Ferger v. Gearhart
This text of 186 P. 376 (Ferger v. Gearhart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
pro tern.—During the early part of the year of 1916, the People’s Ice Company, a corporation, was engaged in the construction, alteration, and repair of certain of its buildings upon its property in the city of Fresno, California. This work was undertaken by the corporation itself, as owner, under the superintendence of one of its employees. The corporation, falling into financial difficulties, was adjudicated a bankrupt in May of 1916. Among its creditors were several who had furnished materials for, and who had performed labor upon, the buildings referred to. Eleven claims of lien were filed under the provisions of the mechanic’s lien law (Code Civ. Proe., see. 1183 et seq.), and assignments were thereafter made to the plaintiff of the specific amounts due each claimant, and also of the rights of the lien claimants under their respective claims of lien.
The fundamental question presented for decision on this appeal is whether the claims of lien of the four lien claimants named were filed within the time limited by section 1187 of the Code of Civil Procedure as it existed prior to the amendment of 1919. This question is, so far as it relates to the claims of lien, in principle identical with that which was before the court in Irwin, v. Silva, 40 Cal. App. 135, [180 Pac. 361] (hearing in supreme court denied). We shall, therefore, rest our decision upon the principal point of the present controversy upon the authority of that case, and for the reasons therein expressed hold that the portion of the judgment conferring upon the plaintiff a lien against the property referred to, to be without foundation.
“This declaration of a right, like many others in our constitution, is inoperative except as supplemented by legislative action.
“So far as substantial benefits are concerned, the naked right without the interposition of the legislature is like the earth before the creation, ‘without form and void,’ or to *248 put it in the usual form, the constitution in this respect is not self-executing/’
The portions of the judgment appealed from which relate to plaintiff’s first, third, fourth, and sixth causes of action are modified (1) by striking therefrom the amounts stated therein to have been paid for verifying and filing the claims of lien;' and (2) wherein it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the plaintiff have a lien upon a property referred to therein; and as thus modified, the judgment shall stand affirmed, the appellant to recover costs of this appeal.
Richards, J., and "Waste, P. J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on January 8, 1920.
All the Justices concurred.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
186 P. 376, 44 Cal. App. 245, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferger-v-gearhart-calctapp-1919.