Queal Lumber Co. v. Lipman

206 N.W. 627, 200 Iowa 1376
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 15, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 206 N.W. 627 (Queal Lumber Co. v. Lipman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Queal Lumber Co. v. Lipman, 206 N.W. 627, 200 Iowa 1376 (iowa 1925).

Opinions

Albert, J.

The appellant Graeser is the owner of a quarter section of land situated adjacent to the White Pole Road, west of the city of Des Moines. On the 17th day of May, 1923, he entered into a lease with one Lipman for ab.out one acre of ground in the southwest corner of said quarter section, the lease to run for a period of 25 years, at an annual rental varying during the term thereof. The lease required the lessee to pay all taxes levied against the premises, provided that said premises should be used for a restaurant and eating house, and also contained the following provisions:

“Lessee agrees to complete prior to August 1, 1923, the construction on the premises herein leased of a building and improvements costing not less than six thousand dollars ($6,000). Neither the lessee nor anyone claiming by, through or under lessee shall have any right to file or place any mechanic’s lien of any kind or character whatsoever upon said premises, or upon any of the buildings or improvements thereon, and notice is hereby given that no contractor, subcontractor or anyone else that may furnish any material, service or labor for any buildings or improvements, alteration, repairs or any parts thereof at any time shall be or become entitled to any lien thereon whatsoever. And for the further security of the lessor, sa'id lessee agrees to give actual notice thereof in advance to any and all contractors, subcontractors or other persons, firms or corporations that may furnish any such material, service or labor. At the expiration of this lease, all improvements thereon shall become the property of the lessor.”

This lease was filed of record on May 21, 1923, and duly recorded in the office of the county recorder of Polls County, Iowa. Lessee took possession of the premises at or about said time, and proceeded to erect the building and improvements called for by the terms of the lease. No labor or materials were furnished by any of the claimants herein prior to the date of the recording of the said lease.

*1378 The appellee and interveners filed their respective claims for mechanic’s liens within the time and in the manner provided by statute. No question is raised as to the correctness of the liens or the filing' of the same. The question as to the acknowledgment of the liens will be disposed of later.

The lessee, after the completion of the building, occupied it for a short period, and then abandoned the same and absconded. The district court held that the improvements were separate from the realty, and ordered the same sold separately and removed from the premises. From this judgment, appeal is taken.

Of the real questions involved in this case, the first urged is, A¥hat is the effect of the proAdsions of the lease, as against a mechanic’s lien? To a fair comprehension of this question, it is necessary to first determine the status of the appellant Graeser under this lease. He AAras and is the fee title holder. The 25-year lease aaus an estate carved out of the fee-simple title. It is too elementary to need discussion that the lien claimants cannot acquire a greater interest in the real estate than that held by the lessee. The lessor, aside from receiving the annual rental and haAdng the taxes paid on the leased property, under the terms of the lease Avas, day by day, acquiring a larger interest in the improvements put upon the property. If the judgment of the lower court is to stand, it amounts in reality to an abrogation of the lease contract, and deprives the lessor of all of his valuable rights under the terms of his contract. As said, after he had day by day acquired an interest in the improvements put upon the property, the decree of The district court Avould appropriate his interest in the improvements, for the benefit of the lien holders. This is neither laAV nor equity.

In the making of this lease between the lessor and the lessee, they had the right to provide any terms and conditions they might determine upon, and to place the same in the lease contract, as long as such terms and conditions were not unlawful. To hold otherwise would be to infringe upon the right of private contract; We are unable to find anything in the terms of the lease which could not be the subject of lawful contract between these parties. Having thus made a lawful contract, the lessor proceeded at once to file and record the same.

Section 2925, Code of 1897, provides:

*1379 “No instrument affecting real estate is of any validity against subsequent purchasers for a valuable consideration, without notice, unless recorded in the office of the recorder of the county in which the same lies. ’ ’

As heretofore explained, the lessor, being not only the holder of the fee and reversionary interest, but having a definite and fixed interest in the improvements themselves (which, under the contract of the parties, were undoubtedly of a permanent nature, and therefore a part of the real estate), had a right, under the aforesaid section, to record this instrument.

Much attention has been given by counsel and the court to the question of the recording* of this lease; but we do not determine the effect thereof, because the question subsequently discussed herein is controlling in this particular case. We call attention, however, to Maine v. Constantine, 157 Iowa 625, and Loser v. Plainfield Sav. Bank, 149 Iowa 672.

We have settled that a mechanic’s lien claimant is not a subsequent purchaser, within the meaning* of the Recording Act. Fletcher v. Kelly, 88 Iowa 475. It being thus settled that the mechanic’s lien holders are not subsequent purchasers, they then stand in the shoes of Lipman herein, and, as heretofore said, their rights cannot rise higher than his, as against the lessor. Marker v. Davis, 200 Iowa 446.

It is fundamental, under the Iowa Mechanic’s Lien Law, that, before one can successfully maintain a lien, he must have a contract with the owner, his agent, trustee, contractor, or subcontractor. It is so provided by Section 3089, Code of 1897, and we have repeatedly held that, without a contract with the owner, no lien can be maintained. Redman v. Williamson, 2 Iowa 488; Wilkins v. Litchfield, 69 Iowa 465; Carney v. Cook, 80 Iowa 747; Littleton Sav. Bank v. Osceola Land Co., 76 Iowa 660; Templin v. Chicago, B. & P. R. Co., 73 Iowa 548.

There is no claim whatever made herein (it would not be available, if made) that the lien claimants had any contract whatever with the lessor, Graeser. It must necessarily follow, therefore, that claimants can enforce nothing against Graeser’s interest in this property. It is suggested that, because the lease contemplated the mailing* of these improvements, it could be held that Lipman was Graeser’s agent, within the *1380 meaning of the-statute; but this cannot be so held in the instant' ease, because the lease specifically provides otherwise, and the cases cited by'the lien holders herein to support this doctrine are all cases wherein the facts are such that the court could imply the agency. As supporting this doctrine, see Stewart v. Talbott, 58 Colo. 563 (146 Pac. 771), and cases there cited;

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Bluebook (online)
206 N.W. 627, 200 Iowa 1376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/queal-lumber-co-v-lipman-iowa-1925.