, he and his bondsmen become personally responsible to the county for the payment of the fee which should have been collected in advance. Now, it must be obvious that no officer can collect or be responsible to the county unless some service upon his part has been performed or undertaken and, under the provisions of this section, there can be no fee payable to the county unless some official act has been done or some service performed or undertaken by such officer and clearly, if an act was done before the fee *235 had been paid, if the action taken was illegal and void and was to be of no force or effect, then the county could have no just claim to the uncollected fee and it is not suppo sable that the legislature intended that payments should be made by the clerk or his bondsmen for the doing of some act by an officer unless that act,, when done, was to have some force and effect. Hence, when both sections of the statute are considered together and effect given to all their provisions, it would seem to follow that the filing and recording of an instrument in a case where the fee therefor was not collected in advance would not be a mere nullity nor render the act of filing and recording of such instrument a mere nullity, but that said acts were to have the same force and effect as if the fee had been collected in advance and before the service had been performed. Particularly, we think this is so where a part of the fee was paid before any of the services were performed and the balance of the fee has since been paid.

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Bluebook (online)
6 P.2d 25, 139 Or. 230, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-k-spaulding-logging-co-v-ryckman-or-1931.