Red River Lumber Co. v. Children of Isræl

73 N.W. 203, 7 N.D. 46, 1897 N.D. LEXIS 58
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 73 N.W. 203 (Red River Lumber Co. v. Children of Isræl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Red River Lumber Co. v. Children of Isræl, 73 N.W. 203, 7 N.D. 46, 1897 N.D. LEXIS 58 (N.D. 1897).

Opinions

Corliss, C. J.

Plaintiff has thus far been unsuccessful in its efforts to establish an alleged mechanic’s lien. The ground on which the District Court based its decision that the lien was void is the insufficiency of the notice of lien. This notice is claimed to be defective, because it does not contain a correct statement as to the owner of the property. The legal title was, at the time the lien was filed, in the defendant Griffith. Defendant the Congregation of the Children of Israel was in possession of the premises under a contract with Griffiith to purchase such property. The agreement for the erection of the building on this land, for which the plaintiff furnished materials, was made with the vendees in this contract of purchase. Plaintiff sold the lumber which was used in this structure, and for which it claims a lien to the person with whom the vendee, the Congregation of the Children of Israel, made the agreement for the construction thereof. It is therefore a subcontractor under the statute, and, in determining what facts the notice of lien must embody, we must turn to section 5476, Comp. Laws, the statute in force when the notice of [49]*49lien was filed. That section is entirely silent on the subject of ownership. It is impossible to discover therein any requirement that the name of the owner of the land be set forth in the statement to be filed. All that is necessary under the section is that he should file “ a just and true account of the demand due him after allowing all credits, and containing a correct description of the property to be charged with said lien, and verified by affidavit.” This section was exactly, literally, and fully complied with by the plointiff. On this point there is no dispute; but it is insisted, and this contention was upheld by the lower court, that another section (5477) prescribing the duties of the clerk of court on receiving a notice of lien for filing has, in some way, not explained and to us inexplicable, injected an additional requirement into section 5476. This section provides that ‘‘the clerk of the District Court shall indorse upon every account the date of its filing, and make an abstract thereof in a book to be kept by him for that purpose, and properly indorsed, containing the date of its filing, the name of the person filing the lien, the amount of said lien, the name of the person against whose property the lien is filed, and a description of the property to be charged with the same.” Although section 5476 required only certain facts to be specified to constitute a valid lien, it is claimed that the courts should ingraft upon this section another requirement, merely because the legislature, after it has declared what a valid notice of lien should contain, has instructed the clerk touching his duties in connection with such notice after it has been filed. It seems to us that this case illustrates a dangerous tendency on the part of courts to tamper with the plain import of statutory law, by reading into unambiguous statutes a conjectured meaning, which the legislature has excluded therefrom. The duty cast upon the clerk by section 5477 can in the great majority of cases be so performed that the name of the person against whom the lien is filed will appear in the abstract thereof which the clerk is directed to make by this section. In most cases, the public records, accessible to him, will [50]*50disclose the name of the owner of the legal title to the property; and, as a rule, it is against such an owner that a mechanic’s lien is claimed. The mere fact that in a small percentage of cases it may be difficult or impossible for the clerk to ascertain the name of the persons against whom the lien is filed, unless the notice of lien states the name of such person, is no reason for holding that a statute which, in effect, declares that the name of the owner need not be inserted, shduld, by judicial legislation, be so amended as to require this very thing to be done. The notice in this case did in fact corx'ectly state the name of the owner of the legal title. But the lien was not and could not be filed against his interest in the land, for he did not contx'act for or authoi'ize the erecting of the building for which the plaintiff furnished the lumber for which the lien was filed. Had an innocent purchaser or incumbrancer dealt with the vendee in the contract of sale, relying upon what might perhaps be regarded as a statement in the notice of lien that the lien was claimed against the vendor’s interest in the land, and not against the vendee’s interest, it might be that the plaintiff would be estopped fi'om setting up the lien as against such purchaser or incumbi'ancer. But no such question arises in this case. The contest is between the vendee in the contract of sale and the holder’s of subsequent mechanic’s liens on the propex'ty, on the one hand, and the plaintiff herein, on the othei\ Thex-e is no pretense that the holder of any lien has been misled, by the statement in the notice of lien that the vendor in the contx'act of sale was the owner of the land, into believing that the lien was filed against such vendoi', and not against the vendee. The only question is whether the' lien is valid. We hold that it is, nor do we regard the question as at all debatable. The case of Welsh v. McGrath (Iowa) 10 N. W. Rep. 810, is directly in point in support of our view.

It is urged that the plaintiff cannot maintain this action, because’ it is a foreign corporation, and the agent appointed by it, under the statute requixdng such corporations to appoint agents on whom process can be served, had at the time the lumber was furnished [51]*51ceased to reside within the state. Since that time no other resident agent for this purpose has been selected by it. It is urged that it follows that the plaintiff, when the lumber was delivered, and when this action was commenced, and also when it was tried, was in the same position that it would have occupied had it never complied with the statute at all requiring the appointment of such an agent. We may concede this without affecting the plaintiff’s right to maintain 'this suit. The question is settled in this state adversely to the contention of counsel for defendant. Mill Co. v. Bartlett, 3 N. D. 138, 54 N. W. Rep. 544. See, also, Wright v. Lee, 2 S. D. 596. 51 N. W. Rep. 706. There is no force in the claim that the lien was not filed in time. The trial court found that it was, and the evidence fully supports the finding.

It is urged that the notice of lien was not properly verified. An agent of the plaintiff swore to an affidavit in which he positively stated that, “under and by virtue of said contract, said Red River Lumber Company furnished lumber and materials for said frame church building as specified in the annexed account, at the respective dates, and at and for the respective prices specified in said account; that said account is a just and true account of the demand due him after allowing all credits' and offsets under said. contract for the lumber and materials aforesaid; that there is due and owing on said account to said Red River Lumber Company, after allowing all credits, the sum of five hundred sixty-seven 57-100 dollars, etc. Attached to the affidavit was an itemized account. That the verification could be made by an agent is clear. Fullerton v. Leonard, 3 S. D. 118, 52 N. W. Rep. 325. The form of the verification was sufficient. Nor is it material that in the itemized account the dollar mark was not used to differentiate dollars from cents. The separation of the two figures at the right hand from the other figures by a period indicates which of these figures represent dollars and which represent cents.

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Red River Lumber Co. v. Children of Isræl
73 N.W. 203 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 N.W. 203, 7 N.D. 46, 1897 N.D. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/red-river-lumber-co-v-children-of-isrl-nd-1897.