Hughes v. Hughes

164 N.W. 435, 197 Mich. 690, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 645
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1917
DocketDocket No. 12
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 N.W. 435 (Hughes v. Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hughes v. Hughes, 164 N.W. 435, 197 Mich. 690, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 645 (Mich. 1917).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Plaintiff brought this action by attachment in the circuit court of Bay county under the so-called “log lien law” (3 Comp Laws 1915, § 14843 et [692]*692seq.), to enforce collection of wages claimed due him for services performed while employed by defendant John A. Hughes, his brother, upon certain cedar posts, telegraph poles and railroad ties, which were purchased by the appellant, W. C. Sterling & Son Company. The forest products attached were cut from lands tributary to the Taquamenon rive'i in Chippewa county, and driven down that stream to its mouth, where they were delivered on board vessels to appellant, and by it taken to Bay City.

Appellant contracted the purchase of this cedar from defendant John A. Hughes in February, 1915, while woods operations were under way, agreeing to make advances, or pay instalments upon the output as the work progressed, up to 50 per cent, of the contract price for ties and poles piled at “the bank of landing,” to be estimated by its inspector, and the remaining 50 per cent, at delivery on board the vessel; all advances to be secured by a “bill of sale on cedar standing or cut on lands from which timber is to be cut.” These posts, ties, and poles were marked by the inspector’s initials after they were cut, some in the woods before any money was advanced, and some on the bank before being wateréd for driving. Under such conditions appellant presumptively made the contract with full knowledge of and reference to the statute giving the laborer a lien upon the forest products he helped to get out, and if the employer failed to pay the laborers for such work, their liens might, if the preliminary statutory steps were taken, be enforced by attachment against such products, in the circuit or justice’s courts of any county in the State, in which any portion of them might be situated' at the time of commencing attachment proceeding.

Plaintiff was employed by his brother, at the time appellant’s cedar was taken out, as camp foreman at $90 per month. After the last boatload of appellant’s [693]*693cedar had been shipped to Bay City in the fall of 1915, he claimed a balance due him of $925 for labor upon it, extending from the time the camp started in September, 1914, until late in October, 1915. On November 2,1915, he filed with the clerk of Chippewa county, in which the labor was performed, a statutory statement and claim of lien in due form for work and labor performed in that county in cutting, skidding, handling, driving, etc., said cedar poles, ties, and posts, a portion of them stated to then be in Bay county, the last labor upon them performed October 23, 1915, the amount of wages due and for which a lien was claimed being $925. On November 11, 1915, plaintiff visited the office of Sterling & Son Company at Monroe, Mich. Of his mission and the result he testified:

“I was sent down by my brother to collect the full amount, and on arriving I tried to collect the money, and Mr. Sterling told me that it was impossible, that a $700 order had been sent in by a merchant, and that if he would pay me he would be liable himself for this $700 order, so I told him I didn’t have money enough to live on at the time, that I depended upon the money that I was to get from him, so he started to laugh, and he said, T won’t see you stuck,’ so he gave me a check for $50 with the understanding that the minute I was paid by Jack I would refund the money to him.”

He then commenced this attachment suit under the statute, in Bay county, to enforce the claim of lien which he had filed in Chippewa county. This, as the law provided, was combined with and contingent on an action and judgment in personam against his brother, whom the writ of attachment required the sheriff to summon, wherever he could be found within the State, in addition to attaching the cedar products stated to be “at the yards of W. C. Sterling & Son Company in Bay City, Mich.” The brother, defendant John A. Hughes, caused his appearance to be entered and pleaded the general issue, but thereafter inter[694]*694posed no defense, and sent a letter to plaintiff’s attorney containing a statement of plaintiff’s account, showing that defendant Hughes owed plaintiff Hughes a balance of $925 due for services during a period of employment for 13 months at $90 per month. The letter and statement were admitted in evidence at the trial against objection, in connection with plaintiff’s testimony, and a verdict was directed by the' court against defendant John A. Hughes under the undisputed evidence for $903.

Before plaintiff could subject the property of appellants, with whom he had no contractual relations, to a lien under the statute, it was incumbent upon him to show himself entitled to and obtain a judgment against his brother, by whom he was employed to do the work for which he claimed a lien.

“Proceedings to enforce a lien upon logs of the owner who is not in contract relations with the lienor, under this statute, assume a double aspect. As to the defendant in the suit, the proceeding is in personam, and the judgment obtained is a personal one, while the attachment against the logs of the owner is in the nature of a proceeding in rem. It is essential to the validity of proceedings in rem that notice shall be given of the time and place of condemnation. What, this notice shall be the legislature must prescribe. An opportunity’ must be given to the owner of the res to appear and contest the validity of the lien, and the amount due.” Reilly v. Stephenson, 62 Mich. 509 (29 N. W. 99).

Appellant appeared as intervening owner of the property attached to contest the validity of the claimed lien, having in that connection the right to contest the amount claimed due the brother, so far as it might have a bearing upon the amount of any lien claimed against its property. While objections were made and error is assigned on rulings in connection with that feature of the case, we are not impressed with their [695]*695importance, and regard the serious questions involved here to be whether plaintiff has established any valid lien in his favor against the cedar products he attached in Bay county, and, if so, the amount.

Although it was shown that the cedar upon which plaintiff worked in Chippewa county was properly marked, no reference is made to any identifying marks in either the writ of attachment or in the sheriff’s return to the writ and inventory, which simply describes the property as “about” 7,000 cedar posts, 4,600 telegraph poles, and 8,000 railroad ties, without any statement of where located, who owned or claimed them, or how they were marked, if at all, and it is contended that a verdict should have been directed for appellant as requested because the record is destitute of any evidence of identification showing plaintiff performed any work upon the property attached. The return is manifestly scant and incomplete. Instead of counsel obtaining leave of the court for the sheriff to amend his return, he was sworn as a witness, and permitted to testify against objection that the cedar he attached was in appellant’s yards in West Bay City. It was also shown that the Hughes cedar from Chippewa county brought down by appellant was then in those yards. While meager, we think' that in connection with plaintiff’s testimony there was inferential evidence upon which a jury might conclude that the cedar atta'ched was that upon which plaintiff had worked.

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Related

Hughes v. Hughes
177 N.W. 959 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1920)

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Bluebook (online)
164 N.W. 435, 197 Mich. 690, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-hughes-mich-1917.