Montandon & Co. v. Deas

14 Ala. 33
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 14 Ala. 33 (Montandon & Co. v. Deas) 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.

Bluebook
Montandon & Co. v. Deas, 14 Ala. 33 (Ala. 1848).

Opinion

CHILTON, J.

The bill in this case is filed by James S. Deas, to enforce a lien as a builder, under the statute of 1834, (Digest, 375,) which provides “that master builders and mechanics, of every denomination, contracting in writing to put up and erect buildings, of every description, shall have a lien in the nature of a mortgage upon the tract, parcel or lot of land, upon which such building or buildings shall be put up and erected, as well as upon such building or buildings, until the price or compensation for services and for materials found, shall be fully paid and satisfied, unless a contrary stipulation be made and agreed upon at the time it is entered into: Provided always, that such lien shall not have a priority over bona Jide or legal incumbrances, existing anterior to the time of the contract being made, if said mortgages and incumbrances shall be duly recorded according to law. By the second section, the contract is required to be recorded in the clerk’s office of the county court óf the county where the building is to be erected, within thirty days after the building is erected, or the lien is declared to be inoperative.”

By the third section it is provided that “ when any judgment or decree shall be rendered in favor of any master builder or mechanic upon such contract, execution may be levied upon such tract, parcel or lot of land on which the building has been put up, as well as upon the buildings and improvements thereon erected and made, and all the right, title and interest the defendant had in and to the said lot, [42]*42tract or parcel of ground, at the time the said contract was entered into, as well as the buildings and improvements erected and made thereon, may be sold to satisfy such judgment or decree, provided such builder or mechanic may levy also on other property,” &c.

1. On the part of the appellants, it is insisted that chancery has no jurisdiction to enforce the lien given by the statute, but that the mode prescribed by the statute must be puiv sued, which is to enforce the lien by the levy of an execution. The statute says the mechanic “ shall have a lien in the nature of a mortgage,” and speaks of suits upon such contracts resulting in judgments or decrees. Now as executions may issue upon decrees in chancery as well as judgments at law, (Digest, 348, § 29,) it seems to me there is nothing in the wording of the act which confines the remedy to a court of law, but rather the reverse, as being in the nature of a mortgage, which courts of chancery foreclose, it w'ould seem wanting in this nature, if the appropriate remedy should be denied. It is not necessary that such jurisdiction should be specifically conferred by the statute, as the argument supposes, but it is sufficient if the statute create the equitable right, and that it comes within the ordinary and appropriate jurisdiction of the equity court, and that the exercise of such jurisdiction is not prohibited by the act. Cases are numerous where similar jurisdiction has been exercised. See Gillespie v. Bradford, 7 Yerg. Rep. 168. In Black v. Breenan, 5 Dana’s Rep. 311, it is held that chancery has jurisdiction to enforce liens and pledges of personal property generally, and may order the sale of a horse belonging to an innkeeper’s guest to pay charges. So, in Gambling v. Read, 1 Meigs’s Rep. 281, it was held that one who had sbld a slave at a fixed price, to be paid on a certain day, but who retained the title as security for the payment, could go into equity to enforce his lien, against one to whom such slave had been assigned in trust by the vendee. 2 Story’s Eq. 461-2.

2, We do not think the design of the legislature was to restrict the lien to cases where the party for whom the building was erected owned the legal title to the land, but the [43]*43proper construction of the act would embrace any interest which the party could pass by mortgage.

The cases referred to, do not sustain the view taken by the, counsel for appellants. The case of Thaxter v. Williams, 14 Pick. Rep. 49, was an adjudication upon a statute very different from ours. In Massachusetts, the act provides for a lien in cases where the person contracting for the erection of buildings is the (owner) propriefor of the land, and the court in the case last referred to, say very properly, that the lien cannot be extended to cases where the party is “ a mere tenant or intruder.” The statute of this State provides for a sale in satisfaction of the lien of “ all the right, title and interest,” which the contracting party had at the time of the contract, and in our opinion clearly embraces leasehold as well as greater estates.

3. It is further insisted, that the recorded contract in this case cannot give a lien, because the land is not specified in it.

It is true, the land is not specified in the contract, but it does provide that the lease from M. D. Eslava to Chantron is pledged for the payment for the work, so that the contract by reference to the lease, may be rendered sufficiently certain. But without thisj does it follow that the land must be described in the building contract in order to create a lien? This act should receive a liberal construction, as it is but an extension of the doctrine of lien, so much favored by the courts, as consonant with every principle of equity and justice as applied to personal property. Cross on Law of Lien, 24. The intention of the act was, to give to the mechanic who had expended his labor and furnished materials in improving the ground of another, a prior right of satisfaction by a lien upon the building, and the interest of the party contracting for its erection, in the land so improved. This right is not dependent upon any peculiar provision in the contract for its existence, but is created and attaches by virtue of the statute, when the contract for building has been duly recorded. If the contract must provide for the lien, the statute would be nugatory, as this could have been done without such law — “ conventio vine,it legem.” But under the statute, [44]*44an express stipulation is required in order to prevent the lien from attaching.

The act of 1821, which this act repeals, limited the lien to the building which was erected, or worked upon, for the services of the workmen. This act, passed in 1834, extended the lien to the lot or tract upon which the building was erected, thus remedying the defect in the former law. Aik. Dig. 308. The terms of the contract for the erection of the building must be reduced to writing and recorded. The building of the house is an act open and notorious,y and the lien is perfected upon the completion of the work, and recording of the contract. These, in the absence of a particular description of the land in the contract, are sufficient to put a prudent man upon inquiry into the existence of the lien, and to charge him without notice, more especially if, subsequent to the registration of the contract and the completion of the building, he take an assignment. It is obvious that the statute designed the erection of the building to operate as notice, from the fact that the contract is not required to be recorded until within thirty days after the erection of the same. So that the argument deduced from inconvenience of want of notice, and surprise, is not well founded.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ala. 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montandon-co-v-deas-ala-1848.