Reed v. Fuller

65 S.W.2d 841, 16 Tenn. App. 47, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 26
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 20, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 65 S.W.2d 841 (Reed v. Fuller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reed v. Fuller, 65 S.W.2d 841, 16 Tenn. App. 47, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 26 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

This is a discretionary appeal from the Chancery Court, upon a designated record, to review the decision of the Chancellor upon one question. The Chancellor denied to the appellant a mechanic’s lien upon tw'o houses, which the appellant had constructed upon two lots owned by the defendant, under a contract for a stipulated price of $1875 each. The appellant seeks in this court to have his lien declared upon this property. The appellant, Frank E. Reed, was the contractor and he filed the bill more than sixty days after the completion of the contract to have declared and enforced a mechanic’s lien against the property; he alleged that others who had furnished material were entitled to a mechanic’s lien also, and he filed the bill as a general lienors’ bill, making the owner, J. F. Fuller, and the members of the firm of G. 0. Crouch & Son, a claimant of a lien, parties defendant. He prayed that all others asserting claims intervene in this proceeding by petition and assert their claims, and that an injunction issue injoining all parties from prosecuting claims in other suits; he prayed also for an attachment, and for general relief.

*48 The injunction was issued, and an attachment, under a fiat of the court, was issued and levied upon the two houses and lots described in the bill. Several claimants filed petitions asserting mechanic’s liens, and prayed for an attachment against the property. Certain creditors of the owner, who had debts secured by trust deeds resting upon the respective property, intervened by petition and asserted their liens and sought to have them declared superior liens.

The bill was filed April 24, 1928, and described the two lots as follows:

“Lots 522 and 525 of Allen’s Addition No. 1 to Bast Highland, ’ ’

but as a matter of fact this was an inaccurate description, and described two lots upon which the parties had no claim; the correct description is: “Lots 522 and 523 of Allen’s Addition No. 2 in East Highland.” The first description is defective in two particulars, the lots were placed in the wrong addition, and the number of one of the lots is given as “525,” when the correct number is “523.”

The attachment was levied upon the two lots described in the original bill, and therefore did not fasten upon the two lots upon which the two houses were built.

On the first day of June, 1928, a creditor intervened by petition asserting a mechanic’s lien on lot 522 of Allen’s Addition No. 2, and prayed for an attachment to be issued and levied upon this lot. An attachment was issued and levied upon lot 522. Upon this day, June 1st, the complainant, Reed, discovered the erroneous description contained in his bill, and applied to the Court for an amendment correcting the description. This amendment was granted and the bill amended so as to correctly describe the lots on which the houses were built. But the amendment contained no prayer for another attachment to be levied upon the property as correctly described, and none was granted, issued or levied. Later in the proceeding another intervening petitioner sought a lien upon lot 523, Allen’s Addition No. 2, and the Chancellor held that this attachment was effectual, and so both lots were brought into court, and in this cause, by petitioners, in the event the amended original bill, and the attachment issued prior to the amendment, was ineffectual.

The appellant, Reed, insists that the amendment speaks as of the date of the filing of the bill, and ¿hat the misdescription in the levy on the attachment is controlled by the description in the bill, and therefore the property was legally attached, citing Crumley v. Reicon Co., 4 App. Cas., 659. (Had the attachment been levied upon the property upon which the lien rested, and the levy incorrectly describes it, while the bill correctly describes it, then apparently this authority is in point, but the levy was not made upon the property upon which the lien rested, but upon other property, and the officer made no error in his description of his levy).

*49 Beed advanced other positions, and the Chancellor disposed of his claims as follows:

‘ ‘ In his bill filed April 24, 1928, Beed described the lots upon which he claimed a lien as follows: ‘Lots 522 and 523 of Allen’s Addition No. 1 to East Highland,’ and an attachment following said description was prayed, issued and levied. But these were not the lots upon which he erected the houses at all. The lots upon which he erected the houses were as follows: ‘Lots 522 and 523 of Allen’s Addition No. 2 to East Highland.’ On June 1, 1928, Beed was allowed to amend the bill so as to correctly describe the lots upon which he claimed a lien, as last above stated, but no attachment of these lots was prayed or granted, issued or levied.
‘ ‘ Of course it goes without saying that attachment of the property upon which a mechanic’s lien is asserted is absolutely essential to the preservation and enforcement of the lien. Solicitor for Beed has made an earnest and able argument that the amendment of the bill was sufficient to cure the failure to have an attachment levied upon the right property and make the attachment of the wrong property good, and he cites the following eases, viz: Crumley v. Reicon Co., 4 App. Cas., 659; Brown v. Jacobi, 10 Heis., 353; Stout v. Swaney, 3 Tenn. Ch., 93, and Nicely v. Nicely, 8 Tenn. App., 134. None of these cases support the contention. In the first four of them there was an attachment of the property upon which the lien was claimed. The last case cited, the lien claimant filed his petition in a proceeding to wind up an insolvent decedent estate, in which the property was already impounded, and it was held that an actual attachment was not necessary in such case, but that case does not resemble Beed’s case.
“Beed has lost any lien he had, and the only relief he is en!titled to is the accounting heretofore ordered. ’ ’

We likewise do not think the cases relied upon are in point; we think this question is to be decided upon a construction of Shannon’s Code, Sections 5306, and especially 5307. We think there are but two reported eases construing this latter section, and these cases, while instructive, are not determinative of the questions made in this case. Before discussing them we will set out the two sections of the Code mentioned:

“5306. The mechanic’s lien is enforced by attachment at law or in equity sued out, upon bill or petition under oath setting forth the facts, and proceeded with under the provision of the preceding chapter; or it may be enforced by judgment and execution 'at law, to be levied on the property on which the lien is.”
“5307. ' Where there are several persons entitled to the lien *50 given by this article, all, or any number of them, may join in one attachment suit in equity, or, upon the filing of one bill, the rest may come in by petition, without suing out a new attachment, by giving bond and security, as if the attachment had been taken out by the petitioner. ’ ’

Now, in the case of Ragon v. Howard, 97 Tenn., 334, the court in construing this last section held that a petitioner who did not make anyone a party to the petition, and who.

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Bluebook (online)
65 S.W.2d 841, 16 Tenn. App. 47, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-fuller-tennctapp-1932.