Copper River Lumber Co. v. Clark

3 Alaska 635
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedNovember 15, 1909
DocketNo. 631
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Alaska 635 (Copper River Lumber Co. v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Copper River Lumber Co. v. Clark, 3 Alaska 635 (D. Alaska 1909).

Opinion

OVERFIELD, District Judge.

The greatest latitude in pleading is necessary to hold that the allegations in the plaintiff’s complaint show that the materials furnished were used in the construction of the Valdez Hotel, as set out in the lien filed herein, although Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 3 (a photograph of the premises) shows that the building in which the lumber was used is called the Valdez Hotel, and is used as an office to the Valdez Hotel proper. So long as the lien sufficiently identifies the building to which the lien is sought to be attached, a sufficient allegation is made in that respect. The evidence supports the regularity and sufficiency of the making, filing, and bringing suit on the lien.

Three questions naturally arise at the outset in deciding this case: First. Does the lien attach to the ground on which the building rests? Second. Does the lien attach to the house?. [637]*637Third. If the affirmative be given in answer to the first two questions, or to the latter alone, is the claim of the lien superior to that of the mortgage?

Section 263 of Carter’s Annotated Civil Code provides in part that the land upon which any building is constructed, altered, or repaired, and a convenient spáce about the same, shall be subject to liens created under the Code.

Section 264, following, qualifies the above as to the land, providing priorities between liens and mortgages, that such a lien as in question shall be prior to any mortgage which may have attached to the land subsequent to the time when the building was commenced, or to an unrecorded mortgage at the time the materials were furnished.

This is a plain, but concise, statement of the two sections of the Code referring to the question at hand, and leads to the patent conclusion that a mechanic’s lien cannot attach to the land on which a prior mortgage, duly recorded, exists at the time the lumber was furnished for the building, etc.

We then pass to the second interrogation. Reverting to the last part of section 264 of our Code, we find that all liens upon any building shall be preferred to all prior liens, mortgages, or other incumbrances upon the land upon which the building is situated when altered or repaired. I do not think the plain reading of the statute needs amplification. Nor does the further reading of said section, which provides that, in enforcing such lien, such building may be sold separately, from the land.

A contention is made by the attorneys for the defendant company that this is not the correct construction of the statute, for the reason that the case of Inverarity v. Stowell, 10 Or. 262, would be noted as holding the old common-law rule that, as soon as a building is erected, it becomes a part of the realty and could not be severed; but in the opinion, at page 264, I think the restriction to the removal of buildings is but a little short of the general and more recent rule, which I deem to be [638]*638that any structure or improvement is subject to a lien under section 264 as against a prior mortgage, and shall be sold separately and removed from the land, where it can be severed from the realty. And I quote from the case pointed out in the defendant’s brief, Johnson v. Puritan Mining & Milling Co., 19 Mont, 30, 47 Pac. 337.

Hunt, J., quotes Jones on Liens, § 1373:

“A lien is given, not on the materials as such, hut on the buildings or improvements in the construction of which the materials are used. The operation of the statute, in case there is a prior mortgage of the land, is to dissever the improvements from the land or realty by giving a superior lien on such improvements and conferring on the purchaser the right to remove them.”

Mr. Justice Hunt, continuing, said:

“Now, to apply these controlling rules, plaintiff has not proved that he erected a building or structure, or put any other improvement upon the mining claims susceptible of severance and removal. He relies solely upon the contention .that, where the improvements are incapable of segregation, the lien is upon the mine itself, and is to be preferred to any prior lien, incumbrance, or mortgage upon the land on which the buildings, structure, or improvements are erected. But we think plaintiff is in error in the construction of the statute. Many improvements, buildings, or erections placed upon mining claims may be removed from the land itself. These are mills, hoists,, pumps, sheds, and other improvements upon which labor may have been done. For all such improvements the lien for labor attaches to the buildings or improvements in preference to any prior lien, incumbrance, or mortgage, and they may be sold and removed.”

The court, continuing, said that when the removal could not he made, giving specific instances, then the statute in such case has not provided for any preference over a prior existing mortgage, but rather, by clear implication, declared otherwise. The case in point and under discussion was decided in favor of the mortgagors and against the lienors for the reason above stated — a failure to show that the personalty could be severed,, and the contention of counsel that the lien should be prior, even. [639]*639to the land, from which a severance could not be had of the improvements. I take the case to be a fair exposition of the law of priority of liens'as it exists to-day, and it may be stated, in passing, that the Montana and Iowa statutes are practically the same as ours (section 264=).

To the same effect, also, is the case of Brooks v. Railway Co., 101 U. S. 446, 26 L. Ed. 1057, where Mr. Justice Miller says:

“The mechanic, therefore, has a lien upon the land paramount to all rights accruing after the commencement of his work, and upon what he puts upon the land, paramount to all other claims, whether created before or after that time.”

The question, then, naturally follows: Can the building in question in this action be severed ?

The defendant claims that it ought not to be severed, for the reason that it will undoubtedly diminish the security of his mortgage. The facts are that the space now occupied by this building was covered by two structures, one since connected in part to the building now in question, at least one side and the floor being used, but at the time of the erection and giving the mortgage the said building belonged to a stranger to the title to the ground. Ground rent, however, was being paid to the amount of the rental value of the building now enlarged and occupying its place on the lot. The other building was moved to the rear of the lot, and so far as the evidence discloses may be there yet.

It is fair to assume, with the lack of evidence to the contrary, that the building now standing upon the space formerly so occupied, is an. improvement, and a substantial one, and, aside from the fact that property values have decreased since 1907, would enhance the value of the mortgage security. That it did so enhance it at the time of the erection of the building I have no doubt. The fluctuation of the market values of [640]*640mortgage securities cannot alter the priorities between a lienor and mortgagor; nor, I apprehend, can it alter the equities.

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Related

Brooks v. Railway Co.
101 U.S. 443 (Supreme Court, 1880)
Marchand v. Frellsen
105 U.S. 423 (Supreme Court, 1882)
Johnson v. Puritan Mining Co.
47 P. 337 (Montana Supreme Court, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Alaska 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/copper-river-lumber-co-v-clark-akd-1909.