In re Coulter

6 F. Cas. 637, 2 Sawy. 42, 3 Chi. Leg. News 377, 5 Nat. Bank. Reg. 64, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 162
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedMay 29, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 6 F. Cas. 637 (In re Coulter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Coulter, 6 F. Cas. 637, 2 Sawy. 42, 3 Chi. Leg. News 377, 5 Nat. Bank. Reg. 64, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 162 (D. Or. 1871).

Opinion

DEADY, District Judge.

This Is a motion by the trustee of the estate to expunge a certain proof of debt. On February 23, 1870, petition was filed in bankruptcy against Coulter, and on March 3 he was adjudged a bankrupt. The usual warrant to take possession of the estate of the bankrupt issued at the same time, and on 31arch 4 the first notice was published by the marshal. At the date of filing the petition the bankrupt was indebted to Uzafovage & Wright in the sum of one hundred and twenty-nine dollars and seventy-three cents, for material furnished by them to the bankrupt to be used in the construction of a brick building on lot four, in block fifty, in the town of Salem, Oregon, then, and at the date of the adjudication aforesaid, owned by.said bankrupt

That on March S, and within three months from the furnishing of said materials, said creditors filed in the proper office a notice of their intention to hold a lien on said building and lot as a security for said indebtedness.

On March 21, U. & W. made proof of their debt before Willis, commissioner, as one secured by a lien upon the lot and building aforesaid, and stating in such proof the facts aforesaid.

On January 30, 1871, the trustee of the estate filed objections to the proof of debt, and moved that the same be expunged. The motion was referred to Mr. Register Hill, who found the facts as above stated, and the conclusion of law that U. & W. had no lien.

The question arising upon the objections, and argued by counsel, is whether the change of property in the lot and building, consequent upon the adjudication in bankruptcy. prevented the creditors U. & W. from thereafter filing their notice of lien with effect, although filed within the time allowed by the local lien act. The amount involved in this motion is small, although'by stipulation other claims of a like nature are to abide the decision of this one, but the principle involved is of great practical importance to the community. The decision of the question must turn mainly upon the proper construction to be given to the lien law. Before passing to that subject, it is well to note and bear in mind that the security given to mechanics and material men is not obnoxious to the letter, spirit or policy of the bankrupt act, because it works no injustice to any other creditor. In Foster v. Heirs of Stone, 20 Pick. 543, the court, in considering a somewhat similar case, said: “It may be remarked, however, that in one respect there is an important difference between mechanic’s lien for labor and materials, and a lien created by attachment. In the latter case, an attaching creditor has no claim for preference over other creditors, except by his attachment; whereas, when a mechanic'obtains a lien under the statute, and relying thereon, increases the value of the land by erecting buildings thereon, he has a strong equitable claim for reimbursement to the extent of the value of his labor and materials, furnished for building, and in this respect he has a marked preference over the other creditors of the land, who had trusted to the personal credit of their debtor.”

The lien is given to secure the claims of certain persons for the value of their labor and material bestowed upon the property of the debtor. The operation of the law is a convenient substitute for the giving of a mortgage or other express security day by day, for the value of such work and material, and is to be considered and enforced as such.

Upon the faith of this security, so given, the one party furnishes labor and material, and the other receives the benefit of them. This transaction, as has been said, is not in violation of the terms or policy of the bankrupt act, even although the owner of the property should be insolvent at the time, because such security or lien is only equivalent to the additional value which the creditor has by this means given to the property of the debtor, and therefore does not diminish the assets of the latter applicable to the payment of his pre-existing debts.

In Darby’s Trustees v. Boatman’s Sav. Inst. [Case No. 3,571], Mr. Justice Dillon,— Treat and Krekel concurring, — held in the language of the syllabus, that: “Advances made in good faith to an indebted person, to enable him to carry on his business, upon security taken at the time, do not violate either the terms or policy of the bankrupt act, since the debtor gets a present equivalent for the new debt he creates and the security he gives.”

Bearing in mind, then, that so far as the bankrupt act is concerned, there is nothing to prevent these creditors from acquiring and enforcing this lien or security for their debt, I proceed to consider the main question —Have U. & W. acquired a lien upon the [639]*639property in question by reason of the facts stated?

The lien law of Oregon (Code Or. p. 7C3) provides (section 1): “Any person, who by virtue of a contract with the owner of a building,” shall furnish any material for the ■construction of such building, “shall, upon filing the notice prescribed in the next section, have a lien upon such building and the lot of ground 'upon which the same is situated, for such * * * material * * * furnished.” [Section 2:]2 If the person furnishing such material desires to avail bimself of the provisions of the lien law, he must “at any time within three months from the completion of such building” file in the •office of the county clerk a notice of his intention to hold a lien upon such building for the amount due. Section 3: “Such lien shall cease to exist at the end of one year after the completion of the building,” unless proceedings are commenced to enforce it. Section 7: “Liens created in pursuance” of this law “shall have precedence over all other liens after the commencement of the building,” and if the property is insufficient “to ■pay all such liens,” they are then to be satisfied pro rata. Section 8: The lien against the building is to extend to the lot on -which it is erected, if “at the time of erecting such building” the same “was the property of the person” who caused it to be erected. The remaining sections of the statute relate to the enforcement of the lien, and do not bear upon the question under consideration.

Prom the terms of this statute, indeed from the very fact of its enactment, it is manifest that it was the intention of the legislature to give mechanics and material men security for the amounts due them, without the trouble or inconvenience or even foresight upon their part, of taking any such -security by special contract or pledge.

Counsel for the trustee maintains that as U. & W. did not file notice of intention to hold a lien until after the commencement of proceedings in bankruptcy, no lien was created on the property, when under the operation of the bankrupt act, it passed to the trustee; and that no lien upon the property -could be created by filing such notice after the building and lot had vested in the trustee for the benefit of the general creditors. If the premises are admitted the conclusion ■follows. An adjudication in bankruptcy, and the assignment thereunder, relate to the filing of the petition and vest the property •of the bankrupt, as of the date of such filing, in the assignee or trustee. Bank. Act, § 14 [1SC7 (14 Stat. 522)].

This argument for the trustee rests mainly upon the effect claimed for the provision ■quoted from section 1 of the act: “shall, upon filing the notice,” etc., “have a lien upon such building,” etc.

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Bluebook (online)
6 F. Cas. 637, 2 Sawy. 42, 3 Chi. Leg. News 377, 5 Nat. Bank. Reg. 64, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-coulter-ord-1871.