Court Opinion

ID: 3279173
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:52:40.595989+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:13:17.387061
License: Public Domain

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the defendants J. Maud Giles and Maurice Rosenthal, sued under the fictitious names of Jane Doe and John Doe, in an action brought to foreclose a lien for street work. The above-named defendant J. Maud Giles was the owner of the property to be affected by this lien on the sixth day of December, 1911, and on that day entered into a contract with W. T. Pritchard for the purchase by the latter of said property, by the terms of which said Pritchard went into possession of the same. While so in possession of said property under said contract of purchase, Pritchard entered into a contract with the plaintiff herein for the doing of certain street work in front of said property, which work said plaintiff thereafter did. The defendant Pritchard, however, defaulted in the performance of his contract of purchase and abandoned the same, and the defendant Giles thereafter conveyed the property to Maurice Rosenthal. Upon the completion of the street improvement in front of said property by the plaintiff he filed his claim of lien therefor, and in due course brought this action to foreclose the same. The trial court rendered judgment against said Pritchard for the contract price of said *Page 76 
street improvement, but refused to enforce a lien against the property.
The only question raised upon this appeal is as to whether the holder of a contract of purchase of a lot of land can impress the land with a lien for street improvements which shall be binding upon the owner thereof. The case of Santa CruzRock Pavement Co. v. Lyons, 117 Cal. 212, [59 Am. St. Rep. 174, 48 P. 1097], is decisive of this question; and it was there held that it was no more within the constitutional power of the legislature to authorize the reputed owner of a lot or parcel of land to create a lien thereon against the will of the real owner than it would be to authorize such reputed owner to transfer the title to said land. It has also been frequently held in other jurisdictions that one who is in possession of land under a contract of purchase cannot subject such land to a lien for improvements upon the property or upon the street adjacent thereto, in the absence of proof that the real owner of the premises has by his conduct so far concurred in such improvement as to be estopped to deny the validity of the lien. (Johnson v. Soliday, 19 N.D. 463, [126 N.W. 99]; Callaway
v. Freeman, 29 Ga. 408; Wilkins v. Litchfield, 69 Iowa, 465, [29 N.W. 447]; Jones on Liens, 3d ed., sec. 1247.) The record in this case presents no evidence of such estoppel, and it therefore follows necessarily that the judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.