Dollman v. Collier

22 S.W. 741, 92 Tenn. 660
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 22 S.W. 741 (Dollman v. Collier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dollman v. Collier, 22 S.W. 741, 92 Tenn. 660 (Tenn. 1893).

Opinion

A. D. Beight, Sp. J.

Complainant filed this Dill• against Defendant Collier eí al., seeking to enforce a mechanic’s lien on the lot and building known as the Appeal Building, situated in Memphis, Tenu., on the corner of Main and Jefferson Streets. Complainant, being a carpenter and contractor, entered into a contract, in July, 1888, with Defendant Collier to furnish the material and do the carpenter’s work in framing and . covering said building. This work was done, accepted, and paid for; and on May 20, 1889, complainant contracted to do the inside wood-work, etc., of said building according to the plans and specifications of the architect, E. C. Jones. This bid was accepted at $13,249. Complainant again bid, on June 12, 1889, on some extra work for the sum of $3,290, the two bids on contract aggregating $16,590.

Complainant went to work under his contract, furnishing the material and doing the work, but before he had completed it, he was discharged by Collier, and not allowed to complete his contract. Though complainant stood ready, willing, and able to complete the work and carry out his contract, he was not allowed to do so by Defendant Collier. Thereupon he filed this bill claiming a mechanic’s lien for the amount due him for the materials [662]*662furnished and work done, etc., and for damages against Collier for breach of contract.

Collier answered denying the equities of the .hill, and set up a counter claim as offset against complainant for damages for negligent and defective work, etc.

Complainant prayed for an attachment, hut none ever issued, nor was any attachment ever levied on the property, nor was any injunction issued.

The Chancellor adjudged that complainant was entitled to recover of Collier for material and labor furnished, and decreed a lien as mechanic, and that he was entitled to recover damages, etc., for breach of contract, and referred the matter to the Master to take proof and report the amount due complainant, and also amount of damages on breach of contract. The Master reported $9,86V.85 due for work and material, etc., and $2,500 damages, aggregating $12,367.85. To this report various and numerous exceptions were filed by Collier. The Master overruled all of the exceptions, and defendant appealed to the Chancellor.

Upon the appeal to the Chancellor, he sustained the report of the Master in all things except item No. 32 of thirty dollars. With this exception the report was confirmed by the Chancellor.

The Chancellor then pronounced a final decree (deducting the thirty dollars) in favor of Dollman against Collier for the sum of $12,337.85, with interest from January 19, 1893, and all costs, and awarded execution. The Chancellor- also decreed [663]*663that $9,837.85 of the $12,337.85 was a mechanic’s lien on the lot and building, situated on the northwest corner of Main and Jefferson Streets, City of Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee, and setting out the boundaries of same. This decree of mechanic’s lien was by the Court decreed to be subordinate to a trust deed' to John Dunn, trustee, executed by Collier and wife to said Dunn to secure a debt for about $66,000, and the trustee and beneficiaries are made parties to this suit. And the decree further recites that Collier and wife, had, pending this suit, conveyed the property to the Memphis Appeal Company, and that the Appeal Company bad executed a trust deed on same to secure a large indebtedness, and that a suit was pending in the United States Court at Memphis against Collier, Dollman, and all other parties interested to foreclose said trust deed to said Dunn, and to sell said lot and building for payment of said debt, and to marshal the liens and securities on same; and, in view not to sacrifice said property, the Court ordered and decreed no sale of said property to be made at present, but said lien will be and is declared on said property in favor of complainant for the amount aforesaid, and'will be enforced, and retained the cause in Court for this purpose, etc.

Defendant prayed an appeal from this decree, but failed to perfect his appeal, and the defendant has brought the case here by writ of error, and has assigned 'errors. It is insisted by defendant [664]*664that the Chancellor was in error in decreeing and declaring a mechanic’s lien in favor of complainant, he having failed to have an attachment issued and levied upon the property.

The Code, M. & V., § 2747, in regard to mechanic’s lien, says it “ shall he enforced by attachment, either in law or equity, or by judgment and execution at law, to be levied upon the property on which the lien is.”

This Court, in Barnes v. Thompson, 2 Swan, page 312, says, in construing mechanic’s lien law: “ The benefit of the lien given the mechanics can only be preserved by attachment.” Also holding that the word “may” is generally construed in statutes to have the same meaning as the word “shall.”

Again, in Brown v. Brown, 2 Sneed, 432, this Court, construing the mechanic’s lien law, the case of Barnes v. Thompson is cited and approved on this point, and the Court says: “And, if the plaintiff desires to secure and enforce his lien for the satisfaction of the judgment to be rendered in the case, he must also cause an attachment to be levied on the property.” To the same effect is McLeod & McGrath v. Capel, 7 Bax., 199, and 5 Sneed, 200.

■ Thus, it will be seen that, in order tó preserve or enforce this lien in this ease, an attachment must issue and be levied upon the property. This complainant has not done; hence, he is not entitled to the lien, he having lost or abandoned his lien. Therefore, the Chancellor was in error in [665]*665decreeing the lien and declaring same a lien on the property, and decreeing a sale of same.

It is insisted hy defendant that no personal decree can be rendered in this case against defendant; that his bill is framed to enforce a mechanic’s lien, and that a personal decree cannot be rendered on the prayer for general relief, as it is inconsistent with the prayer for enforcement of the lien, and that there is error in amount of decree for complainant. While on the other hand, the complainant insists that he is entitled to the personal judgment, and -to have execution issued and levied upon the property described in his hill, and thus enforce the lien under, latter portion of §2747 of Code (M. & V.).

It is true, and we so hold, that complainant has lost his mechanic’s lien, hy a failure to have an attachment issued and levied upon the property. We also hold that complainant is entitled to a personal decree for his debt, not, however, a personal judgment in aid of the mechanic’s lien. Suppose complainant had caused an attachment to issue, and it had been levied upon the property, and, upon final decree, for some cause, the lien had been denied him, could he then ask for a, personal judgment for his debt, under prayer for general relief, and have execution issued thereon and levied upon the specific property and enforce the lien that was denied, all under the prayer for general relief? Unquestionably not; yet this is what complainant is asking.

[666]*666TJnder a prayer for general relief, parties filing vendor’s bill, failing, to establish the vendor’s lien, are entitled to a personal judgment against the defendant; so in cases of bills to set aside conveyance for fraud, ordinary attachment bills, etc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 S.W. 741, 92 Tenn. 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dollman-v-collier-tenn-1893.