Mathers v. Barrow
This text of 80 So. 424 (Mathers v. Barrow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The preliminary question presented by the record in this case is whether Mathers acquired a landlord’s lien on the lumber in question under section 4747 of the Code. That section provides that—
“The landlord of any storehouse, dwelling house, or other building, shall have a lien on the goods, furniture, and effects belonging to the tenant, and subtenant, for his rent, which shall' be superior to all other liens, except those for taxes.”
Our decisions hold that the lien thereby created attaches to any property of the tenant which is brought upon the premises of the rented building, though not kept within the building, if it is used by the tenant in connection with his use of the building (Stephens v. Adams, 93 Ala. 117, 119, 9 South. 529), or if it enjoys the protection of the premises (Nicrosi v. Roswald, 113 Ala. 592, 21 South. 338; Andrews Mfg. Co. v. Porter, 112 Ala. 381, 20 South. 475).
Barrow’s lien is claimed under the act of September 10, 1915 (Sess. Acts 1915, p. 374), which provides that—
“Such lien shall have priority over all other liens, mortgages or incumbrances created subsequent to the beginning of the work or labor done in the getting, cutting, rafting, shipping, hauling or manufacturing of said lumber, timber or cross-ties.”
His lien is therefore expressly denied as against pre-existing liens.
His contention, however, is that, inasmuch as Mathers knew that the logs were to be sawed into lumber by his tenant’s employés, as a necessary incident of the business of operating the sawmill, an implication arises that he authorized and consented to the creation of Barrow’s lien for sawing, and thereby waived the priority of his own lien, and postponed it in favor of Barrow’s.
There are undoubtedly a number of well-reasoned cases which seem to establish the doctrine that, where a prior lienholder (usually a mortgagee) leaves the property in the custody of its general owner for an indefinite time, and the nature and use of the property is such that it can be preserved, and its value as a security maintained, only by repairs by skilled mechanics from time to time, the lien given by law to such mechanics will prevail over the prior lien. This is upon the theory that the general owner is, by the very circumstances of the case, authorized by the prior lienholder to impose such a charge, as his agent by necessary implication. J. C. Walden Auto Co. v. Mixon, 196 Ala. 346, 71 South. 694; Watts v. Sweeney, 127 Ind. 116, 26 N. E. 680, 22 Am. St. Rep. 615; Drummond Carriage Co. v. Mills, 54 Neb. 417, 74 N. W. 966, 40 L. R. A. 761, 67 Am. St. Rep. 719.
Counsel for appellee raises the question of the propriety of Mathers’ resort to attachment proceedings, in that the evidence does not show that Mathers made a preliminary demand for the payment of the rent which was refused by Martin.
That, however, is a question between Mathers and Martin, and is not material to the present controversy. With or without an attachment suit by Mathers, it was the sheriff’s duty to pay him enough of the proceeds to discharge his lien. Smith v. Huddleston, 103 Ala. 223, 15 South. 521.
The judgment of the circuit court will be reversed, and a judgment will be here rendered directing the sheriff to pay the fund in question to the claimant, Mathers, after first satisfying the costs of court properly assessed.
Reversed and rendered.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
80 So. 424, 202 Ala. 342, 1918 Ala. LEXIS 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathers-v-barrow-ala-1918.