Wimberly v. Mayberry & Co.

94 Ala. 240
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 94 Ala. 240 (Wimberly v. Mayberry & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wimberly v. Mayberry & Co., 94 Ala. 240 (Ala. 1891).

Opinions

-COLEMAN, J.

— The agreed facts, as we construe them, are substantially as follows: On the 26th day’of October, 1889, one R. M- Mulford, being then the owner in fee of a lot. and dwelling and other improvements thereon in the city of Birmingham, obtained a loan of four thousand dollars from T. P. Wimberly, and secured the same by a mortgage of tie lot, [243]*243dwelling and improvements; and, as a further security, the mortgage provided that the dwelling should be insured for the benefit oí the moitgagee. The mortgage was regularly acknowledged and recorded. Before the 2d day of June, 1890, the dwelling was partly destroyed by fire, and from the policy of insurance twenty-six hundred and sixty-four dollars was realized. By agreement between Wimberly, the mortgagee, and Mulford, the mortgagor, Mulford was permitted to use the insurance money in rebuilding his dwelling; it being expressly agreed that the new building should stand in the place of the burned dwelling, and be subject to the mortgage in the same manner. Mulford expended the insurance money without completing the dwelling, and without the consent or knowledge of his mortgagee incurred the indebtedness sued upon, for its completion. Complainants, Mayberry & Co., whose claims aggregate about six hundred dollars, filed this bill to enforce a lien for materials furnished for the completion of the building. The City Court granted relief to the complainants, holding that their lien for materials extended to the entire building, and was superior and prior to that of the mortgage. The decree of the court is assigned as error.

Section 3018 of the Code declares, that every mechanic, or other person, who shall do or perform any work or labor upon, or furnish any material, fixtures, . . . for any building or improvements upon land, or for repairing the same, . . . shall have a lien therefor on such building or improvement, and on the land on which the same is situated, to the extent in ownership of all the right, title and interest owned therein by such owner or proprietor,” &c. The lien for repairs, by this section, is as extensive as that given for material or fixtures furnished for the building or improvement. Section 3019 of the Code, fixing the priority of liens, declares, “Such lien as to the land shall have priority over all other liens, mortgages, or incumbrances, created subsequently, to the commencement of the work on the building or improvement, or repairs thereto; and as to the building or improvement, it shall have priority over all other liens, mortgages, or incumbrances, whether existing at the time of the commencement of such work or subsequently created.” The terms “building or improvement,” as here used, are not necessarily synonymous, and have a different signification from “repairs thereto,” although repairs ordinarily may be an improvement.' The term “building” refers to an independent erection upon the land. An improvement may be an independent structure or addition, and it may be an addition to, or mere- betterment of a building or improvement already made and not included in “repairs thereto.”

[244]*244The statute contemplates different conditions of the realty at the time of the commencement of work by the mechanic, or when the materials are furnished, or repairs thereto are made. First, when there is no lien or incumbrance upon the land at the time the building or improvement or repairs are commenced. Second, when there is a lien upon the land, and other and independent buildings or improvements are subsequently commenced.. Third, when there is a lien upon the land and building or improvements thereon, and further improvements or repairs are subsequently commenced. The word “land,” as used in sections 3018 and 3019. has its com-mop-law meaning, and includes all buildings or improvements on the land at the time of the commencement of the work, or when materials are furnished. •

Under the first condition, by virtue of section 3018 of the Code, a lien is given upon the building or improvement and land, not only for thb work done and materials furnished, but for repairs made; and by section 3019 of the Code, this lien has preference over all subsequent liens or mortgages. The lien may be enforced, if necessary, by a sale of the entire property.

Under the second condition, for the erection of an independent’building or improvement, a mechanic’s or material-man’s lien is given upon the building or improvement, which is declared to be superior to any existing lien upon the land. The statute provides that this lien may be enforced by a sale of the building or improvement, and, if necessary, the purchaser has authority to remove it from the land.

The other condition is when there is a lien for an improvement, which is a mere betterment of a building or improvement, or when there is a lien for “repairs thereto,” upon which there is an existing mortgage or lien, before or at the time the improvements or repairs are commenced. The statute as clearly declares the lien for an improvement which is a mere addition or betterment of a building or improvement, or for repairs thereto, as it does upon a building or improvement wholly erected; and it is the duty of the courts to protect and enforce the lien as far as it can be done legally, and without interfering with vested interests, or impairing the obligation of contracts.

To determine the respective rights of the holders of the different liens in the cases last enumerated, is the question presented by the record for adjudication., Section 3019, supra-, fixing' the priority of the liens, uses the term “such lien.” The lien given, to which the words “such lien” refer, and its extent, is declared and defined in the previous section 3018, in [245]*245the following words, “shall have a lien therefor on such building or improvement, and on the land on which the same is situated, to the extent in ownership of all the right, title and interest owned therein by such owner or proprietor.” The italics are ours. “Such lien,” the priority of which is fixed, and provision for its enforcement made in section 3019, is limited by section 3018 to the right, title and interest of the owner or proprietor in the “building or improvement,and the land on which the same is situated.” This must necessarily be correct; otherwise, the owner of a life-estate in a block of buildings, by contract for improvements or repairs, might have all the buildings sold and removed from the premises, to the entire destruction of the property of the remainder-man; or, a vendor, who retains the vendor’s lien, might be improved out of his security, without fault or neglect on his part. Undér this view, the question arises, what operation will be given to that part of section 3019 which provides, “as to the building or improvement it shall have priority over all other liens,” &c. The lien can have no force beyond its extent, and its extent is upon tbe whole building or improvement, except as declared and limited by section 3018. There are many conditions in which the lien can be enforced by a sale of the buildings and improvements, as provided in the statutes, and without injury to any creditor, or owner of the land or remainder interest.

To have a proper understanding of the statute, the two sections must be construed together, and with reference to the existing law intended to be changed, and the protection to mechanics and materiál-men intended by the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
94 Ala. 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wimberly-v-mayberry-co-ala-1891.