Watkins v. Bugge

77 N.W. 83, 56 Neb. 615, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 309
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1898
DocketNo. 8475
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 77 N.W. 83 (Watkins v. Bugge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watkins v. Bugge, 77 N.W. 83, 56 Neb. 615, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 309 (Neb. 1898).

Opinion

N Olí.VAL, J.

In July, 1891, Mattie E. Shelly employed John H. Bugge to furnish the materials and erect a residence and barn on lot 5, in block 5, in Hanscom Place, an addition to the city of Omaha. The plaintiffs John B. Watkins and George A. Hoagland, copartners' doing business under the name and style of J. B. Watkins & Go., sold to Bugge certain building materials, which were delivered on the premises and used in the construction of said house and barn. Before the buildings were completed, on September 10, 1891, Mattie E. Shelly and Thomas 0. Shelly mortgaged the lot to the defendant Truman Buck to secure the sum of $3,500, which mortgage, on the same day, was duly recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Douglas county. Afterward Watkins & Oo. furnished and delivered certain other materials for use in making said improvements, 'and on November 21, 1891, they filed with the register of deeds of said county a duly-verified statement or claim for a lien on account of all the materials so furnished as aforesaid. Subsequently this action was commenced to foreclose said lien. Buck filed therein a cross-petition, praying a foreclosure of his mortgage. A decree was entered establishing and foreclosing the mechanic’¡s lien, and awarding the same priority over the mortgage. The Sliellys and Buck have prosecuted separate appeals.

It is contended by appellants that the petition of plaintiffs does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, for the reason said pleading contains no averment that the sworn statement or claim iof lien was filed with the register of deed's, or that it was ever recorded by him. The allegations of the petition upon this subject are: “That on the 21 th day of November, 1891, and [617]*617within two months from the date of furnishing said lumber and building material, the said plaintiffs made an account in writing of the items of said lumber and building material, and, after making oath thereto as required by law, filed the same in the office of the register of deeds of said Douglas county, Nebraska, claiming a mechanic’s lien therefor upon said real estate and the buildings thereon, at an expense of one and 50-100 dollars.” Section 2, article 1, chapter 54, Compiled Statutes, declares: “Any person or subcontractor who shall perform any labor for, or furnish any material or machinery or fixtures for any of the purposes mentioned in the first section of the act, to the contractor or any subcontractor who shall desire to secure a lien upon any of the structures mentioned in said section, may file a sworn statement of the amount due him or them from such contractor or subcontractor for such labor or material, machinery or fixtures, together with -a description of the land upon which the same were done or used within sixty days from the performing of such labor or furnishing such material, machinery or fixtures, with the register of deeds of the county wherein said land is situated, and if the contractor does not pay such person or subcontractor for the same, such sub-cqntractor or person shall have a lien for the amount due for such labor or material, machinery and fixtures, * * * and the amount so paid shall be held and deemed a payment of such amount to the original contractor. * * * Said sworn statement and claim of lien shall be by such register of deed's recorded in the same manner as other liens provided for by this chapter, and such lien shall remain in force for the same length of time as other liens provided for in this chapter.”

The objection urged against the petition, that it is defective because it is not averred that the claim for lien was “filed with the register of deeds,” is so dry and technical that it rattles as we write down the point. It is true the statute requires that the sworn statement of the [618]*618amount due the person or subcontractor claiming the lien must be “filed with the register of deeds;” and the petition meets this demand of the law, since it avers that the verified account in writing of the items of lumber furnished was filed “in the office of the register of deeds of said Douglas county.” The filing could not legally have been in the office of register of deeds, unless the sworn statement was filed with such officer. That the legislature used interchangeably in the mechanics’ lien law the expression “filed in the office of register of deeds” and “filed with the register of deeds” is manifest. In said section the latter form of expression is used, while in section 3 of the same act it is written, “file .the same in the office of the register of deeds of the county.” This court has frequently used interchangeably the words “file in the office of register of deeds” and “file with the register of deeds.” (White Lake Lumber Co. v. Russell, 22 Neb. 126; Noll v. Kenneally, 37 Neb. 879; Wells v. David City Improvement Co., 43 Neb. 366; Drexel v. Richards, 48 Neb. 322, 732; Nye v. Berger, 52 Neb. 758.) The proper filing of a claim for a mechanic’s lien consists in placing the sworn statement in the custody of, and leaving the same with, the proper officer for the purpose of recording, and the petition sufficiently avers that this was done in the case at bar.

The other objection urged against the petition is equally without merit. It was not necessary for the plaintiffs to set forth in their petition that their statement of lien was recorded by the register of deeds. It is true the law makes it the duty of that officer to record all sworn statements and claims of liens filed with him, but the subcontractor’s lien cannot be defeated by the failure of the register of deeds to record the sworn statement of the lien which had been deposited in his office for that purpose. All the law requires of the lien claimant is that he shall file his sworn claim of lien with the proper officer for the purpose of being recorded. It is the filing, and not the recording, that confers the right [619]*619to a lien. This principle was recognized and applied by this court, as to deeds, in Perkins v. Strong, 22 Neb. 725. The syllabus to that case, which fully reflects the views of the court expressed in the opinion, reads as follows: “A purchaser of real estate who takes his deed to the office of the register of deeds and deposits it'with him for record, and pays the fees for recording and' entering the same on the numerical index, discharges thereby his duty of notice to the public; and if through the fault alone of the register the deed is lost or mislaid, and not entered of record or entered on the index, such failure will not work to the prejudice of the title of such purchaser, even in favor of a subsequent purchaser without actual notice. (Lee v. Bermingham, 30 Kan. 312.)” Of the same purport is Deming v. Miles, 35 Neb. 739. If through the neglect or omission of a register of deeds a deed is not spread upon the records of his office, and the title of the purchaser is not affected or prejudiced by such omission, it is difficult to see how the right to a mechanic’s lien can be defeated by the mere failure of such officer to record a mechanic’s lien which had been duly filed with him or in his office. The law malíes it no part of the duty of the lienor to see that his statement of lien is recorded. It merely devolves upon him to have such statement filed, and he is not required to force the register of deeds, either at the point of a loaded revolver or by legal proceedings, to record his claim of lien, to make the lien effective. A mechanic’s lien is acquired by the proper filing with the register of deeds of the sworn claim for such lien within the period fixed by law, and not by the recording of the lien.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 N.W. 83, 56 Neb. 615, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watkins-v-bugge-neb-1898.