Dalles Lumber & Manufacturing Co. v. Wasco Woolen Manufacturing Co.

3 Or. 527
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 3 Or. 527 (Dalles Lumber & Manufacturing Co. v. Wasco Woolen Manufacturing Co.) 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
Dalles Lumber & Manufacturing Co. v. Wasco Woolen Manufacturing Co., 3 Or. 527 (Or. 1869).

Opinion

Thayer, J.

This is a suit in equity, brought to foreclose a mechanic’s lien, in the circuit court for Wasco County.

The complaint alleges that plaintiff is a corporation duly incorporated under the laws of Oregon, for the object and purpose of manufacturing and selling lumber. And that defendant is likewise a corporation, that between the sixteenth of September and the thirteenth of October, 1868, plaintiff sold and delivered lumber to, and performed labor for, defendant, in constructing its dry house, dye house, and bleach house, amounting to the sum of $1,368.05. That between the twenty-sixth day of June, and the thirtieth day of October, 1868, plaintiff sold and delivered lumber and other material to, and performed labor for, defendant, in the construction of its woolen factory, dry house, dye house, and bleach house, amounting to the sum of $619.89, for which said several sums of money, defendant executed his promissory notes. That on or about the tenth day of November, 1868, said buildings were completed. That on the twenty-sixth day of January, 1869, plaintiff filed a notice of its intention to hold a lien for said sums of money due it, for said lumber, materials, and labor, amounting to $1,987.94, and that said defendants Snipes, Curtis & Marlin, have incumbrances on said premises, subsequent to plaintiff’s claim. The defendants filed a motion to have plaintiff make its complaint more definite, as to the amount of lumber and materials furnished for each particular building, which motion was overruled by the court, to which ruling defendant excepted.

[529]*529Defendant Benjamin E. Snipes, filed a separate answer, claiming, among other things, that he had a lien upon the premises in question, extending to all the buildings and machinery, created on or about the month of July, 1809, amounting to the sum of $8,000. None of the other defendants filed answers. The cause was heard before the said circuit court, sitting as a court of equity. And it was adjudged and decreed by said court, that the plaintiff recover of the defendant, the Woolen Manufacturing Company, the sum of $2,246.32 in United States gold coin, with costs, and the same be adjudged to be a lien upon the entire premises, including all the buildings, and the lots of ground upon which the said buildings were situated, including one half acre of ground described, and that the said lien have precedence over all liens after the commencement of said building (except mechanics’ lien) to wit.: since about the thirtieth day of June, 1867, and that said premises be sold to satisfy the same.

The defendants have brought appeal from the judgment, but it appears from the record that Snipes is the only defendant that filed an answer, and consequently, the only one entitled to appeal, or be heard in this court. No statement or evidence has been returned, and the only ground of error which this court is authorized to examine, must be shown from the records in the ease. Upon the argument, the appellant has presented two grounds of error: 1st, that the circuit court erred in overruling the motion to make the complaint more definite; and 2d, that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to authorize the relief granted herein, as against the defendant Snipes. The record discloses sufficient, we think, to permit an examination of both of these questions. It is claimed by the appellants that the plaintiff being a corporation, formed for the purpose of manufacturing and selling lumber, if authorized to take the benefit of the lien law for lumber furnished, cannot take the benefit of such law to secure a debt created for work and labor done in the construction of a building, or for other materials furnished, the same not being within the objects of its incorporation.

[530]*530The only allegation in the complaint on this point is as follows: “That the plaintiff is a corporation duly incorporated under the laws of Oregon, for the object and purpose of manufacturing and selling lumber.”

The public have an interest in the creation of corporations.

The object of every grant of corporate powers is to obtain a public benefit. The powers granted are the consideration, which the public gives for the benefit received or expected. Every application of, or dealing with the capital, or any funds of the corporation, in any manner not distinctly authorized by its charter, is illegal and void. Corporations are created for public reasons alone, and the legislature is presumed in every instance to have carefully considered the public interest, and to have granted just so much power and so many peculiar privileges as those interests are supposed to require. It will not be contended that although the public have an interest in the creation of corporations, it has none in the precise extent of the powers conferred, and that no public policy is concerned in their being strictly confined to the exercise of such chartered powers. To speak of the powers of a corporation we are understood to refer to the privileges and franchises which are created in the charter, and which control and circumscribe the legal acts of the corporate body. Whenever it goes beyond the privileges and franchises therein mentioned, its acts become illegal and void. In the case at bar, so far as we can see from the complaint, the plaintiff only had the right to manufacture and sell lumber.

What portion of the judgment rendered against defendant was for work and labor done and performed, or for other materials furnished by plaintiff, is unknown to the court.

- The blending of them together and taking a promissory note for the whole amount, does not necessarily, or by any means, vitiate plaintiff’s lien, for the legal part thereof. But as the case now stands, and as it is presented by the proceedings before the court, this objection by appellant appears to be well taken. It is claimed by appellant that [531]*531plaintiffs complaint is defective in not stating the amount of lumber furnished for each particular building.

That the buildings being separate and apart, the lien properly is on each building for the particular amount of lumber furnished for the same. For instance, suppose the main factory building had been completed before the dry house, dye house, or bleach house had been eommenced- and the defendant should purchase lumber for the purpose of constructing the throe last mentioned buildings, and after commencing them, the defendant should mortgage the main factory building, would it be right to allow the plaintiff’s lien to extend to the main factory building and destroy the lien created by the mortgage, when no part of the lumber was used on that building?

This would be contrary to the spirit and meaning of the lien law. It was only intended to be a lien on the particular building constructed by means of the labor or materials furnished for that purpose.

Section 1, page 763, of the statute provides, “that any person who shall hereafter, by virtue of any contract with the owner of any building, or with the agent of such owner, perform any labor upon, or furnish any materials, engine or machinery for the construction or repairing such building, shall, upon filing the notice prescribed in the next section, have a lien upon such building.”

The above section confines the lien to the building constructed or repaired. This question evidently refers to the particular building upon which the labor was performed, or for the construction or repair of which the materials were furnished, and to no other.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Or. 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dalles-lumber-manufacturing-co-v-wasco-woolen-manufacturing-co-or-1869.