Fisher v. Jacobs

24 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 505, 1920 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 65
CourtSummit County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 12, 1920
StatusPublished

This text of 24 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 505 (Fisher v. Jacobs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Summit County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fisher v. Jacobs, 24 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 505, 1920 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 65 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1920).

Opinion

Treash, J.

The decision of this cause turns upon the answer of the question who is the “owner” upon whom a copy of the lien must be served under the provisions of Section 8315 General Code, mechanics ’ lien law:

Every person filing such affidavit, as provided in the preceding section, shall within thirty days after the filing thereof serve on the owner, part owner or lessee of such premises or his agent, a copy thereof, but if neither of such persons can be found within the county where such premises are situated, then such copy shall be served by posting the same in some conspicuous place on said premises within ten days after the expiration of said thirty days.”

The facts as developed at the hearing of the case are substantially as follows: Plaintiff, under the terms of a contract, fur[506]*506nished material to the defendant Jacobs for building a house on Jacobs ’ premises, the first item being furnished March 14, 1917; subsequently Jacobs sold and deeded the premises in question to the defendants Kalman Kovacs and Terez Kovaes, the house at that time being apparently completed. On the same day the deed was duly filed for record with the county recorded, and the Kovaes took possession and resided therein continuously thereafter.

On July 17, 1917, and within the time limited by law, Fischer filed his affidavit for mechanic’s lien, in which he stated Jacobs was the owner of the property, and within thirty days thereafter duly served on Jacobs a copy of the affidavit for lien. No copy was served on the Kovacs, who held the title, and were in possession of the property at the time of the filing of the mechanic’s lien. The defendant, The XXth Century Heating & Ventilating Company, entered into'a contract March 24, 1917, with defendant Jacobs for furnishing and installing a furnace in the same property, the last item of which was completed December 12, 1917. The heating company duly filed its lien, naming Jacobs as the owner, and within thirty days thereafter served both Jacobs and the Kovacs with copies of the lien.

Kovacs claim they paid full price for the property to Jacobs without knowledge of, or deduction for, the lien claims, and that plaintiff’s lien is null and void because no copy of the lien was served upon them as owners, as provided in Section 8315, G. C.

Does the ‘ owner ’ ’ referred to in this action, mean the owner at the time the first work and material was furnished, or does it mean the owner at the time the lien was filed? If the former, then Jacobs was the owner, and Fisher’s lien is good, but if the latter, then it is void, as no copy admittedly was served upon Kovacs.

It is urged that the possession and record title of the Kovacs was notice to all the world of their ownership, and that they alone were interested further in the property, and no rights could be secured thereunder adverse to their interest without due notice, and that no other person had any right of ownership in the property that could possibly be referred to in the statute as the owner. In other words the ‘ ‘ owner ’ ’ referred to in the stat[507]*507ute was the person vested with the dominion and title of the property at the time the affidavit for lien was filed. Numerous decisions from the courts of other states are cited to support this contention, but there seems to be none reported in Ohio upon the subject.

By a primary rule of construction, the intention of the Legislature must be ascertained in the first instance from the language used in the statute. If that language is clear and unambiguous, the courts have no power to change it. State v. Industrial Commission. 92 Ohio St., 434, 443; 111 N. E. 299; 1917D Ann. Cas., 1162.

If that meaning can not be clearly ascertained from the language of the statute itself, then those sections which deal with the same subject matter should be examined and considered together in order to harmonize, if possible, the meaning of like or similar terms used therein. State v. Spiegel, 91 Ohio St., 13; 109 N. E. 523.

Formerly a mechanic’s lien was considered as a right in personam and not in rem, and the Supreme Court in the case of Palmer v. Tingle, 55 Ohio St., 423, declared a mechani’s lien law unconstitutional and void which gave to subcontractors who had no personal contractual relation with the owner the right to file liens directly against his property, but by Article II, Section 33, of the Constitution as amended in 1912, a mechanic’s lien has been made a right in rem and not in personam.

“Laws may be passed to secure to mechanics, artisans, laborers, sub-contractors and material men, their just dues by direct liens upon the property, upon which they have bestowed labor or for which they have furnished material. No other provision of the Constitution shall impair or limit this power.”

In pursuance to this constitutional provision the present mechanics’ lien laws were enacted, and they must be construed with reference to and in the light of the express purpose of the people as set forth in this amendment to the Constitution. The mechanics’ [ien laws must, therefore, be construed as granting the right attached to property and not to the person.

The purpose of the amendment was to make it possible to fasten upon the property a lien for the labor and material used in the [508]*508improvement of the property, The Legislature, in pursuance to that purpose enacted the present mechanics lien law, which for conveniences has been divided into numerous sections. In accordance with the well recognized rule that sections dealing with the same subject matter must be considered together, we must look to the use of the term “owner” in these various sections.

Section 8310 General Code is as follows:

' “Every person who * * * furnishes * * # material * * * for erecting * * a house * * * shall have a lien to secure the payment thereof upon * * *such house * * * and upon the interest * * * of the owner * * * in the * * * land upon which they must stand * * * to the extent of the right, title or interest of the owner * * * at the time * # *materials were begun to be furnished by the contractor under the original contract, and also to the extent of any subsequent aequirel interest of such owner, * # * ”

It clearly appears from this section that the “owner” referred to in this section is the owner at the time the materials were begun to be furnished by the contractor under the original contract, or the labor was performed. This is the original section which defines the persons entitled to and the property to which the lien shall attach, and where reference is made to the owner in subsequent sectios, it is reasonable to asume that the same owner referred to in this section is meant unless there is a dicerent intention manifest in such subeequent sections.

The subsequent sections are in harmony with this definition of the word ‘ ‘ owner, ’ ’ and the language of some of them adds, additional weight to the definition.

The form of the affidavit which the original contractor must furnish to the owner before demanding payment is contained in the body of Section 8312 and that part of it referring to the owner is as follows:

“Situated on or around or in front of the following described property: * * * whereof * * * was the owner,

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Bluebook (online)
24 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 505, 1920 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-jacobs-ohctcomplsummit-1920.