Court Opinion

ID: 3676101
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:22:49.939416+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:24:37.303465
License: Public Domain

This case was before this Court under the title Glazener v. Lumber Co,167 N.C. 676. It now comes up on appeal from the judgment applying that decision to the facts found by the referee. The *Page 606 
(530)  former decision is the law of the case, and cannot be reviewed on a second appeal.
Laws 1913, ch. 150, sec. 6, provides: "Every person doing the work of cutting of sawing logs into lumber . . . shall have a lien upon said lumber for the amount of wages due them, and the said lien shall have priority over all other claims or liens upon said lumber, except against the purchaser for full value and without notice thereof." We are of opinion, upon the list of claimants found by the referee and their vocations, that the following can be deemed to have been engaged in "the work of cutting or sawing logs into lumber," i.e., Glazener, Mill hand, piling lumber; Boyd, mill hand, inspecting lumber from saw; Whit Myer, mill hand, handling lumber; and all others who were found to have been mill hands handling the lumber, including the sawyer, the lumber stacker, the mill foreman, the slabman, the saw filer, the engineer for the mill engine, the fireman at the mill boiler, the lumber handler, the edgerman, the jacker and piler.
But we do not think that under the description "doing the work of cutting or sawing logs into lumber" will fall those described as engaged on the train hauling logs, such as the engineer on the log train, the trimmerman, the dogger on carriage (unless this means on the saw carriage, in which case he would be engaged in cutting), fireman on the log train, conductor and brakeman on the same, and others engaged in bringing logs to the mill to be thereafter sawed into plank by those engaged in that service. The men engaged in working on the long train in any capacity, the night watchman, and all connected with the repairs to machinery, or running the log train or bringing in the logs, cannot be said to come within the description, "engaged in the work of cutting of sawing logs into lumber," as defined by us in Glazener v. Lumber Co., 167 N.C. 676.
In said former case we held that the plaintiffs were entitled to a lien upon whatever interest in the lumber their employer, Campbell, should be found to have upon the settlement of the suit pending between Campbell and the lumber company. Whenever that amount is ascertained the liens of the laborers are the first thereon, and by virtue of the judgment in this case said amount must be retained by the lumber company and paid over to these plaintiffs so entitled. The lumber Company will receive credit for such amount in settlement with Campbell, if they owe him so much.
The cost of this appeal will be taxed in favor of the plaintiffs, since they have recovered judgment for a part of their demand, and the lien has been determined in their favor. Revisal, 1279.
The judgment below, in the accordance with this opinion, will be
Modified. *Page 607 
WALKER, J., and HOKE, J., dissent.
Cited: Bryson v. Lumber Co., 171 N.C. 702 (2f); Graves v. Dockery,200 N.C. 318 (2f).
(531)