Lucky Boy Mining & Milling Co. v. Moore

203 P. 556, 23 Ariz. 291, 1922 Ariz. LEXIS 131
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1922
DocketCivil No. 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 203 P. 556 (Lucky Boy Mining & Milling Co. v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lucky Boy Mining & Milling Co. v. Moore, 203 P. 556, 23 Ariz. 291, 1922 Ariz. LEXIS 131 (Ark. 1922).

Opinion

ROSS, C. J.

E. C. Moore commenced this action August 27, 1919, against Lucky Boy Mining & Milling Company, Oatman Boy Mining & Milling Company, corporations, and R. A. Watson, alleging that plaintiff had worked and labored for the Oatman Boy, Mining & Milling Company (whose manager and superintendent Watson was) on certain named and described mining claims under lease from defendant [293]*293Lucky Boy Mining & Milling Company, owner, and that said lease permitted the lessee to develop and work said mining claims. On the same date summons was issued directed to above-named defendants. The return on summons dated December 27, 1919, was by the sheriff of Pinal county, and recites that summons “was personally served on J. C. Denton, being the defendant named in said summons, by delivering to J. C. Denton, in the county of Pinal, a copy,” etc. January 2, 1920, Moore’s attorney filed a paper entitled in the above cause, calling it an “Amendment to Complaint,” in which a cause of action in favor of Tarr, McComb & Ware Commercial Company for material and merchandise furnished defendant Oat-man Boy Company to be used on the mining claims of defendant Lucky Boy Company was set out. January 31, 1920, the same attorney filed another paper entitled “Amendment to Complaint Adding Other Defendants, ’ ’ in which it is alleged that the Central Commercial Company, F. B. Farrow, and C. H. Sampson had liens against the property of defendant Lucky Boy' Company for work and material done and furnished the Oatman Boy Company, and asked that they be made defendants. Thereupon, on March 3, 1920, the said Central Commercial Company, Farrow, and Sampson filed separate answers in the nature of cross-complaints, setting forth causes of action for liens against the same property and defendants.

May 10, 1920, the court, reciting defendants Lucky Boy Company and Oatman Boy Company “not appearing, being in default, and default duly taken and entered against them,” ordered the case submitted “upon the pleadings, files, and evidence,” and thereupon entered judgment in favor of plaintiffs Moore and the Tarr, McComb & Ware Commercial Company, and defendants Central Commercial Company, Farrow, and Sampson, for the amounts claimed in [294]*294their notices of liens against the Oatman Boy Company, and foreclosed the liens therefor on the mining claims of the Lucky Boy Company, and ordered its mining claims to be sold to satisfy judgment.

June 7, 1920, the Lucky Boy Company moved the court to vacate and set aside default and judgment on the ground that no service' of summons upon the defendants or either of them had been had or shown. August 28, 1920, the motion was granted as to the Oatman Boy Company and Watson, and judgments were set aside and vacated as to them; but, the attorney'for plaintiffs Moore and Tarr, McComb & Ware Commercial Company, having filed his affidavit that J. C. Denton was the statutory agent of the Lucky Boy Company, and exhibited a letter from the Corporation Commission to that effect, the court held the service of summons good as to the Lucky Boy Company, and denied the motion as to it.

The appellant contends that the court erred in assuming jurisdiction over it “for the reason that at the date of the rendition of judgment the record failed to show service of summons on appellant.” It will be noted that this assignment does not deny that appellant was served with summons. It simply asserts that at the date of judgment the record fails to show service. The return of service was that summons had been served upon Denton personally and as defendant. The fact was Denton was not a defendant, but was the statutory agent of appellant “upon whom [as the statute provides] all notices and processes, including service of summons, may be served, and when so served, shall be deemed, taken and held to be lawful personal service on such corporation.” Paragraph 2117, Civ. Code. When the sheriff delivered summons to Denton it was a service thereof upon appellant. . Regardless of the return thereon, the fact [295]*295remained, appellant at the date of rendition of judgment had been legally served with process in the action as originally brought, and the court had jurisdiction of the defendant’s person and the cause of action set out in the original complaint. "We think the rule is:

“When service has in fact been made, so as to give a court jurisdiction, but the proof thereof is defective, or altogether lacking, the defect may be remedied or the proof supplied after judgment. It is the service, and not the proof thereof, that gives the court jurisdiction.”

Von Arx v. Boone, 193 Fed. 612, 113 C. C. A. 483, so states the rule, and cites many cases to support it.

The action is one to foreclose a lien for labor done and material and merchandise furnished the Oatman Boy Mining & Milling Company as lessee in working and developing certain mining claims of the Lucky Boy Mining & Milling Company. The right to assert the lien is based upon paragraph 3654 and subdivision 2 thereof of the Civil Code and amendments thereto (chapter 67, Regular Session Laws 1915). It is provided therein that persons performing labor or furnishing material or merchandise to the lessee of- a mine or mining claim or to the lessee’s agent or contractor, where the terms of the lease permit the lessee to develop or work the mine or mining claim, may have a lien upon the same “for such sums as are unpaid.” The complaint is that, while the Oatman Boy Company was made a party by the lien claimants, it was not served with process, and any judgment against it settling the amount of the lien claims was without jurisdiction and void. This was the view taken by the court in vacating and setting aside the judgment against the Oatman Boy Company.

The record shows that separate money judgments were entered in favor of the lien claimants against the Oatman Boy Company, the primary debtor, followed [296]*296by an order of foreclosure of liens on appellant’s mining claims and an order of sale thereof “or so much as may be necessary to satisfy the foregoing judgment, costs and expenses.” After the judgments against the Oatman Boy Company were vacated, it is the contention of the appellant, that there was no amount settled or adjudicated for the purpose of enforcing the liens. There could be no lien without a debt. The very basis of a lien is that the claimant is owed for labor or for material or merchandise furnished the lessee or his agent or contractor in working and developing the mines, and the amount owing on that account must necessarily be established and adjudicated befare any lien could be foreclosed against the mining claims. The court did adjudicate and settle the amount due the lien claimants from the Oatman Boy Company, but, upon discovering that such company had not been served with process, concluded that its action in that regard was without jurisdiction'and vacated said judgment. So it is quite clear the appellant’s point here made is well taken. The .judgment, after being vacated as to the Oatman Boy ■Company, fails to show that there is anything whatever owing from said company to the different lien claimants.

The appellee contends that it was not necessary originally to make the Oatman Boy Company a party to the suit, or, having done so, to procure service upon it, or to have had judgment against it. The courts of the country are not in accord as to whether the contractor is a necessary party in a suit by subcontractors to enforce liens.

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Bluebook (online)
203 P. 556, 23 Ariz. 291, 1922 Ariz. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucky-boy-mining-milling-co-v-moore-ariz-1922.