Questions Submitted by: The Honorable Avery Frix, Oklahoma State Senate, District 9

2025 OK AG 8
CourtOklahoma Attorney General Reports
DecidedJuly 1, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 OK AG 8 (Questions Submitted by: The Honorable Avery Frix, Oklahoma State Senate, District 9) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oklahoma Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Questions Submitted by: The Honorable Avery Frix, Oklahoma State Senate, District 9, 2025 OK AG 8 (Okla. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

OSCN Found Document:Questions Submitted by: The Honorable Avery Frix, Oklahoma State Senate, District 9

Questions Submitted by: The Honorable Avery Frix, Oklahoma State Senate, District 9
2025 OK AG 8
Decided: 07/01/2025
OKLAHOMA ATTORNEY GENERAL OPINIONS


Cite as: 2025 OK AG 8, __ P.3d __

¶0 This office has received your request for an Attorney General Opinion in which you ask, in effect, the following questions:

1. Under what circumstances, if any, may a wrecker operator's possessory lien on a truck and trailer be extended to include the cost of services performed by a separate environmental remediation company?
2. To the extent that such a possessory lien extends to include services performed by the environmental remediation company, may the wrecker operator withhold release of the property until payment for all services has been rendered?
3. May a single possessory lien cover both a truck and trailer towed by a wrecker operator, or are the truck and trailer each subject to separate possessory liens?

I.
Summary

¶1 Oklahoma statutes grant a possessory lien to a wrecker operator that (1) renders a service to a vehicle owner; (2) which service is enumerated in statute; (3) while the wrecker operator lawfully possesses the vehicle; and (4) the wrecker operator is still in possession of the vehicle. See 42 O.S.Supp.2024, §§ 911 Statutory liens like this one are "strictly confined" to the terms of the statute creating them. H2K Tech., Inc. v. WSP USA, Inc., 2021 OK 59503 P.3d 1177

II.

Background

¶2 When a vehicle accident results in the release of a hazardous substance, the Oklahoma Emergency Response Act, 27A O.S.2021, §§ 4Id. § 4-1-103(E). DEQ is then empowered to "initiate cleanup operations of the release [of hazardous waste]." Id. § 4-1-103(G).

¶3 The cost of environmental cleanup is borne by the "responsible party," defined as "any person who owned, operated, or otherwise controlled activities at the facility at the time the incident[.]" 27A O.S.2021, §§ 42 By DEQ rule, the responsible party "may employ any licensed highway spill remediation service unless the on-scene law enforcement officer has determined that there are hazardous conditions that pose an imminent threat to health or the environment . . . [in which case] the law enforcement officer may contact any licensed highway spill remediation service . . . needed to resolve the emergency." Okla. Admin. Code § 252:210-1-3(a).

¶4 Separately, vehicle accidents often require a wrecker to tow away inoperable vehicles. As noted in a previous opinion from this office, wrecker operators are not responsible for remediating hazardous substances: "the simple task of a wrecker or towing service is to clean up after an accident to ensure highway safety . . . [t]hus, where hazardous or dangerous materials are involved in an accident scene, it is not the obligation of the wrecker who removes vehicles to also remove the hazardous or dangerous materials." 2000 OK AG 42

¶5 Your questions involve a scenario where a wrecker has towed and stored a vehicle following an accident where environmental remediation was necessary. The rates charged by the wrecker operator in this scenario may depend on such variables as distance towed, hours spent on the tow, size of the vehicle, and whether any specialized skill or service was required. 3 In certain cases, the wrecker operator may also collect the costs of environmental remediation. See 47 O.S.2021 & Supp.2024, §§ 953.1(A), 953.2(A). You ask whether the statutory lien allowed for wreckers in possession of a vehicle may be extended to cover the costs of environmental remediation.

III.
Discussion

¶6 When a wrecker removes and stores a vehicle following an accident, it is granted a possessory lien to ensure payment for its services. 47 O.S.2021, § 962See supra footnote 1. In relevant part, Sections 91/91A provide that:

Any person who, while lawfully in possession of. . . [any vehicle, all-terrain vehicle, utility vehicle, manufactured home, motorcycle, boat, outboard motor, or trailer], renders any service to the owner thereof by furnishing storage, rental space, material, labor or skill for the protection, improvement, safekeeping, towing, right to occupy space, storage, or carriage thereof, has a special lien thereon, dependent on possession, for the compensation, if any, which is due to such person from the owner for such service.

42 O.S.Supp.2024, §§ 91H2K Tech., 2021 OK 59Riffe Petroleum Co. v. Great Nat'l Corp. Inc., 1980 OK 112614 P.2d 576Id.

A. A wrecker cannot extend a lien granted under Sections 91/91A to cover the costs of environmental remediation performed by a separate company.

¶7 To obtain a possessory lien under Sections 91/91A, a wrecker operator must (1) render a service to the owner of the vehicle or other property; (2) which service is specifically enumerated in the statute; (3) while in lawful possession of the vehicle or other property; and (4) still be in possession of the vehicle or other property. See 42 O.S.Supp.2024, §§ 91

¶8 As to the first and second elements, services that qualify for a lien are specifically enumerated in Sections 91/91A, and include "furnishing storage, rental space, material, labor or skill for the protection, improvement, safekeeping, towing, right to occupy space, storage or carriage of" the vehicle or other property. Put simply, the services listed in Sections 91/91A revolve around the removal, securing, and storage of the property that is subject to the lien. The wrecker operator plainly provides such services to a wrecked vehicle. See, e.g., 2000 OK AG 42 An environmental remediation provider does not. Services provided by an environmental remediation company are just that -- the containment and ultimate removal of hazardous materials from an accident site. See, e.g., Okla. Admin. Code § 252:210-1-2 (defining "remediation" under DEQ rules implementing the Oklahoma Emergency Response Act). The company's services provide a benefit to the public and the surrounding area, not to the vehicle that the wrecker removes. Because Section 91/91A liens attach only with respect to specific services provided for the benefit of the property subject to the lien, and environmental remediation companies neither provide those services nor benefit that property, the statute does not allow for attachment of a possessory lien to secure payment for environmental remediation services. This is particularly the case where, as here, the statutory language creating the lien is to be interpreted narrowly. H2K Tech., 2021 OK 59

¶9 Regarding the third and fourth elements, taking and maintaining possession are essential to obtaining a possessory lien. See Williamson v. Winningham, 1947 OK 231186 P.2d 644i.e., physical) possession of the vehicle and constructive possession, which involves a level of control over the property even without physical possession. See 42 O.S.Supp.2024, §§ 91

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2025 OK AG 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/questions-submitted-by-the-honorable-avery-frix-oklahoma-state-senate-oklaag-2025.