Fischer v. Cone Lumber Co.

89 P. 737, 49 Or. 277, 1907 Ore. LEXIS 114
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 89 P. 737 (Fischer v. Cone Lumber Co.) 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
Fischer v. Cone Lumber Co., 89 P. 737, 49 Or. 277, 1907 Ore. LEXIS 114 (Or. 1907).

Opinion

-JVIr. Commissioner Slater

delivered the opinion.

As we view the matter, it is not necessary to determine the merits of plaintiff’s objection to the sixth finding. The gist of this action is whether there was a lien upon the logs at the time they were taken and sawed up by the defendant company. If there was, and defendant injured, impaired or destroyed them or rendered their identification difficult, uncertain or impossible, without the express consent of the person entitled to such lien, it is liable in damages therefor' to the lienholder to the amount of his lien, unless said lien was waived; and, if there was no such lien, it would not be liable. So, then, it is wholly immaterial whether or not the company was afterwards garnished by a creditor of the former owner of the logs.

1. Plaintiff’s objection to the twentieth finding, which is set out in full in the statement of facts, is that there is no evidence to support it, and that it is broader than the allegations of the answer. The bill of exceptions purports to contain all the evidence upon which this finding is based. Briefly summarized, the testimony shows that Melntire had been in the habit of selling the logs produced by him and collecting and paying his laborers out of the proceeds. In this instance he says: “I calculated to collect the money and pay it over to the men.” He came to Portland the next day after the sale of the raft for that purpose, and the laborers knew of his going and for what purpose he went. On being asked whether they consented to that, he says:

“I just came up the same as I always done ever since I have been down there, and collected the money, or either gave Fischer an order and he collected it, and came back and paid it.”

And, again being asked what was the understanding between them, he answered:

“There was no understanding. Of course, I supposed they wanted their money as far as the raft-would go. If there wasn’t enough, to pay them, they went back and made enough to pay them.”

The laborers had also come to Portland, and were at the hotel expecting to receive their money;- but this proves no more than [281]*281that the laborers knew that a previous sale had been made and were expecting to receive their pay either from Mclntire or from the purchaser, for their is testimony in the record from which a conclusion might be drawn that they expected to collect from the company through the plaintiff as their agent. A consent to a sale cannot be inferred by their mere silence on being informed that a sale and delivery had been consummated: Patterson v. Taylor, 15 Fla. 336. There is no evidence tending to ■show that plaintiff's assignors at the time of or prior to the ■sale expressly or impliedly consented thereto, if, indeed, an .assent with nothing more would be sufficient to waive their lien, but there must be coupled therewith an intent, express or implied, to waive the lien. In Zorn v. Livesley, 44 Or. 501 (75 Pac. 1057), where the same issue was involved concerning property subject to a chattel mortgage, Mr. Justice Bean says: “There is no doubt that the sale of a chattel by the mortgagor with the consent of the mortgagee, and with the intent on his part to relinquish the lien, would convey a good title.'' There is no prohibition in the statute against a sale of the logs. Mclntire might lawfully have sold the logs subject to the lien, and have collected any proceeds therefrom without any consent of the lien-holders. Nor does it appear from the evidence that he undertook to sell the logs free and discharged of all liens, or that any of plaintiff's assignors so understood. In fact, it is not so alleged in the answer, and in that respect the twentieth finding is broader than the issue; and for that reason, if for no other, it must be set aside. But looking at this testimony in the most favorable light for respondent, and conceding, which we do not think is a fact, that it shows a consent on the part of the lien-holders to a sale, it must have been only to the extent that said logs should be converted into cash from which they expected to be paid, and to that extent it would be only a conditional consent upon the breach of which condition by the defendant it would lose all right to allege such consent as a defense.

In Jones v. Webster, 48 Ala. 109, where a mortgagor was authorized by the terms of the mortgage to sell mortgaged prop[282]*282erty by a broker of his own selection, provided he turned the proceeds over to the mortgagee, it was held that the mortgagee could bring trover against a broker who denied the mortgagee’s right and refused to turn over the proceeds; and in Oakes v. Moore, 24 Me. 214 (41 Am. Dec. 379), where plaintiff had a lien amounting to a mortgage on logs and stood by and saw a sale made, the court say: “In this case it would seem that he witnessed the negotiation between their agent and Paine, and saw .that it Avas an arrangement professedly made with a view to enable them to make payments to him; and doubtless expected to realize therefrom the whole amount due him. He accordingly seems to have waited till the termination of that contract, and, not finding his expectations realized, demanded and sought to regain possession of the logs. We do not see but he might Avell do so. He had not, in express terms, relinquished his right to the timber as secured by his contract; and, if he looked on, and saw the OAvners making arrangements to dispose of it, it cannot be doubted but that it was with an expectation raised by them that he should have the avails of it to the extent of his claim. They, having disappointed him in this expectation, should not be permitted now to say that he has relinquished his right to regain possession, nor to Avithhold from him the value of the timber to the extent of his first demand.” Finding no evidence in the record to support this finding, a new trial of the case becomes necessary, because there is no finding upon the issues made by the pleadings as to whether defendant in sawing up the logs did so without the express consent of the lienholders.

2. In view of a new trial, it becomes necessary to pass upon a question suggested by defendant company in its brief, and insisted upon at the argument, that the complaint does not state a cause of action, for the alleged reason that plaintiff’s right of action is based on an assignment of a lien which had ceased to exist on the destruction of the logs, and that in the place of the lost lien is given a right of action for damgaes to the person who Avas the lienholder at the time of the destruction of the logs, which right of action would not be canned by assignment of the [283]*283lien. It, must be remembered that liens were not filed until several days after the logs were taken away and sawed up by the defendant. Section 5677, B. & C. Comp., provides, in effect, that every person performing labor upon or who shall assist in obtaining or securing saw logs, etc., shall have a lien thereon for the work and labor done; and Section 5683 provides that every person, within 30 daj's after the close of the rendition of the services or after the close of the work, claiming the benefit thereof, must file for l’ecord with the county clerk of the county in which such saw logs, etc., were cut, a verified claim, the form of which shall be substantially that set out in said section.

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Bluebook (online)
89 P. 737, 49 Or. 277, 1907 Ore. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fischer-v-cone-lumber-co-or-1907.