Longhart Supply Co. v. Keystone Pipe & Supply Co.

26 S.W.2d 389
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 18, 1930
DocketNo. 12251.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 26 S.W.2d 389 (Longhart Supply Co. v. Keystone Pipe & Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Longhart Supply Co. v. Keystone Pipe & Supply Co., 26 S.W.2d 389 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

The defendant in error, Keystone Pipe & Supply Company, hereinafter referred to for convenience as the plaintiff, sued the plaintiff in error, the Longhart Supply Company, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, to recover damages for the conversion of a standard oil drilling rig and its attachments. The facts are that one C. W. Whitehead owned and was using the rig in controversy in drilling an oil well on a section of land in Wilbar-ger county, upon which he had an oil and gas lease. While so owning and using the rig, the defendant sold and delivered to him, during April or May, 1926, certain iron casing, for which Whitehead failed to pay, .but to secure which the defendant in due form and time filed with the county clerk of Wilbarger county, on July 31, 1926, an itemized and verified statement of account, claiming a lien on the leasehold estate, the buildings, appurtenances, ■ and fixtures. Later the defendant instituted suit against Whitehead in the district court of Wilbarger county wherein on March 21, 1927, an agreed judgment was entered in favor of the defendant for certain property, including the rig in question, under which judgment the defendant took possession and sold the rig.

Prior to the suit and proceedings therein last mentioned, however, Whitehead, on June 20, 1926, sold the rig to the plaintiff, executing a bill of sale therefor which was duly recorded. The plaintiff was neither a party to, nor had notice of, the suit of the defendant against Whitehead, nor did the defendant *390 have notice of Whitehead’s sale of the rig to the plaintiff other than such as is to be imputed by the record of the bill of sale.

The case was tried by the court without a jury, and resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Keystone Pipe & Supply Company, for $500, from which judgment the defendant Longhart Supply Company has duly prosecuted the present writ of error.

The regularity and general effect of the steps taken by the defendant in fixing its alleged materialman’s lien is not questioned, and it is well settled that, when the formalities required in fixing such a lien have been complied with, it relates back to the inception of the lien, which in this case would be the’ date of the sale of the iron easing to Whitehead prior to May 20, 1926. Keating Implement & M. Co. v. Marshall Elec. L. & P. Co., 74 Tex. 605, 12 S. W. 489.

What, then, must be said of the scope and effect of the defendant’s materialman’s lien? If the drilling rig is to be included within the other property upon which the lien rested, the plaintiff, Keystone Pipe & Supply Company, must lose, notwithstanding it was an innocent purchaser of the rig without notice of the lien, and even though the lien was not fixed until after the purchase.

The lien claimed is statutory, and, if it can be said to attach to the rig in controversy at all, authority therefor must be found either in the Constitution or in the statutes relating to the subject. The pertinent article of the Constitution is article 16, § 37, which reads as follows: “Mechanics, artisans and materialmen, of every class, shall have a lien upon the buildings and articles made or repaired by them for the value of their labor done thereon, or material furnished therefor; and the Legislature shall provide by law for the speedy and efficient enforcement of said liens.”

The statute which controls was enacted in February, 1917 (Acts 35th Leg., c. 17, § 1), and is to be found in the 1918 Supplement of Vernon’s Ann. Civil Statutes, art. 5639a, which was carried forward in the revision of 1925, word for word, as article 5473. It reads as follows:

“Any person, corporation, firm, association, partnership, materialman, artisan, laborer or mechanic, who shall, under contract, express or implied, with the owner of any land, mine or quarry, or the owner of any gas, oil or mineral leasehold interest in land, or the owner of any gas pipe line or oil pipe line, or owner of any oil or gas pipe line right of way, or with the trustee, agent or receiver of any such owner, perform labor or furnish material, machinery or supplies, used in digging, drilling, torpedoing, operating, completing, maintaining or repairing any such oil or gas well, water well, mine or quarry, or oil or gas pipe line, shall have a lien on the whole of such land or leasehold interest therein, or oil pipe 'line or gas pipe line, including the right of way for same, or lease for oil and gas purposes, the buildings and appurtenances, and upon the materials and supplies so furnished, and upon said oil well, gas well, water well, oil or gas pipe line, mine or quarry for which the same are furnished, and upon all of the other oil wells, gas wells, buildings and appurtenances, including pipe line, leasehold interest, and land used in operating for oil, gas and other minerals, upon such leasehold or land or pipe line and the right of way therefor, for which said material and supplies were furnished or labor performed. Provided, that if labor, supplies, machinery, or material is furnished to a leaseholder, the lien hereby created shall not attach to the underlying fee title to the land.”

It seems quite clear that no warrant for the lien under consideration on the rig in question is to be found in the terms of the constitutional provision, for the rig is not a building, nor was it made or repaired or labor thereon performed or material furnished therefor by the defendant. Nor do we think authority for the lien claimed on the rig is to be found in the statute, for, as already noted, defendant neither furnished material for nor labored upon the rig in question, nor do we think it can be said that the rig was “appurtenant” to the lease or to the pipe line supplies furnished Whitehead by the defendant. The property upon which the lien rested, as indicated in the terms of the article, was “land * * * leasehold interest therein, * ⅜ * oil pipe line or gas pipe line, * * * buildings and appurtenances, * * * m&. terials and supplies so furnished, and * * * oil well, gas well, water well, oil or gas pipe line, mine or quarry for which the same are furnished,” etc. No form of the property mentioned can properly be construed, we think, to include the rig. The only terms giving color to the contention that the lien included the rig is that it was an “appurtenance” to the lease or to the material furnished by defendant. The term “appurtenance,” we think, relates to such land, building, or material, if any, that has been furnished or upon which labor has been done. 'We find in 1 Words and Phrases, Second Series, page 261, the following definitions of an appurtenance, to wit: “An ‘appurtenance’ is a thing belonging to and going with the transfer of a principal thing; used with, dependent upon the thing, and essential to it.”

Another: “The word ‘appurtenant’ means attached, to, or belonging to, and in law the term ‘appurtenance’ usually means something appertaining to another thing as principal, and passing as an incident to such principal.”

In vol. 4 Corpus Juris, p. 1470, under the title “Appurtenances,” it is said: “In its ordinary sense the term does not embrace person *391 al property but it has a popular meaning that may he applied to personalty.”

In a footnote to that statement it is said: “A deed conveying land and its appurtenances conveys only such things in the nature of fixtures as are appurtenant to the land itself.

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.W.2d 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/longhart-supply-co-v-keystone-pipe-supply-co-texapp-1930.