De Morris v. Wilbur Lumber Co.

74 N.W. 105, 98 Wis. 465, 1898 Wisc. LEXIS 143
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 74 N.W. 105 (De Morris v. Wilbur Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Morris v. Wilbur Lumber Co., 74 N.W. 105, 98 Wis. 465, 1898 Wisc. LEXIS 143 (Wis. 1898).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J".

Sec. 5, ch. 139, Laws ■ of 1891, being that part of the lien law under which this action was brought affecting the remedy by attachment, is sec. 3333, R. S. 1878, as it has come down from such revision through various reenactments with slight changes. The original punctuation of the section has been so changed that with the introduction by amendment of the words “ by any circuit court or judge thereof,” where hereafter indicated, the real intention in respect to the necessity for an undertaking on attachment in actions in the circuit court has been somewhat obscured. Restoring the punctuation where needed, that part of the section in controversy now stands as follows: “No undertaking upon such attachment, or security for costs in actions hereunder before justices of the peace, need be given, unless upon application of. some defendant in the action, showing by affidavit that he has a good and valid defense to the plaintiff’s claim, and to how much thereof, and if it be only to a part of such claim, unless the residue be paid to the plain-tiff at the time of the application, which payment, if made, shall not affect the jurisdiction of the court; and no order shall be made by any eireuit court or jtodge thereof, requiring the giving of such undertaking or security for costs, except upon ten days’ notice thereof to the plaintiff.” The meaning of the section, by'thus restoring the punctuation, becomes very plain. The words “ no undertaking upon such attachment” plainly refer to actions in the circuit court. As the section originally stood, ten days’ notice was [471]*471required of an applicant for an undertaking in the circuit court or security for costs in justice’s or municipal court. The change confined the ten days’ notice to actions in the circuit court, and probably courts having the same jurisdiction and practice in such matters. That construction agrees with what was held by the trial court. Therefore the order refusing to set aside the attachment cannot be disturbed.

Only a small part of the labor for which the lien was claimed was performed in manufacturing the particular property attached in the action and against which the lien was filed. It was contended on the part of the appellant that the attached property could not be held except for the labor performed by plaintiff and his assignors in actually producing it from the logs and timber and preparing such logs and timber for the mill. If the statutes giving a lien for labor ■on logs and timber were so strictly construed as to limit the lien upon each part of the property to the work done on such part, it would defeat the entire scheme, designed to protect a favored class of laborers, for reasons sufficient to satisfy the legislature of its wisdom. No such construction, was intended, as is abundantly evidenced by the history of legislation on th.6 subject, all tending in the one direction of securing, so far as practicable, to laborers on logs and timber security against any probability of losing their wages. This court has responded to the manifest legislative intent by constantly applying liberal rules of construction to such statutes. Jacubeck v. Hewitt, 61 Wis. 96; Kollock v. Parcher, 52 Wis. 393; Hogan v. Cushing, 49 Wis. 169; Winslow v. Urquhart, 39 Wis. 260. In Jacubeck v. Hewitt, supra, it was distinctly held that a person entitled to a lien on logs or timber, or the manufactured product therefrom, may enforce it for his entire lienable claim against any portion of the property. That is decisive of the question.. The trial court rightly decided that the fact that only a small part of plaintiff’s claim was for work done in manufacturing the shingles [472]*472attached in this action, did not affect the right to resort to such property to collect the entire debt. There is nothing in Glover v. Hynes Lumber Co. 94 Wis. 457, inconsistent with the foregoing. There the evidence was to the effect that a part of the labor was lienable and part not, and there was no evidence by which the two classes of work could be separated. The'subject of whether the entire lienable part could 'be enforced against a portion only of the property upon which lienable work was performed was not involved, discussed, or decided.

It is contended that the action is equitable, and that the court should have protected the appellant on equitable principles, at least to the extent of the enhanced value of the property by reason of the transportation of it from Ogema to Waukesha, such enhanced price being measured by the amount paid for transportation, $147.29. The character of the action was entirely misconceived, both by the court and counsel, as clearly appears from the entire proceedings from the commencement of the trial; it is not an equitable action ;. it has none of the elements of an equitable action; it is an action at law, and clearly so, and has heretofore been so decided by this court. O'Reilly v. M. & N. R. Co. 68 Wis. 212. The action may be commenced in justice’s court or circuit court according to the amount claimed; judgment goes against the party personally liable absolutely and without waiting for any sale of the property, against which it is adjudged to be a lien; the trial is by jury as a matter of right, unless waived by the parties; and the judgment under the statute must be enforced by an execution as in ordinary civil actions; and the execution issues in the ordinary form, except it must contain a special command to satisfy it out of the property upon which the lien is adjudged. Wright v. Pohls, 83 Wis. 560; George v. Everhart, 57 Wis. 397, and other cases of the same character do not refer or apply to actions to enforce liens for work on logs and lumber; but [473]*473to actions to enforce liens of mechanics and material men under the statute on that subject. The latter class of actions, under the old statute, were actions at law; but the change in the procedure, brought about in the Revision of 1878, conforming such procedure largely to that for the foreclosure of mortgages, it was determined by the court, .made such actions essentially equitable in their character. George v. Everhart, supra; Willer v. Bergenthal, 50 Wis. 474; Spruhen v. Stout, 52 Wis. 517. The judgment in this case, that the property be sold unless the defendant lumber company pay into court the value of the shingles as found by the court, within thirty days after notice of the entry of judgment, and providing for a report of sale and judgment for a deficiency, if any, against defendant Holmes as the person liable for the debt, following substantially the statutes on the subject of liens of mechanics and material men, was erroneous. Judgment should have been rendered against the appellant, if at all, for the costs incurred by the plaintiff ip maintaining the lien claim, and against the defendant Holmes for the debt and the entire costs in the action. The aggregate amount of the recoveries should have been adjudged a lien against the property described in the complaint, and the enforcement of the judgment should then have followed according to the requirements of sec. 3340, R. S. 1878.

There is a further reason why the claim that appellant should have been protected to the amount it added to the value of the property cannot be sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
74 N.W. 105, 98 Wis. 465, 1898 Wisc. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-morris-v-wilbur-lumber-co-wis-1898.