Winters v. Falls Lumber Co.

31 P.2d 177, 146 Or. 592, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 75
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1934
StatusPublished

This text of 31 P.2d 177 (Winters v. Falls Lumber Co.) 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
Winters v. Falls Lumber Co., 31 P.2d 177, 146 Or. 592, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 75 (Or. 1934).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

This suit involves the validity of a decree foreclosing three separate mechanics’ liens filed and foreclosed by three of the defendants herein, through which foreclosure proceedings two of the individual defendants in this suit claim to have become owners, as trustees for the other defendants, of the real property here involved.

Five assignments of error are presented for our consideration, to wit: (1) That the liens filed failed to state to whom the materials had been furnished; (2) that because the notices of lien stated that H. J. Winters was the owner or reputed owner, while the pleadings alleged that he and his wife were the owners, there was a fatal variance between the notices or claims of lien as filed and the pleadings, whereby the liens were invalidated; (3) that the court erred in holding that Mary E. Winters was not a necessary party to the foreclosure proceedings; (4) that the court erred in permitting the defendants in this suit to go outside the record in the foreclosure proceedings to show that Mary E. Winters was not a necessary party in such proceedings; and (5) that the court erred in holding that the notices given by the lien claimants to H. J. Winters only, as to the furnishing of materials, sufficiently complied with the law..

*594 At the time of the trial in the circuit court Mary E. Winters was dead. The title to the property involved had been taken in the name of H. J. Winters and was held by him at the time the materials were furnished and the liens foreclosed. During all that time, however, Mary E. Winters was living and was the wife of H. J. Winters.

On April Í6, 1931, Falls Lumber Company instituted suit in the circuit court of the state of Oregon for Klamath county against H. J. Winters, Mary E. Winters, his wife, and numerous other parties, to foreclose a mechanic’s lien which had previously been filed by the plaintiff therein. Thereafter one of the defendants in that suit and in this, Plumbing & Heating Sales Corporation, filed an answer and cross-complaint for the foreclosure of a lien which that corporation had on the same property. And about the same time there was another answer with cross-complaint filed by Charles D. G-arcelon and Effie G. Garcelon, copartners doing business as The Electric Shop, to foreclose a mechanic’s lien which they held on the same property. Summons, complaint and cross-complaints were duly and regularly served on both H. J. Winters and Mary E. Winters in Klamath county, Oregon.

Both H. J. Winters and Mary E. Winters failed to appear in the above proceedings, and orders of default and decree were entered against them, foreclosing the liens and ordering the property sold. Later the sheriff sold the property, the sale was confirmed and upon the expiration of the period of redemption a deed for the property was issued by the sheriff to two of the individual defendants in this proceeding as trustees for the other defendants herein, the lien claimants in the foreclosure proceedings. The deed from the sheriff *595 was delivered on or about September 12, 1932, and the present suit was filed on October 6 of the same year.

The lien notice of the Falls Lumber Company, after stating that said company claimed a mechanic’s lien upon the building and real property here involved, further recited:

“The lien hereby claimed is for materials furnished and delivered at said premises to be used and which were used in the construction of said building and upon said building at the instance and request of C. R. G-ebert.
“At the time commencing to furnish said materials and to perform said labor H. J. Winters was the owner or reputed owner of said building and H. J. Winters is now the owner thereof. That H. J. Winters is the owner of said land and had knowledge of the construction, alteration and repair of said building, and caused the same to be done.
“In the construction, alteration and repair of said building C. R. Gebert was the contractor and agent of said H. J. Winters. ’ ’

The lien further set out the dates between which the materials were furnished; the contract and reasonable price thereof; the amount then due the claimant; the averment that not later than five days after the date of the first delivery of the materials mentioned herein the claimant mailed to H. J. Winters, “the owner or reputed owner of said property”, a notice stating that claimant had commenced to deliver materials and supplies for use on said premises; and other matters not essential here to mention.

The liens filed by The Electric Shop and Plumbing & Heating Sales Corporation were for work performed and materials furnished in the construction of the building on the land here involved, at the request of *596 C. R. Gebert, tbe agent of H. J. Winters, and were substantially like the lien filed by Falls Lumber Company.

In the complaint filed by Falls Lumber Company in the foreclosure proceedings it was alleged that during all the times therein mentioned H. J. Winters and Mary E. Winters, his wife, were “the owners and/or reputed owners” of the property described in the complaint; that one C. R. Gebert “was employed as contractor by said H. J. Winters and Mary E. Winters, his wife, to construct an apartment house upon the real property” described in the complaint; and that during all said time C. R. Gebert was the agent of H. J. Winters and Mary E. Winters. That complaint further alleged that not later than five days following the date of the first delivery of materials the claimant mailed to H. J. Winters, “the owner or reputed owner of said property”, a notification that the plaintiff in that suit had commenced to furnish materials for the building to be erected on the real property referred to in the lien claim. The cross-complaints contained like allegations.

The first contention made- by the appellant herein is that the notices of lien filed by Falls Lumber Company and the other claimants failed to state to whom the materials were furnished by the claimants and were therefore invalid, and in support of this argument reference is made to Rankin v. Malarkey, 23 Or. 593 (32 P. 620, 34 P. 816); Dillon v. Hart, 25 Or. 49 (34 P. 817); Leick v. Beers, 28 Or. 483 (43 P. 658); Getty v. Ames, 30 Or. 573 (48 P. 355, 60 Am. St. Rep. 835). Even a cursory reading of the notices of lien in the foregoing cases will readily disclose that they are entirely different from the claims of lien here involved. Moreover, the language used by this court in the cases *597 relied upon by the appellant, when taken in its entirety and with reference to the facts in those cases, does not lend support to appellant’s contention.

The form of the lien notice filed by Falls Lumber Company is, with the exception of the names of the parties, designation of materials, amount of lien, date, and description of property, identical with the claim of lien involved in McCormack v. Bertschinger, 115 Or. 250 (237 P. 363).

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Related

Walling v. Lebb
15 P.2d 370 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1932)
Olsen v. Crow
290 P. 233 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1930)
McCormack v. Bertschinger
237 P. 363 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1925)
Rankin v. Malarkey
32 P. 620 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1893)
Dillon v. Hart
34 P. 817 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1893)
Leick v. Beers
43 P. 658 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1896)
Getty v. Ames
48 P. 355 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1897)

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Bluebook (online)
31 P.2d 177, 146 Or. 592, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winters-v-falls-lumber-co-or-1934.