McKinley v. Tice

276 P. 1110, 129 Or. 190, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 125
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 276 P. 1110 (McKinley v. Tice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKinley v. Tice, 276 P. 1110, 129 Or. 190, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 125 (Or. 1929).

Opinion

*192 RAND, J.

Plaintiffs contracted with the Tice Lumber Company, a copartnership, to cut into saw-logs all of the timber on a certain tract of land and to deliver the logs at the sawmill of the copartnership. They delivered, pursuant to the contract, 1,098,000 feet of logs for which there is now due them a balance of $1,451.76. The copartnership sawed the logs into lumber and sold the lumber, a part being purchased by the Nebraska Bridge Supply & Lumber Company and the remainder by the Coast Fir and Cedar Products Company, neither of which companies had any notice of plaintiffs’ claim. The lumber was sold at a price of $14 per thousand feet of which $10 per thousand feet was paid, the remainder to be paid upon delivery of the lumber on board cars. After the lumber had been so sold, plaintiffs, pursuant to Section 10236, Or. L., filed a lien upon the lumber and shortly thereafter commenced suit to foreclose the lien. Upon the trial of the cause in the court below, the suit was dismissed and plaintiffs have appealed.

The statute under which the lien is claimed provides :

“Every person performing labor upon or who shall assist in obtaining or securing sawlogs, spars, piles, cordwood, or other timbers, has a lien upon the same for the work or labor done upon or in obtaining or securing the same, whether such work or labor was done at the instance of the owner of the same or his agent. The cook in a logging or other camp, and any and all others who may assist in or about a logging, or other camp maintained for obtaining or securing sawlogs, spars, piles, cordwood, or other timber, shall be regarded as a person who assists in obtaining or securing the sawlogs, spars, piles, cord- *193 wood, or other timber herein mentioned.” Section 10236, Or. L.

Defendants contend that this statute is in derogation of the common law and for that reason must be strictly construed, while plaintiffs contend that it is a remedial statute and should be liberally construed. It is clear from a mere reading of the statute that it provides remedies which were unknown at common law. It was a general principle of the common law that a bailee of personal property who has imparted to it an additional value has a lien on the property for his reasonable charges and he has the right to retain the property in his possession until the charges therefor have been paid. This lien or right was not an interest in the property itself but a right to retain only and depended for its existence upon the actual possession of the property for if possession was once voluntarily given up then the lien was lost. It was also a principle of the common law that the lien of a workman for services performed upon a chattel belonged strictly to the person who contracted to do the work or perform the services and not to subcontractors or persons employed under him: Boss v. Spaniel, 122 Or. 424, 429 (251 Pac. 900, 259 Pac. 430). This common-law lien has not been abrogated by statute and hence is still in force in cases where the facts warrant its application. The remedies provided by this statute are entirely different from those provided by the common law and rest upon an entirely different state of facts. Under this statute the possession of the logs at the time the work is being performed, or the retention of the possession after the services have been performed, is not essential to the validity of the lien and, in the *194 case provided for by the statute, the workman is not in possession of the logs within the meaning of that word as used at common law at the time he performed the work. Under this statute the logs are in the possession of the owner and the workman has nothing more than a mere custody over them at the time the work is performed and hence the workman can have no common-law lien in cases provided for under this statute, for the statute contemplates the performance of the work by a laborer who, at the time, is not in the possession of the logs and, since the statute gives to a workman a new remedy, and one which was unknown at common law, the statute is in derogation of the common law and must be strictly construed, both as to the methods to be pursued in enforcing the new remedy and also in determining to what cases the statute is to be applied, bxit after the statute has been strictly complied with and it has been determined that the lien claimant is one of the persons entitled to a lien under the statute, then the statute should be liberally construed in favor of the persons entitled to the lien. In 2 Lewis ’ Sutherland on Statutory Construction (2 ed.), Section 690, the author says:

“ * '* It has been held that such a statute should be construed strictly as to the things to be done to obtain a lien and liberally as to the enforcement of the lien after it has attached; also that it should be construed strictly as to the persons entitled to a lien but liberally as respects the property to which the lien attaches.”

The question of construction, however, is not of importance in this suit for the lien is invalid upon two grounds. It appears from the evidence that in the performance of the contract plaintiffs actually performed a part of the work and the remainder of the *195 work was performed by others who were employed by plaintiffs for that purpose. There was but one lien filed and it included not only a claim for work done by each of the plaintiffs individually but also for what had been done by their employees and nothing appears upon the face of the lien by which a segregation can be made of what was due to plaintiffs or either of them. As said in Alderson v. Lee, 52 Or. 92, 98 (96 Pac. 234), where this particular lien statute was being considered by the court:

“ * * The right to perfect a lien, given by statute, is a privilege limited to the claimant, and that any assignment thereof before record, carries only the chose in action constituting the basis of the intended lien. To constitute a lien, every requirement of the statute must be complied with; and, until such compliance, no lien is created.”

Again, in construing an analogous statute, the Mining Lien Law, in Loud v. Gold Ray Realty Co., 72 Or. 155, 158 (142 Pac. 785), this court said:

“ * * The right to a lien of this kind is a creature of the statute, and the right to perfect such a lien is limited to the persons who do the work or furnish the material or supplies.”

Neither of these statutes, the one involved here nor the Mining- Lien Law, is similar in respect to this question to the Mechanics’ Lien Law which permits a contractor not only to file a lien for his own labor but also to include in his lien the labor of his workmen for whose charges he is responsible. See Christman v. Salway, 103 Or. 666, 686 (205 Pac. 541). TJnder this statute, the right to perfect a lien is limited to the persons who performed the work and the amount for which they are entitled to claim a lien is limited to the amount due for the work which *196 the lien claimant himself performed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
276 P. 1110, 129 Or. 190, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinley-v-tice-or-1929.