Standard Oil Co. of Indiana v. Vanderboom

158 N.E. 151, 326 Ill. 418
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1927
DocketNo. 16964. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 158 N.E. 151 (Standard Oil Co. of Indiana v. Vanderboom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Oil Co. of Indiana v. Vanderboom, 158 N.E. 151, 326 Ill. 418 (Ill. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

This case comes to this court from the Appellate Court upon petition for certiorari. The action was commenced by a bill in equity by defendant in error, the Standard Oil Company of Indiana, to establish a mechanic’s lien against money, bonds or warrants in the possession of the State of Illinois, under section 23 of the Mechanic’s Lien law.

C. C. Vanderboom & Sons, a co-partnership, (hereinafter referred to as the contractors,) had contracts to build for the State of Illinois two separate sections of hard road. During the progress of the work defendant in error furnished the contractors gasoline, oil and grease to the amount of $3607.92. The gasoline, oil and grease were used in operating motor trucks, concrete mixers and other motor-driven appliances and machinery used in the construction of the road. The contract required the contractors to construct the road and furnish all material, supplies and labor at their own cost and expense. It was stipulated that defendant in error had complied with the requirements of section 23 and that there remained in the State treasury funds against which no voucher or other evidence of indebtedness had been issued. The circuit court found by its decree the amount due and owing to defendant in error from the contractors for gasoline and oil furnished to and used by them and consumed in the operation of the machinery in the construction of the improvement, and decreed that defendant in error have a lien on the funds due from the State to the contractors for the amount due and interest thereon. The decree was affirmed by the Appellate Court.

The question presented is whether gasoline, oil and grease sold and delivered by defendant in error to the contractors and used in operating trucks, concrete mixers and machinery by them, but which did not become a part of the completed improvement, are lienable under section 23.

Section 1 of the Mechanic’s Lien law provides for a lien in favor of anyone who furnishes a contractor material, etc., for improving private property when the material is used “for the purpose of or in” the improvement, or for the services of an architect or structural engineer “for any such purpose,” and for a lien for labor or services as superintendent in building or altering the improvement. That section in its present form was enacted in the revision of 1895. Prior to that time an architect who prepared plans and specifications for the improvement could not maintain an action for a lien. This court held in Freeman v. Rinaker, 185 Ill. 172, that under section 1 of the act of 1895 an architect who performs services “for the purpose of or in” building an improvement is entitled to a lien.

Section 23, as amended in 1919, provides that any person who shall furnish material, etc., to any contractor having a contract for a public improvement for any county, township, school district, city or municipality in this State shall have a lien on the money, bonds or warrants due or to become due to the contractor under his contract. “Any person who shall furnish material, apparatus, fixtures, machinery or labor to any contractor having a contract for public improvement for the State, may have a lien on the money, bonds or warrants due or about to become due such contractor under the contract, by filing with the official whose duty it is to pay such contractor, a sworn statement of the claim showing with particularity the several items and the amount claimed to be due on each; but the lien shall attach to only that portion of the money, bonds or warrants against which no voucher or other evidence of indebtedness has been issued and delivered to the contractor by or on behalf of the State.” The lien provided for by section 1 was against a private improvement, but as that could not be in a case of a public improvement, the lien provided for by section 23 was against the money, bonds or warrants due the contractor against which no voucher or other evidence of indebtedness had been issued or delivered to the contractor.

Plaintiffs in error contend that as the statute for mechanics’ liens is in derogation of the common law it should be construed strictly, and as so construed the meaning of the statute is that the materials must be furnished the contractor, for the State, to entitle the party furnishing them to a lien. We think that is directly contrary to what the statute says. The statute is, that any person who shall furnish materials to any contractor “having a contract for public improvement for the State” may have a lien. The statute plainly is that any person who furnishes materials to a contractor who has a contract with the State to construct a public improvement for the State shall have a lien on the moneys due the contractor from the State. If the rule of strict construction be applied it could not change the meaning of the statute to a different one from what it says. This court has held that section 24 (now section 23) is a remedial statute. (Young v. Jones, 180 Ill. 216.) In that case the court said: “It follows that so far as the public are concerned, this section 24, [now section 23,] applied to contracts for improvements, is merely remedial.” In West Chicago Park Comrs. v. Western Granite Co. 200 Ill. 527, the court said: “The section gives no lien upon the improvement to anyone but only gives a lien to the subcontractor as against the contractor. * * * The fund devoted to the payment for the work was brought under the control of the court and subject to whatever decree might be finally made.”

In construing section 1 it has been decided that it is essential to the right to maintain a lien under that section that materials furnished the contractor were delivered for the purpose of being used in constructing the improvement so as to become a part of the completed structure. Lumber furnished which never became and was not intended to become a part of the property but which the contractor employed for temporary use and took away and used again for his own purposes is not a proper subject matter for a lien against the completed improvement. Rittenhouse & Embree Co. v. Brown & Co. 254 Ill. 549.

Section 23 was under consideration by this court in Alexander Lumber Co. v. Farmer City, 272 Ill. 264. In that case the circuit court decreed a lien in favor of parties who furnished the contractor materials for use in carrying, out the contract for a sewer. One of the claims included an item for the use of an engine and pump, one an item for pipe used in carrying water to the mixing boxes where concrete was mixed, and a small item of one claim was for work in repairing machinery and tools. It was contended that lumber for which a lien was claimed did not become a part of the completed sewer but was left in the trenches for use for shoring and for the protection of the men at work and some of it was used up by the contractor in the work and not returned. The same claim was made as to to a small amount for pipe used to carry water to the concrete mixers and the claim for work in repairing machinery and tools. The court referred to previous decisions under section 1 of the Lien act, and said: “The construction of section 23 is not governed by the construction given the provisions of the act relating to the enforcement of liens afforded against the owner’s real estate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 N.E. 151, 326 Ill. 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-oil-co-of-indiana-v-vanderboom-ill-1927.