Donaldson v. Henning

4 Alaska 642
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedApril 7, 1913
DocketNos. 1639, 1647, 1655, 1760
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 Alaska 642 (Donaldson v. Henning) 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
Donaldson v. Henning, 4 Alaska 642 (D. Alaska 1913).

Opinion

FUELER, District Judge.

The first contention of the defendants is that the lien claimants are at most entitled to a lien only upon the small dump of unwashed gravel, and upon that only to the extent of the amount of their labor for the time actually taken to hoist this dump, and that, at most, this cannot be more than two or three days for any of the claimants., It is further contended that as the evidence does not show, on the part of any claimant, the actual time he was employed while this dump was being hoisted and placed on the surface, there is no evidence to show the amount in which any claimant is entitled to a lien, and that the evidence therefore is altogether insufficient to sustain the actions. It is also contended that, as far as the dump of tailings is concerned, no reference is made to it in any of the recorded claims of lien, and that, by reason of such omission, no lien was ever acquired thereon; also that inasmuch as no notice of the commencement of the actions in the commissioner’s court was posted upon the pile of tailings, even if the statement in the notices could be construed to include such tailings, the court is without power to adjudge that a lien exists upon them.

While the evidence undoubtedly shows that the small dump of unwashed ground was the result of only a few days’ labor, and that the greater part of it accumulated during a few days while the machinery was broken down and sluicing could not be carried on, it also appears that some gravel was placed upon this dump at various times during all the period that Henning was operating, and it seems that it -should be considered as the result of all the work done under his lease, and of the labor performed by all the claimants, rather than as the result of the labor during the hours that gravel was actually being dumped thereon. The labor performed in sinking the [650]*650shaft, running tunnels, and developing the mine prior to the time the dump was actually being piled up contributed more or less towards producing this dump, and the object of the act seems to be to give to each one performing labor upon the mine, while the mine is being developed and operated, a lien upon the dump produced. In this case it would be impossible to segregate the labor directly expended in excavating, hoisting, and piling the ground in this dump from the labor performed in and about the mine during all the time mining operations were carried on by the claimants. So to restrict the terms of the act will either defeat its purpose altogether, or limit its benefits to the few who could prove that the dump was the direct product of their labor, whereas the labor of these same men at other times, or of their coemployes, was as necessary, and tended as directly to the production of such dump, • as the labor actually performed in piling the gravel thereon. It follows, therefore, that each of the claimants was entitled to a lien upon this dump for the balance due him for the labor performed in and about the mine. The evidence shows that the amounts for which they were entitled to a lien were as found by the commissioner’s court, except in the case of Fred Irving, in which the amount should be $167.50, instead of $67.50, with a corresponding increase in the allowance for attorney’s fees, and in the case of the individual claim of John Dunn. The statement in Dunn’s notice of lien is as follows:

“That H. M. Henning & Co. employed claimant to perform such work and labor upon the following terms and conditions: That the claimant was to receive the sum of $8 per day for part of said services, and the sum of 810-50 per day for the remainder of said services. That said contract has been faithfully performed and fully complied with on the part of the claimant, who performed labor thereunder- aforesaid for the period of 37 days. That said labor was performed between the 13th day of December, 1910, and the 19th day of January, 1911, and the rendition of said services was closed on the 19th day of January, 1911, and 90 days have not elapsed since that time. That the amount of claimant’s demand for said services is 8363.50. That no part thereof has been paid except the sum of 810, and there is now due and remaining unpaid thereon, after deducting all just credits and offsets, the sum of 8353.50, in which amount he claims a lien upon said property.”

[651]*651The evidence was that Dunn was employed and worked for a certain number of days at $8 a day; that he then made an agreement with Henning by which he was to receive $10.50 a day for his services and the use of a boiler. The evidence did not show exactly the number of days that he worked at either rate. It also appeared that he sold a cable to Henning, 'the exact price of which did not appear, and that the amount of $363.50, stated as the amount of his demand, was made up of these three different items. Evidently no attempt is made to segregate these items in the notice of lien, and the evidence itself does not show with any certainty the amount due for the different items. The statute gives a lien for labor alone, and clearly no lien could be had for the amounts due for the use of the boiler or for the cable. It may be that the intention of the parties was to allow $2.50 a day for the use of the boiler, and $8 a day for the services of the claimant; but this is not the agreement testified to by the claimant, and it is not competent for the court to make a new contract, separating the items, in order that the claimant may have an agreement entitling him to a lien.

“The rule seems to be that where lienable and nonlienable items are included in one contract for a specific sum, or are made the basis of a lump charge, so that it cannot be perceived, from the contract or account, what proportion is chargeable to each, the benefit of the Mechanic’s Lien Law is lost. In such case the court cannot, by extrinsic evidence, apportion the amount of the entire charge or contract price between the lienable and nonlienable items; but where the claimant’s demand, made in good faith, consists of several different items separately charged, some of which are by law a lien upon thé property, and others do not come within the scope of the statute, he may enforce his lien so far as given by law, and it is not vitiated because he has included therein nonlienable items.” Allen v. Elwert, 29 Or. 428, 44 Pac. 823, 48 Pac. 54; Williams v. Toledo Coal Co., 25 Or. 426, 36 Pac. 159, 42 Am. St. Rep. 799; Harrisburg Lumber Co. v. Washburn, 29 Or. 150, 44 Pac. 390; Kezartee v. Marks, 15 Or. 529, 16 Pac. 407; 27 Cyc. 204, 777.

Neither the notice of lien nor the evidence given upon the trial was sufficient to sustain a lien upon the property, and the claim of the claimant Dunn must therefore be disallowed.

The next contention of the owners of the mining claim is that although the claimants may have valid liens upon the [652]*652dump, so far as the interest of Henning therein is concerned, these liens cannot bind the interest of the owners, inasmuch as their right to one-fourth of the gold in the dump was fixed by the terms of the lease made between them and Henning on the 2d day of June, 1910, and prior to the date of the act giving a lien for labor upon dumps of gold-bearing gravel produced from placer mining claims. This act was approved and went into effect June 25, 1910. Prior to that time the only right a laborer had to a lien for work done upon a placer claim was a right to a lien upon the-claim or mine itself for labor performed in the improvement or development of the mine. Pioneer Mining Co. v. Delamotte, 185 Fed. 752, 108 C. C. A. 90; Andrews v. Ladd, 188 Fed. 313, 110 C. C. A. 291.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Alaska 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donaldson-v-henning-akd-1913.