TRI-CITY BUILDING CENTER, INC. v. Wagner

548 P.2d 961, 274 Or. 581, 1976 Ore. LEXIS 905
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 548 P.2d 961 (TRI-CITY BUILDING CENTER, INC. v. Wagner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TRI-CITY BUILDING CENTER, INC. v. Wagner, 548 P.2d 961, 274 Or. 581, 1976 Ore. LEXIS 905 (Or. 1976).

Opinion

*583 HOLMAN, J.

This is a suit to foreclose a materialman’s lien. Plaintiff appeals from a decree which held the lien to be invalid.

Defendant Reese purchased on contract from the defendants Wagner property in an industrial park as a site upon which to construct a building for his auto parts business. The other defendants are not material to this appeal. Reese undertook to be his own general contractor in the construction of the improvement. As a result, there was no contract let for all of the work involved. The improvement authorized by the building permit granted to Reese required the construction of the building, parking area, landscaping and a site-obscuring fence.

Construction commenced in late August or early September. Reese entered into a contract with American Wallboard Company (American) to install wallboard in the interior of the building. American purchased the material for the job from plaintiff and although Reese advanced the money with which American was to pay for the material used, plaintiff contends its account was never paid. American completed its contract on November 28,1973. Reese was in the building in early December, using it as his place of business, and the building was substantially completed as of that date. Plaintiff filed its lien January 31,. 1974.

Work on blacktopping the parking area, the site-obscuring fence and the landscaping was delayed for two reasons: (1) the county had not yet installed the street, therefore, the grade had not been established to which the said improvements had to conform; and (2) the ground was saturated with water, thereby making work on said improvements impossible. The defendant Reese testified:

"Q When was the building completed? And explain the progress work that went along on the building.
*584 "A The slabs and the forms were completed in early September. The building, the structure itself, went up through September, and the first part of October we began the framing. The building was basically complete with the exception of the landscaping and the asphalt, which the County had yet to put the street in, and no curbs; and we were just unable to do those items, and we had a tremendous amount of problems with mud. The instability of the ground wouldn’t permit us to install the landscaping and the curbs and the asphalt.
"Q Now you referred to the outside as far as landscaping, fencing and streets. Are you saying that the County had to put a street in?
"A Without a street in there, we had no definition of grade so we could install the things that were required by the County to get the final approval. I had to have in the asphalt, the parking, the landscaping and all these other items, and it was impossible to do those until the street was complete.”

There is no evidence when the site-obscuring fence and the landscaping were installed; but evidence does indicate that the blacktopping was not done until the following summer.

The first issue is whether plaintiff filed its lien within the time required by statute. Defendants claim the time for filing is governed by the date of the completion of the building, whereas plaintiff claims it is determined by the date of the completion of the project, including the blacktopping, site-obscuring fence and landscaping. ORS 87.010G) 1 provides:

"Any * * * person * * * furnishing any material to be used in the construction of any improvement * * * shall have a lien upon the improvement for the * * * material furnished * *

ORS 87.005(1) defines "improvement” as follows:

'Improvement’ includes any building, wharf, bridge, ditch, flume, reservoir, well, tunnel, fence, street, *585 sidewalk, machinery, aqueduct and all other structures and superstructures, whenever it can be made applicable thereto.”

ORS 87.035 provides the time within which a lien must be filed:

"* * * [E]very * * * person, except the original contractor, claiming the benefit of ORS 87.005 to 87.075, within 45 days after the completion of the construction, * * * or after he has ceased to furnish materials therefor, shall file for recording * * * a claim * * *.”

ORS 87.005(2) defines "construction” as follows:

" 'Construction’ includes alteration, partial construction and all repairs done in and upon any improvement. ” (Emphasis in all the foregoing statutes added.)

The issue resolves itself into a problem of how the parameters of an improvement are determined for the purpose of deciding when it is complete and, thus, when the time for filing a lien starts to run. A materialman normally does not have knowledge of the completion of an entire improvement because he is not in close contact with the job after he delivers his materials, nor does he usually have knowledge of what the owner and contractor intend. It would, therefore, seem logical to commence the running of the time for filing a materialman’s lien from the last delivery of materials because this is a date of which the materialman is aware. However, the legislature has seen fit to provide, as an alternative time for filing, the period within 45 days of completion of construction of the improvement, an entirely fortuitous event insofar as the materialman is concerned and one of which he has no control and, normally, little knowledge. This would indicate a general policy of broadening, rather than narrowing, the opportunities for the filing of liens.

We have been unable to find any Oregon cases directly in point. The closest analogy is where construction is abandoned. Abandonment is treated as completion in the computation of the time within which liens may be filed and is determined by the *586 intent of the owner or general contractor. Block v. Love et al, 136 Or 685, 688-89, 1 P2d 588 (1931); Pacific Coast S. Co. v. Construction Co., 130 Or 225, 229, 279 P 848 (1929); Stark-Davis Co. v. Fellows et al, 129 Or 281, 286-87, 277 P 110, 64 ALR 271 (1929); James A. C. Tait & Co. v. Stryker, 117 Or 338, 342, 243 P 104 (1926). In one of the above cases the time between the cessation of work and the filing of the lien was more than a year, and, in another, work had been interrupted for two years, yet the lien was upheld. In Eastern & Western L. Co. v. Williams et al,

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Bluebook (online)
548 P.2d 961, 274 Or. 581, 1976 Ore. LEXIS 905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tri-city-building-center-inc-v-wagner-or-1976.