Sabin v. Connor

21 F. Cas. 124, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 37
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedMarch 30, 1871
StatusPublished

This text of 21 F. Cas. 124 (Sabin v. Connor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sabin v. Connor, 21 F. Cas. 124, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 37 (D. Nev. 1871).

Opinion

HILLYER, District Judge.

The bill is filed to have the lien of the defendant, a miner, declared null and void. Defendant demurs to the bill for want of equity. The facts are, briefly, that the defendant worked in the mine of the bankrupt, the Hope Mining Company, from about March 31, 1870, to February 10, 1871. Creditors’ petition "against the bankrupt was filed February 11, 1871; adjudication, March 2d, and assignment, March 3d. The defendant filed his notice of lien, account, and description of the property sought to be charged with the lien, on the 1st day of March. On the 4th day of March, the legislature passed a mechanic’s lien law, and repealed, without any saving of rights acquired before that time, all former laws. The questions raised upon the demurrer are: First. That filing the notice, account, and description are necessary to create the lien, and, this having been done after the commencement of the bankruptcy proceeding, the lien cannot avail. Second. That the act of March 4th, by repealing the law under which this lien (if any) accrued, without any saving clause, has destroyed all remedy for the enforcement thereof.

On the first point the argument for the plaintiff is that the lien is created by filing the account and description required, and not by performing the labor: that the laborer has no lien until the account is filed, and not having done this prior to the commencement of proceedings in bankruptcy, to which the title of the assignee relates, no lien can be charged on the bankrupt's estate after such commencement of proceedings. Section 1 of the act supplementary to the mechanic’s lien law of 1861 (St. 1807, p. 48} provides: “All miners or other persons performing labor to the amount of twenty dollars or upwards, * * * [125]*125for the owner * * * of any lode of gold or silver bearing quartz, * * * he or they shall have a lien upon said lode,” etc. Section 2 provides that “all the provisions of the mechanic’s lien law of 1S01, respecting the mode of recording, securing and enforcing mechanics’ liens, shall apply hereto.” It seems plain from this language that it is the performance of the labor that gives or raises the lieD in favor of the laborer, and for the mode of recording, securing and enforcing this lien already in existence, the provisions of another law are adopted.

Referring now to the lien law of 1861 (St. 1861, p. 35), section 2 declares that every person wishing to avail himself of the benefits of the act (that is, of the lien) shall within sixty days after the completion of the building, etc., file his account and a description of the property to be charged with such lien. Section 4 mates the lien a preferred one over every lien or incumbrance which shall have attached to the' property subsequent to the time at which the work was commenced. Section 6 provides that no such lien shall bind the property longer than six months after filing the same; and section 7, that such liens may be enforced by suit in any court of competent jurisdiction. Now, it seems clear to my mind that the lien exists from the time the labor is begun, and that filing the account and description and bringing suit within the time prescribed are only the mode by which the laborer may avail himself of such lien.

Judge Blatchford, in Re Dey [Case No. 3, 870], under the law of New Jersey, held that performing the labor did not create the lien. A careful reading of that law as quoted by the learned judge will show that there is a material difference between the language of that law and our own. The first section of the New Jersey law declares the debt shall be a lien, but the 12th section provides that no debt shall be a lien unless a claim is filed as provided in the act. The statute of New Jersey is not at hand, and it may well be that Judge Blatchford found enough, taking the whole law together to carry him to the conclusion that the legislature of the state did not intend a lien should exist until the claim was filed. On the other hand, the supreme court of Massachusetts, under the law of that state (not varying substantially from our own) as to creating the lien, held that the statute created the lien as soon as the labor is performed, and that the certificate necessary to keep the lien alive might be filed after the bankruptcy proceedings have been commenced. Clifton v. Foster [103 Mass. 233]. The Massachusetts law declared that, unless the certificate was filed within thirty days, the lien-should be “dissolved.” Our law says the party shall file the account, etc., in sixty days, if he wishes to avail himself of the lien. Both statutes create a- lien when the labor is performed, but in one case it is dissolved, and in the other unavailable, unless the certificate is filed within the time prescribed. In California, under a law from which our own Is copied, it has been held that the lien attached from the time of the delivery of the material (Tibbetts v. Moore, 23 Cal. 208), and that the lien is deemed to have accrued at the commencement of the work (McCrea v. Craig, Id. 522). The defendant, then, had a lien on the property described when the bankruptcy proceedings were commenced, and the assignee took the estate charged with this e’quity. The filing of the account and description was necessary to preserve his lien, and this cannot be considered as any unlawful interference with the rights of the assignee, or the authority of this court. Clifton v. Foster, supra.

Upon the second point: The act of March 4, 1871, re-enacts in substance the laws of 1861 and 1867, with some modifications, and it also repeals those laws in direct terms. It is plain that the legislature never intended to destroy rights acquired under the old laws, but simply to consolidate all the laws upon the subject of mechanics’ liens, and to extend it to some objects not before included. Unless, therefore, the repealment have an effect contrary to this intention, by reason of the unqualified terms of the repealing statute, it will be entirely consonant with justice to carry out the evident intention. In a case in point the supreme court of the United States said: “The new act took effect upon the repeal of the old, and may more properly be said to be substituted in the place of and to continue in force, with modifications, the provisions of the original act, rather than to have abrogated and annulled them.” Steamship Co. v. Joliffe, 2 Wall. [69 U. S.] 450. The legislature of Massachusetts in adopting the Revised Statutes, repealed all former laws; and, speaking of the effect of this repeal, the supreme court of that state said: “There was no moment in which the repealing act stood in force without being replaced by the corresponding provisions of the Revised Statutes, and the practical effect is a continuance, and not an abrogation, of the old law.” Wright v. Oakley, 5 Metc. [Mass.] 400. The law of 1871. which went into effect the instant the law of 1861 was repealed, provides that suits upon the liens may be brought in any court of competent jurisdiction. This, upon the authorities cited, may fairly be considered as a continuance of the law of 1861, which contained precisely the same language. The lien holder has a remedy preserved to him still by the new law, and the case stands very differently than it would if the law of 1S61 had been repealed without the enactment of a substitute therefor.

But, if the repeal could have the effect contended for by the plaintiff, it would, in my judgment, “impair the obligation” of the defendant’s contract. The law in existence at the time the defendant performed his labor was a part of his contract. After the labor was done, he had, by virtue of that law, a lien for the amount due him.

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Related

Smith v. Morse
2 Cal. 524 (California Supreme Court, 1852)
Tibbetts v. Moore
23 Cal. 208 (California Supreme Court, 1863)
Quackenbush v. Danks
1 Denio 128 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1845)
Clifton v. Foster
103 Mass. 233 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1869)

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Bluebook (online)
21 F. Cas. 124, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sabin-v-connor-nvd-1871.