Willamette Falls Transportation & Milling Co. v. Riley

1 Or. 183
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1 Or. 183 (Willamette Falls Transportation & Milling Co. v. Riley) 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
Willamette Falls Transportation & Milling Co. v. Riley, 1 Or. 183 (Or. 1855).

Opinion

Williams, C. J.

Biley sued the Falls Company ” for work and labor done upon their buildings, and obtained a judgment by default, in the District Court, for the sum of $779 30, and a lien therefor on said buildings.

Among various other objections made to the proceedings of the court below, it is contended, in the first place, that the notice in the summons is insufficient to entitle Biley to the judgment in this case. Section 27, page 68, of the Statutes of Oregon, is as follows: “ There also shall be inserted in the summons a notice, in substance as follows: In an action arising on contract, for-money, or damages only, that the plaintiff will take -judgment for a sum specified therein, if the defendant fail to answer the complaint.

In other actions, that if the defendant fail to answer the complaint, the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded therein.” The motion in this case is, “ that the plaintiff will take judgment for a sum specified therein, if the defendant fail to answer the complaint.” This notice, it is [184]*184said, is defective, because it does not also state'that judgment will be taken for a lien; but this objection we think not well-founded, for the statute classifies actions, and provides that, in the class of actions arising on contract for the recovery of money or damages only,” there shall be such a notice as was given in this case. Manifestly, then, the notice was right, for this is an action arising on contract for the recovery of money only,” though the court is empowered, under certain circumstances, to order that the judgment, instead of being a general lien upon the real estate of the defendant therein, shall be a lien upon a specific part of such estate. This order relates, however, to the execution, rather than the recovery of the judgment, and is not obtained without the service upon the defendant of a copy of the complaint in which it is claimed. The verification to the complaint, it is said, in the second place, is insufficient to entitle Riley to his judgment for a lien. Kelly, attorney for plaintiff below, makes affidavit to the complaint, and states his belief of its truth, on the ground “ that the promissory note upon which the action is founded is in his possession, and that he presented the same to Daniel H. Ferguson, the acting agent of the defendants, who did not deny the correctness of the same.”

Sec. Sé,page 74, Statutes of Oregon, provides, “ that in the absence of the party the pleadings may be verified by any person having a knowledge of the facts; and when the affidavit shall be made by any other person than the party, he shall set forth in it his knowledge, or the grounds of his belief, on the subject.” Now, the promissory note referred to is a mere promise to pay for value received, and evidence, therefore, of nothing but indebtedness, so that as to the other allegations in the complaint, upon which the right of lien depends, the attorney professes to have no knowledge or grounds of belief.' Those averments, then, showing the existence of a lien, are in effect not verified at all, so that the court below adjudged to the plaintiff there a specific lien upon the buildings of the defendant, with no other evidence before it except the unverified statements of said plaintiff’s attorney. [185]*185We-think that the letter and reason of the statute have been overlooked in this verification, for it is evident that any stranger seeing the note referred to, without any knowledge as to the alleged contract for work and labor, might make an affidavit just as good as the one attached to the complaint in this case.

Plaintiffs in error have urged, with great earnestness, that Biley acquired no lien for his work and labor upon their buildings, and therefore the judgment of the District Court should be reversed. They argue that Biley commenced work in June, 1858, under a contract of that date, and continued so to work until the 10th of September, 1854; that on the first of May, 1854, the statute of 1851, under which said contract was made, was repealed without any saving clause, and that by virtue of such repeal, the growing, but not then perfect right of lien, was destroyed, and that no lien was obtained under the act of 1854, for that only applies to work done after its passage. When Biley commenced labor upon the buildings of said company, the law, to secure the payment of his wages, gave him a lien therefor upon said buildings, and required him, within sixty days from their completion, to file a notice of his intention to hold such lien ; but before said buildings were completed, the law was repealed, and another enacted at the same time, which allowed him three months in which to file, and in which he did file, said notice. Now, as one statute ceased to exist, and the other was created uno flalu, we think that the act of 1854 may be regarded as a continuation of the act of 1851, so that the laborer may have that security for his hire which the law promised when he commenced work; the labor, in question, must be regarded as an entirety, and the rights of the party to the whole job be determined in accordance with the law in force at the time the contract was made, or in accordance with the law in force at the time the work was finished. Assuming that the parties are to be treated as though the work was performed on the day when it was completed, and beyond question there was a lien acquired under the act of 1854; but [186]*186assuming that the parties are to be treated as though the work was performed at the time the contract was made, and the lien was perfect, and vested under the act of 1851. Taking either view of the case, there was a lien; but we consider it to be entirely consonant with principle and justice to hold that the rights of the parties are to be ascertained and fixed by the law in force when the contract was made ; but such rights may be established and enforced by the law existing at the bringing of the suit.

Plaintiff avers in his complaint that he “ filed, &c., a notice of his intention to hold a lien against the said buildings,” and does not show that any amount of indebtedness is specified in such notice. Section two of the act concerning liens, page 149, Statutes of Oregon, provides, that persons wishing to avail themselves of the provisions of that act, shall file a notice of their intentions to hold a lien upon the buildings for the amount due or to become due, specifically setting forth such amount, “ so that the notice described in the complaint was not such an one as the statute required, and, for not setting forth any amount, was obviously insufficient.” Notice must be alleged in the complaint; (5th Blackford's R. page. 329 ; 8th Ib. 252;) and, of course, if it is necessary to show that a notice was filed, it is necessary to show that it was a legal notice, and in some way designated the amount for which, and the premises upon which the lien is claimed. The objection made to the claim upon this ground must be sustained. Our attention has been directed by the argument to the question, as to whether a mechanic’s lien relates to the time when he commenced woik, or to the commencement of the building.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Or. 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willamette-falls-transportation-milling-co-v-riley-or-1855.