Zabriskie v. Greater America Exposition Co.

62 L.R.A. 369, 93 N.W. 958, 67 Neb. 581, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 450
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1903
DocketNo. 12,625
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 62 L.R.A. 369 (Zabriskie v. Greater America Exposition Co.) 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
Zabriskie v. Greater America Exposition Co., 62 L.R.A. 369, 93 N.W. 958, 67 Neb. 581, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 450 (Neb. 1903).

Opinion

Lobingier, C.

This is a suit to foreclose a statutory lien for materials furnished and labor performed in repairing certain buildings of the Greater America Exposition at Omaha. The company which promoted and carried on this exposition acquired its interest in these buildings and the land whereon the same were situated through an instrument executed by a purchaser from the Trans-Mississippi and International Exposition, Avhich had maintained a similar enterprise on the same site during the previous year. This instrument purported to pass “all the buildings, fences, trees, shrubs, plants, colonnades, booths, water and sewer-pipes, electric plant, wires, appliances, appurtenances, * * * and also all right, title and interest, including leaseholds, of the said Trans-Mississippi and International Exposition to or in the said exposition grounds.” But this grant was expressly made “subject to the contracts, agreements and obligations of the Trans-Mississippi and International Exposition with the various property holders in the city of Omaha to restore to their original condition the grounds, buildings and property taken possession of or occupied by the said Trans-Mississippi and International Exposition.” The Greater Amer[583]*583ica Exposition Company also entered into a lease for one year with tbe fee owner of the grounds on which the buildings were situated, by which it undertook: “That it will use said lands for exposition purposes only; that by and upon the expiration of the term herein limited, it will refill in a thoroughly good and substantial manner all excavations at any place and time made on said lands since the entry thereon of said Trans-Mississippi and International Exposition; that by and upon the expiration of the term herein limited it will remove from said lands all buildings and structures and all debris of every description whatsoever.”

One of the buildings in which the materials sued for was used is thus described by a witness, and the description will apply generally to the buildings in controversy: “The power-plant building was constructed of heavy timbers as framework, and sheeted outside with corrugated iron, also roofed with corrugated iron; and the foundation of the building consisted of piling driven in the ground, and' the foundation timbers fastened to the same. The floor was of wood construction — that is, the machinery part of it — with heavy joists or sleepers covered with heavy lumber; and the boiler-room was constructed, the flooring was of concrete or slag — some kind of stone. * * * The foundations for the engines and dynamos were built of brick and concrete. There were excavations made in the ground, to considerable depth, enough to malee them perfectly suitable, and bolts, extending up from the foundations, imbedded in the concrete, and these bolts extending up over the frame of the engines and also the frame of the dynamos.”

A decree was rendered below finding that plaintiff was entitled to a lien as prayed, and from this the exposition company and its vendee, the Chicago House Wrecking Company, appeal.

It is contended by appellants that the exposition buildings “were merely trade-fixtures”; that as personal prop- . erty they were not subject to a mechanic’s lien, but that [584]*584they must have entered into and become a part of the realty. We are cited to cases from certain jurisdictions holding that there can be no such lien on a building distinct from the land. Kellogg v. Littell & Smythe Mfg. Co., 1 Wash. St., 407; Belding v. Cushing, 1 Gray [Mass.], 576. Cf. Coddington v. Dry Dock Co., 31 N. J. Law, 477. These cases appear to be greatly in the minority. “The general rule undoubtedly is that a lien may exist upon the building alone under certain circumstances.” 20 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law [2d ed.], 284, where the authorities are set out in extenso. The Massachusetts case above cited was decided under a statute no longer in force. The present doctrine in that jurisdiction is thus stated: “In our opinion this makes it clear that Gen. Sts., c. 150, and Pub. Sts., c. 191, were intended by the legislature to give a lien upon buildings the owner of which had no estate or interest in the land upon which the building was erected, as well as upon any interest which the owner of a building might have in land on which it might be erected, and that the lien might extend to a building erected upon land although the building was personal property.” Forbes v. Mosquito Fleet Yacht Club, 175 Mass., 432, 436.

In our neighboring state of Iowa the statute provides, like our own,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 L.R.A. 369, 93 N.W. 958, 67 Neb. 581, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zabriskie-v-greater-america-exposition-co-neb-1903.