Case ID: wash_18/html/0269-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Scott, C. J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

[No. 2776.
    Decided December 11, 1897.]
    J. F. Judge et al., Respondents, v. Bay Mill Company, Defendant, E. F. Neiharge et al., Appellants.
    
    LABORER’S LIENS-MANUFACTURE OF SHINGLES — RIGHT TO LIEN AFTER SALE AND DELIVERY TO CARRIER — CONSTRUCTION OF STATUTE.
    One performing labor in the manufacture of shingles is not entitled to a lien thereon, under Laws 1893, p. 428, § 2 (Bal. Code, §5931), providing that “every person performing work or labor or assisting in manufacturing saw logs and other timber into lumber and shingles, has a lien upon such lumber while the same remains at the mill where it was manufactured, or in the possession or under the control of the- manufacturer,” when it appears that the shingles although still in close proximity to the mill where manufactured, had been loaded upon a car on a sidetrack along the mill, but on land of the railway company, that the car had been sealed and a bill of lading delivered to the purchaser of the shingles, that full delivery had oeen made by the manufacturer and that the shingles had in fact passed out of his possession and from under his control.
    Appeal from Superior Court, King County.—Hon. William Hickman Mooke, Judge.
    Beversed.
    
      Ballinger, Ronald & Battle, and B. M. Shipley, for appellants.
    
      W. D. Lambuth, for respondents.
   The opinion of the court was delivered by

Scott, C. J.

This action was brought to foreclose laborers’ liens on a quantity of shingles, and, the liens being sustained, the intervenors have appealed. The sole question to be determined is whether the shingles were at the mil] where they were manufactured, or under the control of the manufacturer, within the provisions of section 2, laws 1893, p. 428 (Bal. Code, § 5931). The evidence is not brought here, the contention being that the decree is not supported by the findings of fact. The court found that the mill company sold the shingles in controversy to the intervenor, ISTeiharge, on the 27th day of May last; that the Seattle & International Railway Company was a common carrier of goods, and owned a switch or branch track running from its main line along and adjoining land owned by the mill company upon which the mill was situated, which switch was built and used for the purpose of standing cars thereon while shingles were being loaded in the cars for shipment. By the contract of sale the mill company was to deliver the shingles to ISTeiharge on board a car, and that by the direction of the mill company the railway company placed a car on said switch so that said shingles might be loaded thereon, and that said mill company put the shingles on the ear on the third day of June, whereupon the car was boxed up and sealed, and on said day the railway company issued to ISTeiharge a bill of lading in the usual form, by the terms of which the railway company were to transport such shingles to Oraig, Mo., and deliver the same to the order of intervenor, Andrews. The mill company did not own the land upon which the track was situated, but the same belonged to the railway company. On said day the mill caught fire and was wholly destroyed, and the ear containing the shingles in question was then standing on said switch track, and was standing there when the plaintiffs’ liens were filed, on the day following. The car had been pushed a short distance along the track, away from the mill, to prevent'its burning, but we do not regard this as material, for, independent of such fact, we are of the opinion that under the findings the shingles could not be brought within the provisions of the statute to enable the plaintiffs to maintain a lien thereon. A distance of a few feet, more or less, could not affect this question, but the shingles had been sold and delivered to a common carrier for shipment, and had passed ont of the possession of and from under the control of the manufacturer, and in contemplation of law were as much removed from the mill and from the control and possession of the manufacturers as if they had been delivered at their final destination in pursuance of the bill of lading. "While said statutes should receive a liberal interpretation in favor of lien claimants, to sustain the liens here would render uncertain and insecure all dealings in the purchase and sale of such merchandise, and the decree should have been in favor of the intervenors.

Reversed and remanded accordingly.

Gordon, Dunbar and Reavis, JJ., concur.