Edmiston v. Kiersted

12 P.2d 299, 140 Or. 299, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 12
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 12 P.2d 299 (Edmiston v. Kiersted) 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
Edmiston v. Kiersted, 12 P.2d 299, 140 Or. 299, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 12 (Or. 1932).

Opinions

Suit by Florence E. Edmiston and husband against H.W. Kiersted, R.O. Stephenson, doing business as the Economy Lumber Company, and others. From an adverse judgment, the last-named defendant appeals.

AFFIRMED. REHEARING DENIED. Suit to foreclose executory contract for the sale of real property. Lien claimed by defendant, R.O. Stephenson, for building material furnished vendee in possession and used in repairing and improving residence on said real property. From a decree of foreclosure declaring said defendant's claim subordinate to plaintiffs' interest in said property, said defendant appeals. *Page 300 The single question here presented is whether the claim of a materialman, who has not given the vendor the statutory notice of furnishing building material within five days of first delivery thereof, which material was furnished at the instance of the vendee in possession under an executory contract of purchase, is entitled to priority over the vendor's claim for unpaid installments of the purchase price.

On and prior to May 17, 1930, Florence E. Edmiston, one of the plaintiffs herein, was the owner of certain real property. At all the times mentioned herein, plaintiff, J.E. Edmiston, was the husband of said Florence E. Edmiston.

On said May 17, 1930, said plaintiffs, as vendors, and the defendants, H.W. Kiersted and Anna T. Kiersted, as the vendees, executed a contract wherein plaintiffs agreed to sell and said defendants, Kiersted, agreed to buy said real property.

At the time of the execution of said contract, defendants Kiersted went into possession of said real property.

Defendants Kiersted, while in possession of said real property, ordered certain building material from defendant R.O. Stephenson, doing business as Economy Lumber Company, which was used in alterations and repairs of a building upon said real property. No notice was given by defendant R.O. Stephenson to plaintiffs, or either of them, that said building material would be or had been furnished.

Defendant Stephenson contends that one who sells real property under an installment purchase contract sustains a relationship to the property in the nature of a mortgage to whom the giving of the statutory *Page 301 notice of delivery of material is not required as a condition precedent to a materialman's lien. And the equitable lien of a vendor under a contract of sale, where the contract is unrecorded, under section 51-103, Oregon Code 1930, is subsequent to a mechanic's lien. In support of this contention defendant Stephenson cites the case of Randolph v. Christensen, 124 Or. 661 (265 P. 797).

Section 51-103, supra, among other things, provides:

"A lien created by this act upon any parcel of land shall be preferred to any lien, mortgage, or other incumbrance * * * which was unrecorded at the time when said building, structure, or other improvement was commenced, or other materials for the same were commenced to be furnished and placed upon or adjacent to the land"; etc.

In the case at bar, the executory contract of sale executed by plaintiffs and defendants Kiersted, was not recorded at the time defendant Stephenson commenced furnishing the material for which his claim of lien was filed.

If plaintiffs, in the instant case, may be deemed to be in a position similar to that of mortgagees holding an unrecorded mortgage, their lien would be subordinate and secondary to that of defendant Stephenson.

The case of Randolph v. Christensen, supra, relied on by defendant Stephenson does not hold that the relationship to the property of the owner of record, who executes a contract of sale, is in the nature of that of a mortgagee. In that case the owner of the property, one Stevens, executed a contract of sale. The vendee named in that contract assigned his interest therein to the Sabbes. The Sabbes executed a second contract of sale. The vendee named in this second contract assigned *Page 302 his interest therein. This assignee executed a third contract of sale to Christensen. None of these contracts of purchase and sale were recorded. The holding there is that the Sabbes, who were the assignees of the vendee named in the original contract, were in a position, with respect to the property, similar to that of the holder of an unrecorded mortgage.

Stevens occupied a position in that case similar to the one Mrs. Edmiston holds in the case at bar. As to his liability, this court, speaking through Mr. Justice ROSSMAN, said:

"Stevens was aware of the fact that improvements and repairs were being made upon the premises; he was present almost from the beginning of the work was informed fully as to the contemplated improvements; and neither remonstrated nor posted notices of nonliability as provided for by section 10194, Oregon Laws; hence, his interest was subjected to the plaintiff's lien."

Actual knowledge of the extent and nature of the improvements is the ground assigned for subjecting the original vendor's interest in the property to the lien there asserted.

In the case at bar, defendant Stephenson calls attention to the testimony, which discloses that, during the negotiations preceding the sale of the property, plaintiff J.E. Edmiston knew that alterations and repairs of the building were contemplated by defendants Kiersted.

On his direct examination, defendant Kiersted was asked:

"Q. Did you have any conversation with Mr. Edmiston or Mrs. Edmiston at the time the alterations were commenced or shortly prior to the time you commenced on the building?" *Page 303

To which he replied:

"I told him the place wasn't fit for my wife to live in and had to be altered."

He was also asked:

"You informed him you were going to alter it?"

"Absolutely."

On cross-examination, upon being asked to relate the conversation with Mr. Edmiston regarding using some of the money advanced by the defendant C. E. Fruit Company, a marketing company of which Mr. Edmiston was manager, to repair the house, H.W. Kiersted testified:

"The conversation was that he asked me about how much money it was going to take and I figured at the time about five or six hundred dollars, and he said, I was spending entirely too much money on it."

We quote from the cross-examination of plaintiff James E. Edmiston:

"Q. You said that you didn't know that the house was being altered at all?

"A. I didn't know the house was being altered until after the work was done.

"Q. Not until after the work was done? A. No.

* * * * *
"Q. Now Mr. Edmiston, at the time this $1,000.00 was advanced in June, I will ask you whether or not that was not advanced for the purpose of fixing up the place?

"A. Mr. Enright, I told Mr. Kiersted not once but at least three or four times that I would advance nothing except to care for the fruit as provided in the contract. Certainly it was not advanced for fixing up any of the place. Mr. Kiersted knows that.

"Q. You were out there from time to time were you not?

"A. I was out there, yes, from time to time. *Page 304

"Q. And during the time you were out there he was having this place fixed up was he?

"A. Mr. Kiersted's work was pretty well over before I saw what he was doing. I then went after him about it and he told me in the presence of my wife several times that all the work he was doing there would cost less than $500.00. I just want, if I may, to recall Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
12 P.2d 299, 140 Or. 299, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edmiston-v-kiersted-or-1932.