Walbridge v. New York Alaska Gold Dredging Co.

8 Alaska 36
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedApril 23, 1928
DocketNo. 3054
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 Alaska 36 (Walbridge v. New York Alaska Gold Dredging Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walbridge v. New York Alaska Gold Dredging Co., 8 Alaska 36 (D. Alaska 1928).

Opinion

CLEGG, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity to foreclose an alleged lien under the laws of Alaska with reference to or conferring on laborers and miners a right to lien for work and labor.

On behalf of the plaintiff, it is alleged that he was employed by the defendant company, which is a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the state of Delaware and engaged in the mining business in the territory of Alaska. The complaint shows the plaintiff was employed by a resolution of the board of di[37]*37rectors of that company in the year 1922 as superintendent and general manager of the business and properties owned by the corporation in the Bethel precinct, Fourth division, Alaska, and that his salary was to be $600 per month, and was to continue indefinitely or until he ceased the employment or the company, by its board of directors, resolved otherwise.

He acted in that capacity from the time of his appointment, according to the complaint, until the 5th day of January, 1928, and at that time filed the claim of lien, consisting of practically three pages of typewriting describing the numbers of the claims owned by the company, for something over $19,000 against all the properties of the company situated in said precinct, and also upon its dredge situated on this property and buildings used in mining.

The claim of lien, so far as the legal requirements are concerned to be observed by a lien claimant, is almost exact, except^ of course, it shows the employment of plaintiff on the part of defendant company as superintendent and general manager, and it is for that character of services that he claims a lien.

This is a very important question, it seems, under our statute, but it must be governed entirely in its decision by the Janguage of our Code extending a miners’ and laborers’ lien to miners and laborers.

Our Code has been amended by the territorial Legislature, and the last amendment, I think, is 1915 (Laws 1915, c. 13, § 1), and provides as follows:

“Every person who at the instance of the owner performs work or labor in, on or about a mine or mining claim in opening up, developing, sinking, drifting, stoping, mucking, shoveling, mining, hoisting or performs any other class or kind of work on, in or about a mine or mining claim necessary or convenient to the development, operation, working or mining thereof, or the extraction of the earth, rock, quartz, ore, minerals, or mineral bearing sands or gravels therefrom, or performs any work or labor in or about [38]*38such mine or mining claim tending to or assisting in the separation or reduction to a commercial value of the minerals contained therein, or thereon or extracted therefrom, shall have a lien on such mine or mining claim to secure the payment of the amount due for such work or labor.”

Then follows in almost identical language another sentence or paragraph which confers a lien upon steam shovels, mills, or machines used in mining and dredges. And then it goes on and describes a third class of liens for those who assist, in substance, in the production of a dump, and later on the act specifies these three classes of liens which the act confers on those who are entitled to it under its language.

It is contended by the defendant who' has filed a general demurrer to the complaint, that work such as is done by a superintendent and general manager of mining claims or of the business of this company in Alaska in connection with mining, as set forth in the claim of lien and as contained in the complaint, is not included in the language of this statute, and therefore such person is barred from filing or claiming a lien for such services.

It is also contended by the defendant in the demurrer that, even though he was entitled to a claim of lien, his claim of lien was made prematurely because it was prepared at a time when he had not ceased his employment.

On the other hand, it is contended by the plaintiff’s attorney that the language of this Lien Act, which is chapter 13 of the Session Laws of Alaska 1915, at page 29, is broad enough to include superintendents and general managers of mines and mining properties.

It is also contended by the plaintiff that the language of the Lien Act, which requires the notice of lien to be filed after the rendition of the services or the cessation of the labor, brings him clearly within the terms of the statute with reference to the time at which the lien was filed.

Apparently the claim of prematurity of filing is not relied on by the defendant very much, and defendant desires real[39]*39ly a decision of the court interpreting this lien statute and a statement by the court to say whether or not a superintendent of the business of the company and general manager of the company’s business is entitled to a lien under this statute.

Supporting his contention that he is not, the defendant’s attorney has cited a very strong case in the Supreme Court of Oregon, which is entitled Durkheimer v. Copperopolis Copper Company, reported in 55 Or. 37, 104 P. 895, 897.

The statute of Oregon, under which this decision is made by Judge McBride, is not at all dissimilar from our own statute, and commences the same way at least. It says: “Every person who shall perform labor upon * * * any mine, lode, mining claim * * * shall have a lien.” Laws Or. 1907, p. 294. And in the strongest language this Court holds that the words ‘‘labor on mines” means actual physical labor, except where other kinds of service are expressly mentioned in the statute. And it further says: “That the notice of lien must unequivocally show that the labor was actually performed upon the property.”

Now a reference to our statute will show that in the first paragraph of the act referred to the language used is particular work or labor. In the second sentence of the act that I have referred to, it says: “Every person, who at the instance of the owner of any dredge, steam shovel, mill or machine used in mining, performs work or labor in any capacity requiring manual labor on.”

That is the only place in these three different sections that I have referred to where the words “manual labor” is mentioned, but the title of the act says that it is “An Act to provide for the liens of Laborers and Miners,” and in one place it says that it is the purpose of the act to secure the wages of the laborer and miner, and in the last section of the act the language used is as follows: “In as much as uncertainty and confusion exists because of existing laws relating to liens of miners and laborers in mines, an emergency is hereby declared to exist, and this Act shall [40]*40take effect and be in force from and after its passage and approval.” Section 16.

Now in this case from the Supreme Court of the state of Oregon that I have already referred to, there is discussed the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Flagstaff Silver Mining Co. v. Cullins, 104 U.S. 176, 26 L.Ed. 704, which was taken to that court from the state of Utah (2 Utah, 219), in. which the Supreme Court held that the plaintiff, Cullins, who was working as the foreman of the mine and at the same time had the authority to hire and discharge employees, was entitled to a lien for his services, but in that case the Supreme Court of Oregon, points out that he claimed his lien, .not as a foreman or superintendent, but as a workman or laborer.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Alaska 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walbridge-v-new-york-alaska-gold-dredging-co-akd-1928.