Court Opinion

ID: 9832037
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 21:34:06.254351+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:43:41.378987
License: Public Domain

HARPER, C. J.
E. W.- Riggle brought tMs suit against the Magdalena Oil Company to recover the principal sum of $10,500 on promissory note, interest, and attorney’s fees, and foreclose a chattel mortgage on a well-drilling outfit.
Appellant and several others intervened in the suit. Riggle and the interveners, other than Gray, recovered judgment with foreclosure of their liens upon the property described in plaintiff’s petition. Gray recovered judgment for the amount of money sued for, but the court found as a fact, stated in the decree, that he has no lien, and denied a foreclosure. From this judgment Gray alone appeals. ,
F1] The first assignment is that the court erred in concluding as a matter of law that -the appellant had no lien on the machinery, tools, and supplies of the said company. As applicable to this question plaintiff’s (appellant’s) petition alleges:
“That on or about February 25, 1920, this intervenor was employed to hauj. a certain string of oil well tools, machinery and casing for the drilling of an oil well on what is commonly known as the Moore lease. * * * That he * * * did haul said machinery, tools and casing until the 15th day of May, 1920, when at which time, he completed his contract.”
*694The statement of facts contains no evidence of a contract, unless it be that the itemized statement filed with the county clerk in lieu of a written contract as provided for by article 5622, R. O. Stat. 1920, can be considered as' evidence.
This statement was filed September 13, 1920, and his indebtedness accrued, according to his pleadings, May 15, 1920, so he has complied with the statute, which requires his statement to be filed within four months, and with proof of a contract would be sufficient if the statute can be construed to give a lien under the facts, but was not filed within the time required for laborers’ liens, which is 30 days.
The statute does not appear to provide a lien upon anything hauled, but the person who labors or furnishes material, etc., to erect any house or improvements, etc., shall have a lien on such house, lot, or lots connected therewith, etc., to secure the payment for the labor done, etc.; so for this reason he has no lien.
The other assignments assert that the other interveners had no liens, and that the court erred in so holding, but, of course, it is immaterial to appellant whether their liens were recognized and foreclosed if he had none himself.
[2] Appellant’s brief does not comply with the rules in many ways, and should not have been considered, but it is easier to show why there is no merit in his appeal than it would be to describe the many defects in his brief. For this reason we have passed upon the merits.
Finding no reversible error, the cause is affirmed.

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