Lord v. Collins

76 Me. 443, 1884 Me. LEXIS 88
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 28, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 76 Me. 443 (Lord v. Collins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lord v. Collins, 76 Me. 443, 1884 Me. LEXIS 88 (Me. 1884).

Opinion

Foster, J.

This is a petition to enforce a lien for feeding and sheltering three colts from November 22, 1882, to April 18, 1883. The case discloses the following facts.

This petitioner, on the 16th day of October, 1880, verbally agreed with the respondent to feed and shelter three colts during the winter season then following for the specified sum- of sixty dollars; the price was not paid, and the colts were not taken away, but remained in the petitioner’s possession, and on the 22d day of November, 1882, he filed a petition returnable at the December term of this court for the county of Somerset, in which he claimed [444]*444a lien for feeding, sheltering and pasturing the said Colts from the time they came into his possession to the date of the said petition, amounting to two hundred twenty-eight dollars and forty cents, with a credit of thirty dollars, leaving a balance of one hundred ninety-eight dollars and forty cents; notice thereon was duly ordered, and at the March term, 1883, the case was defaulted, judgment entered, and a decree for thi lien "as prayed for, and for the sale of said colts by the sheriff of this county or either of his deputies for the payment thereof, and for costs.” Execution issued April 12, 1883, and the officer in pursuance of the same, seized the colts on the 21st day of April, and thereafterwards sold the same in accordance with the provisions of the statute, receiving therefrom a surplus of one hundred sixteen dollars and thirty cents, above the amount necessary to satisfy the claim of the petitioner and the costs accruing thereon.

For the keeping and sheltering of said colts for twenty-one weeks, from the time of filing his first petition to the 18th day of April, three days prior to the time they were taken by the officer, amounting to ninety-five dollars, this second petition is brought substantially alleging the foregoing facts, and "for which sum as well as for his costs herein he claims a lien upon said animals by virtue of the provisions of chapter 125 of the laws of 1873, in addition to the judgment of lien in his behalf against said animals granted him as hereinbefore set forth.”

The question is whether the statute authorizes a second petition, judgment, and order of court to enforce a lien upon the same animals in this form.

We think not. Liens are in derogation of the common law, and the court is not authorized to extend the law beyond the objects specifically provided for, or enforce a remedy provided by statute except in accordance with the terms thereof.

The petitioner claims the lien by virtue of the statute, public laws of 1872, c. 27, amended by the laws of 1873, c. 125, under which this process is brought to enforce it.

While we admit the doctrine that the remedy being granted by statute may be liberally construed, we must also hold that the remedy as one additional to the common law, if intended by the [445]*445legislature, should appear by express declaration or necessary implication. The proceedings are strictly in rem, and we are not called upon to determine the rights of these parties in any other process, or proceeding in personam.

The statute in force at the time of filing these petitions ran thus : "Whoever pastures, feeds or shelters animals by virtue of a contract with or by consent of the owner, has a lien thereon for the amount due for such pasturing, feeding or sheltering, to secure payment thereof with costs, to be enforced in the same manner as liens on goods and personal baggage by inn-holders or keepers of hoarding-houses.” i

.The remedy provided for inn-holders and keepers of boardinghouses, was, at that time, by petition to the court to enforce a sale of the goods and baggage of delinquent guests, as stated in E. S., 1871, c. 91, § 89, and sections following. Hence we are to look to those provisions of the statute for the measure and extent of any remedy sought by this petition. It will be noticed that the statute relating to the remedy of a party who pastures, feeds or shelters animals provides for a lien " thereon ;” that by § 40, of the statutes relating to the remedy of inn-holders and keepers of boarding-houses, the petition is to set forth a "description of the article possessed,” on which the lien is claimed; and by § 45, it is provided that "after trial and final adjudication in favor of the petitioner, the court may order any competent officer to sell the article on which' the lien is claimed, as personal property is sold on execution, and out of the proceeds, after deducting his fees and the expenses of sale, to pay to the petitioner the amount and costs awarded him, and the balance to the person entitled to it, if they are known to the court, otherwise into court.”

In accordance with the provisions of this section the same property described in this second petition, and on which this second lien is claimed, was ordered by the court to be sold, and the officer, by virtue of lawful authority, the judgment and order of court on the first petition, made sale of the same.

If this petition is to be sustained, where is the property that " the court may order any competent officer to sell the article on which the lien is claimed” ?

[446]*446This order of the court is not discretionary with the court. If judgment and decree for lien be granted on this petition, the court must necessarily order some competent officer to sell the property on which the lien is claimed, as no other mode is prescribed by the statute.

Provisions of a statute very similar to the one we are considering have received a construction that warrants us in this conclusion ; and the court say : "But it was not the intention of the legislature, that it should be left to the discretion of the court whether an order should issue or not. All persons having established a lien are equally entitled to its enforcement and to an order of court for such enforcement. A lien being established, the order could not legally be withheld. . .

" The order is one consequent upon the judgment and a necessary sequence thereof. It follows the judgment equally as the execution.” Low v. Dunham, 61 Maine, 569.

If this petition is sustained there ought certainly to be something upon which a lien exists and upon which the order- of the court can be excuted in accordance with the provisions of the statute, as a necessary sequence of the judgment; and this can lawfully be done only on such property as a lien exists.

In this case the animals whereon a lien is claimed in this petition were sold in April, 1883, as we have said, by virtue of lawful authority, and judgment and order of the court on a prior petition. The order of the court, therefore, in this case if granted would be useless, as under it there could be no sale of property the title to which had passed by an absolute sale under a similar process months before.

There is nothing in the statute we are considering which by express words or. by necessary implication contemplates the enforcement of a lien upon anything other than the animals which have been furnished food or shelter. The petitioner claims to sustain this petition as against said animals in addition to the judgment of lien in his behalf before granted, and to have his claim satisfied "out of said- property or the proceeds thereof.” The statute does not go to that extent, where, by the petitioner’s own motion, the property has been sold to satisfy a lien in favor [447]

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Bluebook (online)
76 Me. 443, 1884 Me. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lord-v-collins-me-1884.