Gorman v. Bepler

4 Ohio N.P. 241
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedJuly 1, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio N.P. 241 (Gorman v. Bepler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gorman v. Bepler, 4 Ohio N.P. 241 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

HOLLISTER, J.

On the trial of consolidated actions involving the rights of the parties named in the title, it appeared that Riehle, a builder, constructed a house for'Adelheid Bepler, and was paid what was due him therefor less $189.60, which she is ready to pay to whomsoever is entitled to it. Riehle was indebted to J. B. Doppes & Sons, for lumber used in building the house, in the sum of $479.04, for which they sought to obtain and enforce a lien against Mrs. Bepler’s property, on which the house had been built. All of the steps to perfect, the lien had been taken by Doppes & Son as provided by the Mechanic’s lien law, as amended April 13th, 1894, 91 O. L., 135, and they had also complied with the requirements of secs. 3193, 3194 and 3195, as they stood prior to that act.

As they were sub-contractors under Riehle, standing in no relation of privity with Mrs. Bepler, their case comes within Young v.The Lion Hardware Co., 36 B.,315, wherein it is held that the act of April 13th, 1894, “in so far as it gives a lion on the property of the owner to sub-contractors, laborers, and those who furnish machinery, material or tile to the contractors,’ is unconstitutional and . void.’’ Riehle made an assignment for the benefit of creditors to Frank M. Gorman.

The question is, who is entitled to the $189.60, still due for the construction of the building, Doppes & Sons or Riehle’s Assignee?

The act of 1894. re-enacts sections 3184, 3188, 3193, 3194, 3195, 3197, 3200, and expressly repeals section 3184, as amended April 18th, 1892, - sections 3188, 3193, 3194, 3195, 3196. 3197, 3198, 3199, 3200. 3201, 3202, 3203 and 3204. The act is, and is clearly intended to be a substitute for the law as contained in tne repealed sections. The substantial difference so far as the rights of these parties are concerned between the law as it stood prior to the act of 1894, and the provisions of that act, was an enlargement' of the remedy of sub-contractors, laborers, material men etc., by giving them a lien on the owner’s property. Under the old law the sub-contractors (sec. 3193, 3194) might at any time, not exceeding sixty days from the performance of labor or delivery of material, file with the owner, or board or officer, if the work were of public nature, a statement of the Irbor performed or material furnished and the owner, board or officers or authorized clerk, agent or attorney must, after such notice, detain in his hands all subsequent payments to secure the claims of the subcontractors, laborers, etc., who intervened before the next subsequent payment under the contract or within ten days thereafter. And section 3195 provided for filing a copy of the statement with the county recorder, in order to bring notice to fellow laborers, material men and sub-contractors.

But the act of 1894, takes away from these [242]*242sections their application to cases where the labor is performed for, or material furnished to owners of property, and leaves them effective only as against a public board or officer, and transfers bodily, so to speak, the rights of the sub-contractor etc., from the fund in the hands of the owner applicable to the' liquidation of his obligation to his contractor, to the very property of the owner himself, so that in any event the sub contractor himself shall be sure of his money, although the owner may have paid all he contracted to pay. To that end section 3184 was amended by giving a lien for all labor or material expended upon, or furnished to the building. .The entire object of the law, on its face, as appears from a consideration of all its .sections taken together, and from comparison between its provisions and the sections of the Statutes which it superceded, was to add to the theretofore existing rights and remedies of the sub-contractors, laborers'! .and material men, operating under the im.mediate contractor with the owner.

The rights and remedies against the fund in the owner’s hands were eliminated from sections 3193, 3194, 3195, as they stood be ,fore the act of 1894, because and only be- ■ cause those rights and remedies were no • longer necessary when merged into the sup- j erior security of a lien

The act, although embracing several sections, specifically designated by the number • of the sections sought to be repealed, was a single act, with but one object, A Mechanic’s Lien Law which should give to the classes of mechanics named, a lien against 'the owner instead of a right to funds in his hands as yet unpaid to his contractor, but a right to the fund only, for reasons of public policy, when they were engaged upon public work. Sections 3193, 3194 and 3195 were repealed only for the purpose of carrying that object into effect. Since the act of 1894 failed in its object, the mechanics whose remedies it sought to enlarge, have lost all remedies, if it be held the repealing clause of the act is operative.

. The Legislature had in mind a scheme of legislation whereby greater rights were granted to mechanics than they had theretofore enjoyed. So far as the new plan differed from the old, the old was repealed. Where the old was in consonance with the new, the old was re-enacted. When the new feature of the lien is taken away, there is no reason for the act of 1894. With that feature eliminated the act absolutely takes away the rights of the mechanics to the fund. The effect of the repeal is, therefore, to accomplish a result directly opposite to that which the legislature sought to attain.

It may be said, with a reasonable degree of certainty, that the legislature would not have undertaken to repeal sections 3193, 3194 and 3195 excepting only for the purpose of enacting a new and more beneficial remedy and of substituting it for the remedies theretofore existing in favor of those whose interests they were seeking to subserve.

. I am of opinion that it was the intention of the legislature to repeal those sections only because they were substituting for their provisions, something which they thought was advantageous, and having failed in their main object, the efforts incidental to carrying that object into effect are equally abortive. ' Nor is authority wanting to justify this conclusion. In state of Ohio ex rel. v. Smith 48 Ohio St. 211, the supreme court held the act creating a “Board of City Affairs for Cincinnati, was unconstitutional. This act purported in expressed terms to repeal the act establishing the “Board of Public Improvements” for Cincinnati. The effect of the decision was to re-instate the Board sought to be superseded, the court saying, on page 219 : “As the act itself is invalid, the repealing clause must also be held inoperative, as we cannot suppose that the legislature would have repealed the act creating the Board ot City Improvements, without providing any substitute therefor.” The Court of Vppeals of New York, held, with respect to a certain act that, “All the provisions are connected as parts of a single scheme, and that the incidental provisions must fall with the main purpose of the act. ” Jones v. Jones, 104 New York, 235 and 235. In Spraigue v. Thompson, 118 U. S., 90, it appeared that the state of Georgia had enacted a law relative to the employment and compensation of pilots of ships bearing towards its ports, or between its ports and South Carolina or Elorida, but excepted from the operation of the law coasters in the state of Georgia. Under section 4235 U. S. Rev. Stat., this legislation was valid, but section 4327 U. S. Rev. Stat., provided that no provisions of a state law should make any discriminations in the rate of pilotage between vessels sailing between the ports of different states,and annulled all such provisions in existing laws.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio N.P. 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gorman-v-bepler-ohctcomplhamilt-1897.