Griffith v. Hulion

107 So. 354, 90 Fla. 582, 1925 Fla. LEXIS 644
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 23, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 107 So. 354 (Griffith v. Hulion) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffith v. Hulion, 107 So. 354, 90 Fla. 582, 1925 Fla. LEXIS 644 (Fla. 1925).

Opinion

Brown, J.-

-Appellee Hulion exhibited his bill for the enforcement by foreclosure on certain real and personal property of a lien claimed by him for certain work done by him as a "woods rider” for defendant Frink on a turpentine place formerly belonging to Frink and which had been sold and conveyed by the latter to defendants Griffith and Smith subject to a mortgage claimed to have been executed by Frink to the West Florida Naval Stores Company prior to Hulion’s employment. The purchasers, Griffith and Smith, the vendor Frink and the said mortgagee, Naval Stores Company, were all made parties defendant. Defendant Frink suffered a decree pro confesso to be entered against him, but the other defendants filed a joint answer, embracing a demurrer to the bill, admitting the execution and existence of the mortgage and setting up among other things that at the time of the transfer by Frink to Griffith and Smith, Frink was due the Naval Stores Company a large amount on said mortgage, which had duly *585 been filed for record some length of time before Hulion’s employment; that said mortgaged property was not worth anything in excess of the mortagage debt; and that said mortgage had priority over any claim or lien that Hulion may have had on the property, and expressly denied that Hulion had any lien.

The court on final hearing on pleadings and proof rendered a decree in favor of the complainant, ascertaining the amount of the indebtedness, due him, and allowing him a ten per cent attorney’s fee, as prayed in the bill, and decreeing that complainant had a first lien securing said indebtedness on a part only of the property described in the bill, superior in dignity to any lien held by any of the defendants, and directing foreclosure sale of said property, to-wit: 20 barrels of spirits of turpentine, 60 bbls. of rosin, 6 bbls. of crude dip, and all the scrape which, at the time of the writ of the attachment, was upon the pine trees, upon the described lands so sold by Frink. From this decree the defendants with the exception of Frink, took this appeal.

As to the nature of his work, appellee alleges in his bill as follows: *

“That the character of work which your complainant was employed to perform under said contract was to ride the woods and look after and superintend the chipping of trees and the dipping of the gum and getting same to the still, to have general superintendence of the hands in the woods and those in charge of the hauling of the gum to the still, and keeping the time of the other employees in connection with the still operations, and to look after the commissary. ’ ’

It appears therefore that Hulion’s services did not embrace the distillery work, but ended when the crude turpentine was hauled to the still.

(1) Appellee claimed a lien on said property for such *586 services from November 11th, 1920, to July 11th, 1921, the date of- the sale of the place by Frink, under sections 3505 (amended by chapter 8474 of the Acts of 1921, p.194) and 3506 of the Rev. Gen. Stats, of Florida, 1920.

These sections are among a number of sections prescribing liens in favor of certain named classes of persons, preceded by the general statement in section 3502: “Liens prior in dignity to all others accruing thereafter shall exist in favor of the following persons, upon the following described personal property, under the circumstances hereinafter mentioned, to-wit: ’ ’ and section 3505, before amendment, read as follows:

“3505. For labor as bookkeeper, clerk, etc. In favor of bookkeepers, clerks, agents, porters and other employees of merchants and transportation companies and other corporations; upon the stock, fixtures and other property of such merchants, companies or corporations.”

Strictly speaking, Frink was neither a merchant, a transportation company nor a corporation. He was operating a turpentine business, and in connection therewith ran a small commissary. If, giving this section a very liberal construction, it be held that the operation of the commissary made Frink a merchant within the meaning of the statute as to that particular department of his business, the evidence showed that Hulion’s services in connection with the commissary were so very occasional as tO' be almost negligible, and it would be practically impossible on this record to apportion what amount of services and what compensation, or lien, -he would have been entitled to on that score. This statute would not give Hulion a lien for his services as “woods rider” on Frink’s' turpentine place, which was his real employment and occupation, merely because Frink also operated a small commissary which Hulion looked after occasionally when Frink happened to be away. The law does not favor such indirection. Warburton v. *587 Coumbe, 34 Fla. 212, 15 South. Rep. 769. The ease of First National Bank v. Kirby, 43 Fla. 376, 32 South. Rep. 881, is not in point here because that case dealt with employes of a corporation, as to which the statute applied without regard to the character of business engaged in.

(2) But we are of the opinion that the terms of the amendment to section 3505 of June 14th, 1921, which are quite comprehensive in their scope are broad enough to give appellee a lien for services rendered between the effective date of the amendatory act, June 14th, 1921, to the time of the termination of his employment on July 11th, 1921, a period of approximately four weeks, for services performed upon the classes of personal property described in the amendatory act, and which appear to embrace the property covered by the decree, with the exception of the scrape hereafter mentioned, it having been shown by the evidence that Hulion’s services pertained to the production of such personal property. The amendatory act reads.:

“3505. For labor as Bookkeeper, Clerk, etc. In favor of persons performing labor or services for any other person, firm or corporation, upon the personal property of the latter upon which the labor or services is performed or which is used in the business, occupation, or employment in which the labor or services is performed. ’ ’

While Hulion’s services were in the nature of those of a foreman or overseer of the laborers who actually did the work of chipping the trees, preparing the boxes, dipping the gum from the boxes, etc., under his immediate superintendence, the statute covers “services,” as well as labor, upon the personal property described in the act, and his work was so closely related to the performance of the labor that it became as it were a part of the work itself, and constituted “services” upon such personal property within the meaning of the statute. Palm Beach Bank & Trust Co. v. Lainhart, 84 Fla. 662, 95 South. Rep. 122; Bank v. *588 Kirkley, 43 Fla. 376, 386, 32 So. 881; 27 Cyc. 43. By employing the terms “services,” the legislature evidently intended that the act should not he confined to the protection only of those performing strictly manual labor.

This amendatory act provided in a second section that it should become effective upon becoming a law. It was approved on June 14, 1921, and hence became effective on that date. Parker v. Evening News Pub. Co., 54 Fla. 482, 44 South. Rep. 718.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 So. 354, 90 Fla. 582, 1925 Fla. LEXIS 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffith-v-hulion-fla-1925.