Glazener v. Gloucester Lumber Co.

167 N.C. 676
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 9, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 167 N.C. 676 (Glazener v. Gloucester Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glazener v. Gloucester Lumber Co., 167 N.C. 676 (N.C. 1914).

Opinions

Clakk, 0. J.

Tbis was an action brought by E. A. Glazener, Jack Fisher, and 0. P. Hogsed, separately, to enforce a laborer’s lien, and tried together by consent. Judgment below was entered against Glaze-ner and Fisher, from which they appealed, and in favor of 0. P. Hog-sed, from which the defendants appealed.

By consent, the court found the facts, which are as follows: The defendant lumber company entered into a contract with Donald Campbell under which he took over the band sawmill and all attachments, the railroad for hauling out logs, and entire rolling stock and certain sections of the timber boundary which the defendant lumber company had been operating, and became responsible for the upkeep of the entire property, and employed and became responsible for the wages of the laborers, among whom are the three plaintiffs. They represent distinct classes of employees, and about one hundred other actions brought by the other employees to enforce laborers’ lien for their wages abide the result of the appeal by these three plaintiffs.

It is admitted that the lumber company had no control over the employees of Campbell, and did not assume any obligation to pay them after they entered Campbell’s employment, and the court found that the debts due the plaintiffs were the sole obligation of Campbell, except in so far as they might, as a matter of law, have the lien which they claim.

The court also found that the plaintiff E. A. Glazener was an employee of the defendant lumber company prior to 15 July, 1913, and after the property was turned over to said Campbell he was employed by him. He was an employee in the blacksmith’s shop which was a part of the plant, and worked therein, “making small repairs from time to time bn the cars which were used in hauling out the logs from the woods,” and he also made necessary repairs, in the way of blacksmithing, to the sawmill machinery. He was paid by Campbell for the months- of August and September, but there was a balance due him for October and November of $86.13 for labor and services rendered in the respect above mentioned, for which he began his action before a justice of the peace and filed his lien against two engines, two logging cars, and certain logs and lumber.

The court finds the facts as to the claim of Jack Fisher to be the same as in the case of Glazener, except that Fisher was a section hand and worked upon the railroad, repairing its tracks, its trestles and bridges from day to day, as he was directed to do by the section foreman, and that there is due him the sum of $11.07 for work and labor done, for which he began his action before a justice and filed his notice of lien upon the same property as Glazener, above set out.

[678]*678As to tbe claim of C. P. Hogsed, tbe court finds tbe same facts as above, with these exceptions: Tbe said Hogsed worked in tbe band sawmill, receiving tbe plank as it fell from tbe saw and placing it upon a mecbanical device, and there is due him for said service and labor a balance of $12.30 for work and labor done in November, 1913, for which be brought action and filed tbe lien on tbe same property as Fisher and Glazener.

Tbe court was not asked to find, and did not find, whether tbe lumber company was indebted to Campbell upon tbe contract, as there is an action pending between them to settle their differences.

Tbe court adjudged that tbe claim of Grlazener, who was an employee in tbe blacksmith shop making repairs on tbe cars, and of Fisher, who was a railroad band working on tbe track and repairing bridges, were not liens upon tbe lumber or other property named above in tbe lien filed, but that tbe claim of Hogsed, who aided in cutting tbe lumber by taking tbe boards from tbe saw as cut and placing them on a truck, was such lien, provided, of course, that there was an.indebtedness found to be due from tbe lumber company to Campbell at tbe time tbe notice of tbe lien was given.

"We think bis Honor’s decision was well considered and correct as to all three parties. Tbe lien claimed by Grlazener and Fisher could have no validity unless it comes under tbe provisions of Revisal, 2017 or 2016. Revisal, 2017, provides:

“Personal Property Repaired.- — Any mechanic or artisan who shall make, alter, or repair any article of personal property at tbe request of tbe owner or legal possessor of such property shall have a lien on such property so made, altered, or repaired, for bis just and reasonable charge for bis work done and material furnished, and may bold and retain possession of tbe same until such just and reasonable charges shall be paid”.; with a further provision that if not paid within tbe time specified, such mechanic or artisan may proceed to sell tbe property so altered or repaired at public auction, upon giving tbe notice required. This act does not apply, because it is held that under this statute, if tbe mechanic or artisan surrenders possession of tbe property, be loses bis lien. Tedder v. R. R., 124 N. C., 344; Block v. Dowd, 120 N. C., 402; McDougall v. Crapon, 95 N. C., 292.

Tbe other section is as follows (Revisal, 2016) :

“On Buildings or Other Property. — Every building built,' rebuilt, repaired, .or improved, together with tbe necessary lots on which such buildings may be situated, and every lot, farm, or vessel, or any kind of property not herein enumerated, shall be subject to a lien for tbe payment of all debts contracted for work done on tbe same or material furnished.”

[679]*679Tbis section is also construed in Tedder v. R. R., 124 N. C., 342, as meaning that tbe “Legislature bas provided a lien only when tbe service or -labor is for tbe betterment of property on which it is bestowed, leaving tbe laborer in all other cases to secure himself as at common law”' — ■ i. e., by retaining in bis possession any property on which he makes repairs until paid for the same.

It would seem clear, therefore, that Glazener has no lien on the “two engines, two logging cars, and the logs and lumber.” It does not appear that he made any repairs or did any work on any of this particular property, and certainly not on the logs and lumber, which is the material point. If he made any repairs on these cars, it does not appear, and he certainly did not retain his lien by keeping possession, as was necessary to a common-law lien.

The same is true as to Fisher, who repaired the tracks, trestle, and bridges, against which he has filed no lien, even if he was entitled to do so under Eevisal, 2016. As already stated as to Glazener, Fisher could have no lien on “personal property repaired” under Eevisal, 2017, because he surrendered possession of the same. Block v. Dowd, 120 N. C., 402, and other cases above cited. Eevisal, 2018, applies only to laborers “constructing railroads.”

As to the claim of Hogsed, that stands upon an entirely different footing. Laws 1913, ch. 150, sec. 6, provides: “Every person doing the work of cutting or sawing logs into lumber, getting out wood pulp, acid wood, or tan-bark, shall have a lien upon said lumber for the amount of wages due them, and the said lien shall have priority over all other claims or liens upon said lumber, except as against a purchaser for full value and without notice thereof.” Hogsed may properly be said to have shared in “the work of cutting or sawing logs into lumber,” but has a lien against lumber only.

Laws 1913, ch. 50, sec.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 N.C. 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glazener-v-gloucester-lumber-co-nc-1914.