Cleveland v. Hightower

1925 OK 190, 234 P. 614, 108 Okla. 84, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 10, 1925
Docket13924
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1925 OK 190 (Cleveland v. Hightower) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland v. Hightower, 1925 OK 190, 234 P. 614, 108 Okla. 84, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 102 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

BRAÍNSON,

V. O. J. J. W. Hightower, as plaintiff, brought suit ini tbe district court of Stephens county, against Joseph Daneiger, the Pioneer Oil Company, and the Underwood Drilling Company, owners of an oil and gas leasehold, and E. Cleveland and Ed Saunders, as doniftraetor and subcontractor, to subject the said leasehold and personal property located thereon to a lien for hauling certain casing from the city of Duncan, a distance of approximately nine miles, for a consideration of $10 per load; and certain other similar claims which the plaintiff held by assignment, and which stood o.n the same basis as the individual claim.

The defendant Danciger had made a contract with one Ed Saunders to haul said easing for $500, whereupon Saunders sub-let bis contract to one Cleveland for $400. and Cleveland engaged the plaintiff and plaintiff’s assignors to perform the work.

Each lien case being dependent entirely upon the statute, it is not useful to discuss whether the statute is to b^ strictly or liberally construed. The intent of the Legislature, when ascertained, is controlling, and when .such intent is in dispute, as in the *85 instant case,, the court cannot sidestep the burden its duty imposes upon it to deter: mine what the act of the Legislature means.

If the plaintiff has any lien, it is by reason of the special lien, statute as to oil and gas leaseholds, the same being sections 7464 and 7466, Comp. Stat. 1921. The first section provides (omitting those parts which are not material here for clear understanding of the statute) as follows:

“Any person * * * who shall, under contract express or implied, with they owner of any leasehold for oil and gas purposes * * * perform labor * * * used in the digging, (Drilling, torpedoing, completing, operating, or repairing ,of any oil or gas well, or who shall * * * perform any labor in constructing or putting together any of the machinery used in drilling, torpedoing * * * any gas well, shall have a lien,” etc.

Section 7466 provides:

“Any person * * * who shall perform such labor under a subcontractor with a contractor * * * may obtain a lien upon said leasehold for oil and gas purposes * * * in the same manner and. to the same extent as the original contractor, for the amount due him for such labor, as provided in the preceding section.”

It is admitted that the said defendants, designated above, owned the leasehold; that the contract made to haul the pipe to the leasehold was made with Saunders, and Saunders made a subcontract with Cleveland, and that the plaintiff, working in accordance with his agreement with Cleveland, by his labor and the use of his team, transported 'thej Pipe from the city of Duncan to the premises on which the well was to he drilled. The last above quoted section of the applicable lien statute defines thgj character of labor by reference therein contained to section 7464, as:

“Any labor in constructing or putting together any of the machinery used in drilling * * * any oil well or gas well.”

Plaintiff’s labor was under ithe subcontractor Cleveland. He not only furnished his personal labor, but coupled therewith, and directed by it, a team, which was the instrumentality, guided by his intelligent direction, that transported the pipe 02 casing to the premises on, which the oil well was to be drilled. To place the oas ing upon the leasehold premises, the sub•contractor not only engaged the plaintiff, but others who did the same kind of work, and who assigned their claims to the plaintiff, and this entitles, under the statute, plaintiff and his assignors to the lien on the leasehold filed and sought to be foreclosed herein, if within the interpretation of the .statute this kind of labor falls within the intent of the said legislative enactment. If plaintiff is entitled to a lien, it is because, as a matter of law, he, under the facts in this case, falls within the classification referred to in the statute as “a laborer” under a subcontractor. The statute goes no further by its terms than to recognize a contractor, a subcontractor, laborers, and materialmen. It£ the person referred to as entitled to a lien, does not, under the facts, fall vithin the class as a contractor or subcontractor, he must b;e in the class of laborers, or those who furnish material. The, plaintiffs in error make the point that the statute does not expressly provide for hauling casing to a lease, and that for this character of labor no, lien is, by the statute, given.

We think, without quoting at length the authorities as ito interpreting lien .statutes, that when the fair and reasonable interpretation of the statute in questibn is ascertained, and thereby the intent of the Legislature reached, if plaintiff falls within the class of persons included in such interpretation of ,the statute, then he has a lien; otherwise he has not. Eberle v. Drennan, 40 Okla. 59, 136 Pac. 162; Bryan v. Orient Lumber & Coal Company, 55 Okla. 370, 156 Pac. 897; Neves v. Mills, 74 Okla. 7, 176 Pac. 509.

In the case of Kansas City Southern Railway Co. v. Wallace et al., 38 Okla. 233, 132 Pac. 908, this court considered section, 7473, Comp. Stats. 1921, being the railroad lien statute, which provides:

“Every * * * laborer * * * who shall do or perform any work or labor upon, or furnish any materials * * * towards the equipment, or to facilitate the operation of any railroad, shall have a lien therqfor upon the roadbed, buildings,’’ etc.

In that case the lien claimant constructed cement abutments, and it was contended that under the statute no prison could have a lien, except those who furnished labor or material towards the equipment of the railroad, or to facilitate the operation of such equipment, and that equipment meant cars, locomotives, etc., and the wiorlc of the plaintiff in that ease did not fall therein.

Disposing of the ease, thq court followed the rule that such construction should be given to such statutes as is in consonance with the purposes of the Legislature in adopting the statute itself; and as said in *86 another railroad lien case, involving- (practically the same contention (Kansas City Southern Railway Company v. Rosier et al., 38 Okla. 231, 132 Pac. 908). “Why should the Legislature give a lien to the man' who performs work on the equipment and not to the man who builds the roadbed?”

The plaintiffs in error seem to further contend that the phraseology of the statute, “in -constructing or putting together any of the machinery used in drilling,” qtc., is limited to labor upon the premises- in actually putting together or constructing the machinery used in drilling the well. We think Ithajt '(the tproivísioh Jof 'ithe statute would heist reach ¡the intent of the Legislature 'by being paraphrased so as to read:

“Any person * * * who shall perform any labor towards constructing or putting together any of -the machinery (meaning the devices necessary ip drilling or operating the oil weal) shall have a lien,” etc.

The word “in,” as used in the statute preceding ithe word “constructing,’’ carries with it the idea of either “towards” or “necessary for” constructing or putting together, etc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 190, 234 P. 614, 108 Okla. 84, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-v-hightower-okla-1925.