Gyllenberg v. Heriza

272 P. 674, 127 Or. 481, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 329
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 272 P. 674 (Gyllenberg v. Heriza) 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
Gyllenberg v. Heriza, 272 P. 674, 127 Or. 481, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 329 (Or. 1928).

Opinion

BEAN, J.

It appears to be conceded that the G. M. 0. truck, serial No: K-72-370, Motor No. 89-3401, was sold by the appellant to John Heriza on a conditional sales contract, which provided for monthly payments and at the time these liens were filed Heriza was in arrear in his payments.

Appellant contends that in respondent’s first cause of suit there are lienable and nonlienable items mingled in a lump sum. It is also contended by appellant that some of the items charged in the lien are nonlienable, for the reason that they were furnished and supplied two or three days before, or after the date of the account mentioned in the lien notice. It is the settled rule in this state that, where the lien is claimed for a lumping sum, and lienable and nonlienable items of account are mingled together to make up the lumping sum, the lien is invalid: Stewart v. Spalding, 71 Or. 326 (141 Pac. 1127).

At the trial it developed that every item included in the lien notice was spent upon the truck in ques *484 tion, but that 37.25 hours of labor was performed, either before August 27, 1927, or after September 12, 1927, the date set forth in the lien. The plaintiff therefore withdrew that item from his claim, but it was contended that some of the small items, bolts and such matter, included in the account, were supplied before or after the dates mentioned in the lien notice. And, therefore, the plaintiff did not place a true statement of ¡his demand in his notice of lien.

The answering defendant, whom we will hereafter term the defendant, cites in support of this contention the eases of Cooper Mfg. Co. v. Delahunt, 36 Or. 407 (51 Pac. 649, 60 Pac. 1), and Rowland v. Harmon, 24 Or. 529 (34 Pac. 357).

Upon the trial the plaintiff at first stated that the labor was performed and the materials were furnished between the dates mentioned in the lien notice. Upon an examination of time tickets, or requests for the performance of the work, it was discovered that a portion of the work was done a short time before and a short time after the dates mentioned. This fact did not render the items referred to nonlienable.

The accounts by plaintiff were kept upon a kind of work sheet and full statements of various items, or bills of particulars, were made out and furnished to the defendant. ¡ The dates of the several items were not given. The statement is dated September 12, 1927, and included a long list of both large and small items of labor and material. It was evidently an innocent mistake in fixing the date, which would not invalidate the lien.

The statute, Section 10273, requires the lien claimant, within sixty days of the date of delivery of the chattel, upon which the lien is claimed to the *485 owner thereof or his duly authorized agent, to file in the office of the county clerk of the county in which the labor, skill and materials were expended on such chattel, a lien notice, which notice shall state the name of the claimant, the name of the owner, or reputed owner, a description of the chattel, sufficient for identification, upon which the claimant has expended labor, skill and material, the amount for which the labor is claimed and the date upon which such expenditure was completed, which notice shall be verified.

If a wrong date had been intentionally inserted for the purpose of apparently bringing the claim within the statutory period for filing the lien, or for some wrongful purpose, then the condition would be otherwise; but an innocent error in the matter of bookkeeping by a garage owner in fixing a date a day or two late, or early, would not render the items nonlienable.

This principle is borne out by the cases cited by defendant. In Cooper v. Delahunt, supra, a claim was made that plaintiff’s lien was invalid because it did not contain a true statement of its demand. The lien filed showed a credit of $350, while the trial court found that $400 had been actually paid to the plaintiff on account *of material furnished for the building, and for this reason held the lien void. There was an honest dispute in regard to the $50. The court held that there was no evidence that the plaintiff wilfully and knowingly filed an untrue statement of his account, or that he made the statement carelessly or negligently and that there was error in holding’ the lien was void.

Where there is a mistake in the statement as to the amount due, made in the honest belief of its cor *486 rectness, the courts will not, for that reason, hold the lien void: Rowland v. Harmon, 24 Or. 529 (34 Pac. 357). By the same token where there is an honest mistake in regard to a date of an account where the labor, skill and material were furnished on or about that date made in the belief of its correctness, it being a mere matter of bookkeeping and the defendant was in no way prejudiced thereby, the court should not, for that reason, hold the lien void.

Section 10273, Or. L., in detailing the requisites of a notice of lien, does not require the dates of the expenditure of the labor, skill and material, except the date upon which such expenditure was completed. In the latter part of this section there is a provision that the notice may be substantially in the form provided therein, and the form provides that “said labor, skill and materials were expended upon said property between” two blank dates. Bach of the lien notices in the present case conforms to the form provided in the statute.

Objection is made by the defendant to the lien notice, for the reason that it does not allege that the lien notice was filed within sixty days after the truck was delivered to the owner, or reputed owner. The statute does not require that statement to be contained in the notice of lien. -

If, in fact, the notice of lien is duly filed within the statutory time, or within sixty days from the date of the delivery of the chattel or truck to the owner thereof, or his duly authorized agent, it is sufficient: See Stewart v. Spalding, 71 Or. 326 (141 Pac. 1127). In Curtis v. Sestanovich, 26 Or. 107, 118 (37 Pac. 67), where it was held that, under Hill’s Code, Section 3673, which required a notice of lien for labor and material furnished on a building to be filed within *487 thirty days after the completion or alteration, or repair of a building to file notice thereof with the county clerk, it was held that the notice of lien need not state the date of the completion of the building, if the lien notice is in fact filed within thirty days after the completion thereof. It is shown in the present case that the liens were duly filed within the statutory period of sixty days after the delivery of the truck.

It is contended by defendant that plaintiff failed to show the “reasonable value of the materials furnished and the reasonable value of the labor performed.” It is also claimed that the plaintiff, Gyllenberg, was not qualified to testify as to the value of the labor, skill and materials in question.

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Bluebook (online)
272 P. 674, 127 Or. 481, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gyllenberg-v-heriza-or-1928.