Nicolai-Neppach Co. v. Poore

251 P. 268, 120 Or. 163, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 18
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 251 P. 268 (Nicolai-Neppach Co. v. Poore) 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
Nicolai-Neppach Co. v. Poore, 251 P. 268, 120 Or. 163, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 18 (Or. 1926).

Opinion

CO SHOW, J. —

It has become the settled law of this state that where a materialman furnishes material for a building to be erected on land belonging to a person other than the purchaser of such material in order to effect a lien on the owner’s interest in the real property it is necessary to give the notice prescribed by statute: Or. L„, § 10191. It is also well settled that where the material is furnished directly to the owner of the fee that such notice is not required: Boise-Payette Lumber Co. v. Dominican Sisters, 102 Or. 314 (202 Pac. 554).

It is contended by appellant Wilhoit Springs Mineral Water Company that the material furnished by the defendant Skeen was furnished to the lessees, H. D. Poore et al., and their successor Wilhoit Mineral Springs, Inc. The defendant Skeen claims that *172 the material was furnished directly to the Wilhoit Springs Mineral- Water Company. It is conceded that the notice required by said Section 10191, Or. L., was not given by defendant Skeen. The determination of the contention between said parties is purely one of fact. We have carefully examined' the evidence and concur with the learned Circuit Court that the material was furnished directly to the defendant Wilhoit Springs Mineral Water Company, the owner in fee of the premises on which the improvements were made and in which the material furnished by the defendant Skeen was used. The testimony upon this issue was confined mainly to the testimony of defendant Robert Skeen and Edw. Labbe, president of the defendant Wilhoit Springs Mineral Water Company. In addition to the positive testimony of the defendant Skeen is the fact that a discount of 10 per cent was allowed by defendant Skeen on all material furnished for said improvements. This discount would not have been allowed to any one of the defendants, excepting the owner of the fee, the said Wilhoit Springs Mineral Water Company. The president of that company and the defendant Skeen had long been friends and at one time partners in electrical works. Because of those relations the defendant Skeen gave to the Wilhoit Springs Mineral Water Company the favor of that discount. It would not have been given to a stranger. .It is not disputed that the president of the Wilhoit Springs Water Company went to the place of business of the said Robert Skeen and interested the said Robert Skeen in furnishing the material. The said Edw. Labbe claims that he simply introduced one of the three lessees, to wit: One B. 0. Rowan. The defendant Robert Skeen testified that in addition to introducing the said Rowan, he re *173 quested Skeen to go out to Wilhoit Springs to ascertain what was needed and to furnish the supplies. One cannot read the testimony without being convinced that Robert Skeen thought he was furnishing the material to the Wilhoit Springs Mineral Water Company through its president, the said Edw. Labbe. He was led to that belief by the conduct of the said Labbe. He would not have given it the discount that he did if he had not believed that the said Edw. Labbe was the purchaser of the material. It was the duty of the said Edw. Labbe, if he was not purchasing it, to have conveyed to his old time friend and former partner the facts so that said Skeen could have protected himself. We are persuaded that Skeen sold the material to said Labbe as president of the Wilhoit Springs Mineral Water Company, which has received all the benefits of the material so furnished and has never paid for them.

It is also claimed by the appellant Wilhoit Springs Mineral Water Company that the lien filed by the defendant Skeen was not filed within thirty days after the completion of the buildings in which said material was used. The record shows, however, that the last item furnished by said Robert Skeen was within thirty days of the filing of Ms lien. It is stipulated in the record that the material, though used in different structures, was furnished under one contract, and that the several structures constituted but one enterprise and that it was necessary for the convenient use of the structures for the purpose for which they were erected that the entire tract of 300 acres should be sold. In addition to the foregoing considerations the work undertaken by defendants Poore et al. and Wilhoit Springs Mineral Water Co. was not completed. Defendant Skeen had until *174 thirty days after the completion of the work in which to file his notice of lien: Wills v. Zanello, 59 Or. 291 (117 Pac. 291); Tait et al. v. Stryker et al., 117 Or. 338 (243 Pac. 104).

The objections to the lien of defendant Finnigan & Williams, Inc., are three. First, that the lien was not filed within thirty days of the substantial completion of the work. It is claimed that the work was substantially completed on the opening day, to wit: June 12, 1921, or not later than July 10, 1921. The lien was not filed until August 23, 1921. The record, however, shows that the work was not completed when the premises were taken over by the creditors, to wit: August 18, 1921. The testimony convinces us that the work never was completed. It was interrupted by the creditors as aforesaid. Materialmen and laborers may file a lien against a structure at any time within thirty days after claimant ceases to work or deliver the material, or within thirty days after the completion of the entire work: Wills v. Zanello, 59 Or. 291 (117 Pac. 291); Tait et al. v. Stryker et al., 117 Or. 338 (243 Pac. 104). It is our opinion that the lien was filed in time.

Second, Finnigan & Williams, Inc. is not entitled to the lien for labor for the reason that under the circumstances the laborers were the employees of the lessees, and Finnigan & Williams, Inc. is not a contractor or a laborer under the statute. The evidence shows that the labor done for which defendant Finnigan & Williams, Inc. claims the lien was performed by its own employees. It has been ruled by this court that a corporation, firm or person supplying material and labor is entitled to a lien for the labor supplied as well as the material: Christman v. Salway et al., 103 Or. 666 (205 Pac. 541).

*175 Third, Finnigan & Williams, Inc. is not entitled to a lien for the materials furnished for it did not deliver or mail the statutory five-day written notice within five days after it had commenced to deliver materials and might file a lien therefor. The evidence convinces us that a notice was mailed on May 31, 1921, addressed to the appellant Wilhoit Springs Mineral Water Company, Labbe Bldg., Portland, Oregon. Finnigan & Williams, Inc. claim a lien for all material furnished after five days prior to the last-named date. It is contended that the address of the defendant Wilhoit Springs Mineral Water Company was not in the Labbe Building but in the Gaseo Building. The name Wilhoit Springs Mineral Water Company did not appear in the Portland directory for the years 1919, 1920 and 1921, but it did appear in the directory for 1917 and 1918, and it is there given as the Labbe Building. The defendant Wilhoit Springs Mineral Water Company knew that the construction work was being carried on. Indeed, their lease with Poore and others required that it be done.

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Bluebook (online)
251 P. 268, 120 Or. 163, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicolai-neppach-co-v-poore-or-1926.