Woolridge v. Torgrimson

229 N.W. 805, 59 N.D. 307, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 143
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 229 N.W. 805 (Woolridge v. Torgrimson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woolridge v. Torgrimson, 229 N.W. 805, 59 N.D. 307, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 143 (N.D. 1930).

Opinion

Bubb, J.

This action involves the priority of liens upon real estate, and the case is submitted on a stipulation of facts.

Defendant Torgrimson is the owner of the real estate and on November 1, 1923, he gave a mortgage thereon to the Bank of North Dakota to secure the payment of $5,000.00, which remains unpaid.

On April 24,1924, T. gave a second mortgage thereon to the Deering State Bank to secure the payment of $2,434.36, which is still due.

After the recording of these mortgages T. bought from the plaintiff building material for a barn, and it is stipulated that “said barn was erected permanently upon said premises.”

*308 On May 11, 1928, tbe plaintiff perfected a mechanic’s lien on tbe land for $409.93 — tbe amount due for material remaining unpaid.

Tbe plaintiff admits: that tbe mortgage to tbe Bank of North Dakota is tbe first lien on tbe land; that tbe mortgage to tbe Deering State Bank is tbe second lien on tbe land; and that bis lien, so far as tbe land is concerned, is tbe third lien. However, be claims that, because tbe barn was erected after tbe mortgages were given and by means of tbe material which be furnished, bis lien is a first lien on tbe barn.

Tbe lower court held against this contention, and the plaintiff appealed.

Tbe sole issue is whether, under the facts stated, the plaintiff has a lien on tbe barn superior to tbe lien of tbe mortgagees named.

Mechanics’ liens were unknown at common law. They are purely creatures of statute. Every state in tbe union has now a mecbanic’s lien law. Tbe statutes vary in their operation and extent. Hence decisions of other jurisdictions are not always of assistance to us. However, tbe general principle hereafter noted runs through all.

Tbe mecbanic’s lien differs from tbe lien of an artisan in this, that ordinarily there can be no mecbanic’s lien unless there be a lien upon real estate; whereas tbe other is a lien upon personal property, generally dependent upon possession. Our statute makes two exceptions to this rule, which will be noted later.

Leaving out of consideration for a moment tbe two exceptions in our statute tbe general rule in all jurisdictions is there can be no mecbanic’s lien unless it attach to tbe real estate.

Hence it is that a mecbanic’s lien may attach to real estate even where tbe title to tbe land may be held by one, and tbe building be erected by another whose interest in tbe land is inferior to tbe former. This is based on tbe theory that tbe labor and material have given value to tbe property upon which they have been expended. Thus tbe landowner may find bis land charged with tbe lien, even when not liable personally for tbe claim; and another find bis interest in tbe land charged with the lien and himself personally for tbe claim; on tbe theory that it is not reasonable for tbe one to stand by and see tbe improvements in progress without objection on bis part, and tbe other has incurred tbe debt. No part of tbe real property can be considered personal property unless *309 designated, by statute, or in accordance with an agreement between tbe parties interested.

Under our statute fixtures, such as a barn, when permanently attached to the soil are part of the real estate. See §§ 5249 and 5251 of the Comp. Laws 1913. Being part of the real estate, even if affixed thereto after the execution of the mortgages, the barn became subject to the liens of the mortgages. The plaintiff does not deny this, but he claims that the mortgages, though liens so far as the barn is concerned, are inferior liens. He admits § 6815 of the Compiled Laws says: “A mechanic’s lien shall be void against the owner or holder of any mortgage — whose mortgage — shall have been filed and recorded prior to the filing of record of the herein prescribed notice of mechanics’ liens” but urges this has in mind the 'mortgage on the land only, referring to the condition as it existed when the mortgages were given, and does not consider the lien on buildings subsequently erected.

In Coddington v. Beebe, 31 N. J. L. 477, a mechanic’s lien was sought against a floating dock. It was held that as the floating dock was neither a building nor a fixture there could be no mechanic’s lien, because there was no real estate to which it could attach. “In order to subject a building to the lien law, the owner of the building must have some estate in the land on which it stands; unless this is so there can be no lien either on the land or the building.” There are many cases w'hich hold that where the description of the land is so imperfect that the land cannot be determined from the statement of the lien the attempted lien fails, as “a mechanic’s lien cannot be maintained against the building when the lien against the land was filed through an inaccurate description.” See Mayes v. Murphy, 93 Mo. App. 37. In Missouri a mechanic’s lien may be had upon the building and one acre of ground upon which it stands requiring the acre to be described. In Ranson v. Sheehan, 78 Mo. 668, 674, it is said: “The lien on the building is made to depend on the lien on the acre of ground to prevent difficulties and embarrassments which would inevitably arise out of a construction that would permit one man to sell and own the building, while another owned the ground on which the building stood. The only case provided by statute for the removal of the building from the land by the purchaser under the mechanic’s lien, being in the instance of prior encumbrances and mortgages, and in case of leaseholds, the in *310 ference is that the legislature did not contemplate any other contingency under which the building might be separated from the land; and as without this right of separation the lien on the building alone would be of little avail, such separate lien was not in the legislative mind in enacting the statute.”

We have now no statute permitting “separation” in the “instance of prior encumbrances and mortgages,” and the matter of leasehold interest will be discussed later.

Unless there be these before mentioned exceptions to the general principle, it can be laid down as a general doctrine that no mechanic or materialman has a lien upon a building as distinct from the land upon which it stands. In Rees v. Ludington, 13 Wis. 277, 80 Am. Dec. 741, a dwelling house had been erected by one who had a contract for the purchase of the land upon condition that the purchaser would erect a valuable house, the vendor having a vendor’s lien on the land. The purchaser thereafter had the building erected, received a deed and gave back a mortgage for the amount of the unpaid purchase price. Thereafter the mortgagee sought to foreclose the mortgage making the mate-rialmen, who had filed liens, parties to the action. The court held that the “statute does not create any distinction between the employer’s ownership of the building and his ownership of the land with which it is connected; and the former must follow the latter, unless it has been separated by the agreement of competent parties.” The court held: “The mortgage is to be regarded as only a continuance of the vendor’s lien in another form and has preference over” the mechanics’ liens on the building.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
229 N.W. 805, 59 N.D. 307, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woolridge-v-torgrimson-nd-1930.