Waters v. Johnson

96 N.W. 504, 134 Mich. 436, 1903 Mich. LEXIS 663
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 1903
DocketDocket No. 156
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 96 N.W. 504 (Waters v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waters v. Johnson, 96 N.W. 504, 134 Mich. 436, 1903 Mich. LEXIS 663 (Mich. 1903).

Opinion

Carpenter, J.

This is a suit in chancery to enforce a mechanic’s lien. Defendant Stevenson appeals from an •order overruling a demurrer to complainants’ bill of complaint.

The bill avers that the labor and materials for which the lien is claimed were furnished under a contract between •complainants and defendant Alva M. Johnson, in improving and repairing the house and barn of said Johnson, , situated on the land described in said bill; that the first of .said material and labor was furnished July 6, 1901, and the last December 28, 1901; that on February 10, 1902, •complainants filed in the office of the register of deeds of Van Burén county (the county in which the property in -controversy is situated) their claim of lien, and served the .same on said Alva M. Johnson; and that defendant Alva M. Johnson and his wife, Ellen Mi Johnson, on December 21,1901, by warranty deed, conveyed the property in controversy to defendant Elizabeth Stevenson, and that said ■deed was recorded in the office of the register of deeds ■of Van Burén county, in Liber 111 of Deeds, at page 540.

The said claim of lien is annexed to, and made a part • of, complainants’ bill. It states that complainants furnished certain labor and materials in and for improving .and repairing a certain house and barn situated on the land thereinafter described, “in pursuance of a certain ■contract with Alva Mason Johnson, the owner; and also for certain materials furnished in and for improving and repairing a certain house and barn, situated on the land .hereinafter described, in pursuance of a certain contract -with Alonzo Curtiss, contractor; * * * and that there [438]*438is justly and truly due [the complainants] therefor from-the said Alva Mason Johnson, over and above all legal-set-offs, the sum of $305.33, for which amount [they] claim-a lien on said land, of which Alva Mason Johnson is the-owner.” Said claim of lien is sworn to by complainant Harry C. Waters.

The grounds of the demurrer may be classified under three heads, which we will proceed to state and dispose of.

First. That said bill did not sufficiently state the terms-of the contract and of its performance. -Respecting this ground, we think it unnecessary to say more than that in our opinion it is not well taken.

Second. That it appeared by the claim of lien that a portion of the amount claimed was furnished to AlonzoCurtiss, a contractor; that the bill was defective in not stating what amount was furnished to Curtiss, and in not making him a party. The basis of this ground of demurrer is-the following statement in the claim of lien:

“And also for certain materials furnished in and for improving and repairing a certain house and barn, situated on the land hereinafter described, in pursuance of a certain contract with Alonzo Curtiss, contractor.”

The only construction we are able to place upon the-claim of lien compels us to regard the foregoing statement as surplusage. It seems to have no connection whatever-with the claim asserted against defendant Johnson, which, it is stated, amounts to $305.33. In our judgment, therefore, this ground of demurrer is not well taken.

Third. That the case made by the bill is fatally defective, because it shows that complainants named as owner in their claim of lien, and served notice of said claim upon, not defendant Stevenson, but defendant Johnson. It appears by the bill that defendant Johnson owned the-property at the time that complainants entered into their contract to improve and repair it, and that defendant Stevenson owned it, and had owned it for more than a month, when the claim of lien was made. In making- and serving the claim of lien, should the lien claimants. [439]*439have regarded defendant Johnson or defendant Stevenson as the owner of the premises ?

The statutes which provide for this claim and service are sections 10714 an,d 10715, 3 Comp Laws. Section 10714 provides for the claim of lien. It requires the claim to contain, among other things, ‘ ‘ the name of the owner, part owner, or lessee, if known,” and to be verified by affidavit; and the form therein contained has this recital; ‘ ‘ Of which-is the owner (or part owner or lessee, as the case may be).” Section 10715 requires a copy of said statement, “within ten days after the filing thereof,” to be served “on the owner, part owner, or lessee of such premises,” and that “proof of such service shall be filed in the office of the register of deeds * * * before any subsequent proceedings shall be taken for the enforcement of such lien. ”

We think it obvious that the owner referred to in both these sections is the owner at the time the- claim of lien is made. In our opinion, the above-quoted language of the statute admits of no other construction. The evident purpose of the statute is to give notice to the party most vitally interested that a lien is asserted against his property. We cannot suppose that the law contemplated so futile a proceeding as a notice to one who has no interest whatever in the property, simply because he once had an interest-therein. While this question has never before received the attention of this court, decisions in harmony with these views have been made in several of our neighboring States. See Amidon v. Benjamin, 128 Mass. 534; McPhee v. Litchfield, 145 Mass. 565 (14 N. E. 923, 1 Am. St. Rep. 482); Derrickson v. Edwards, 29 N. J. Law, 468 (80 Am. Dec. 220); Corbett v. Chambers, 109 Cal. 178 (41 Pac. 873); Sprague Investment Co. v. Mouat Lumber & Investment Co., 14 Colo. App. 107 (60 Pac. 179); Willamette Lumbering Co. v. McLeod, 27 Or. 272 (40 Pac. 93); Collins v. Snoke, 9 Wash. 566 (38 Pac. 161).

[440]*440Complainants contend that they were under an obligation to name in their claim of lien, and to serve notice upon, the true owner only when his name was known to them, and that it is not in this case to be presumed that her name was known to them. The basis of this contention is the language of section 10714, requiring the statement of the name of the owner, “if known.” It is true that lien claimants are by this language relieved from the obligation of stating in their claim the owner’s name, if in fact his name is not known. See McPhee v. Litchfield, 145 Mass. 565 (14 N. E. 923, 1 Am. St. Rep. 482); Durling v. Gould, 83 Me. 134 (21 Atl. 833). The lien claimants must take advantage of this language when they make their claim of lien. If, as in this case, they file a statement in which they swear, in effect, that they do know the owner’s name, the statute does not relieve them from the consequences of a mistake in stating that name. McElwee v. Sandford, 53 How. Prac. 89. It is to be noted that if the lien claimants are, by section 10714, relieved from their obligation to state in their claim of lien the owner’s name when they do not know it, there is nothing to indicate that their obligation in section 10715, to serve the owner within 10 days, does not bind them within that time to ascertain his name.

What, then, are the consequences of misnaming in the claim, and of failing to make service upon, the owner whose property it is sought to take ? The statute, in our judgment, imperatively requires that said owner be named in the claim, save when his name is unknown, in which case it need not be stated, and that service be made upon said owner within 10 days.

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Bluebook (online)
96 N.W. 504, 134 Mich. 436, 1903 Mich. LEXIS 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waters-v-johnson-mich-1903.