Court Opinion

ID: 6898538
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 21:52:33.797651+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:06:05.262651
License: Public Domain

Decided 18 February, 1901.
On the Merits.
This is a suit by C. W. Nottingham against J. McKendrick, Louis Trummer and others to foreclose two mechanics’ liens. In brief, the facts are that in August, 1897, the defendant Dammeier, who was the owner of a three-story brick building- on lot 5, block 62, in the City of Portland, and of a leasehold interest in the ground, leased the corner room on the ground floor of such building to the defendant Trummer, who entetred into a contract with McKendrick to furnish material and perform the labor necessary in plas*499tering, painting, and inside finishing such room. During the progress of the work, McKendrick purchased material of the plaintiff and Rasmussen & Company, to be used, and which was used, in the repairing and finishing of such room. Thereafter, and within the time provided by law, the plaintiff and Rasmussen & Company filed notices of mechanics’ liens on the building and lot for the balance due each of them for the material so1 furnished. On October 14, 1897, this suit was commenced to foreclose such liens, the plaintiff alleging that Rasmussen & Company had sold and assigned their lien to him. Trummer and Dammeier answered, denying the allegations of the complaint, and for further and separate defenses alleging (1) that the defendant Dammeier, for herself and Severson, the owner of the fee, within three days after obtaining knowledge of the construction, alteration, and repairs mentioned in the complaint, gave notice, by a writing posted in a conspicuous place upon the land, as required by section 3672 of the statute, that she and Severson would not be responsible for the same or any part thereof; (2) that only a small portion of the material furnished by the plaintiff and Rasmussen & Company was furnished to be used, or was used, in the construction, erection, or repair of the building mentioned and described in the complaint; (3) that, prior to the date-of the alleged assignment to the plaintiff, Rasmussen & Company’s lien had, for a valuable consideration, been waived and released. The allegations of the answer were put in issue by a reply, and upon the trial a decree was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, from which the defendants appeal. Affirmed.
For appellants there was a brief and an oral argument by Mr. Schuyler C. Spencer.
For respondent there was a brief over the name of Fred L. Keenan, with an oral argument by Mr. Robert F. Bell.
Mr. Chief Justice Bean,
after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
5. The first objection to' the decree of the court below is that the notices of lien filed by the plaintiff and Rasmussen & Company are each fatally defective, because they do' not state to whom the materials were furnished. The statute provides (Hill’s Ann. Laws, § 3673), that a material man, claiming the benefit of the act, shall file with the county clerk a claim, containing, among other things, “the name of the person * * * to whom he furnished the materials,” and a claim or notice which does not so1 state, either directly or by necessary inference, is insufficient: Getty v. Ames, 30 Or. 573 (48 Pac. 355). The notices in question are substantially the same, that of the plaintiff, so far as material, being ,as follows: “Know all men by these presents, that C. W. Nottingham, doing business as Nottingham & Company, have, by virtue of a contract heretofore made with J. McKendrick, a contractor, with L. Truipmer, lessee of the building hereinafter described, under a lease with M. C. Dammeier, for the furnishing of building material, to wit, lime, etc., furnished said material, to be and which was, used in the construction and erection of a certain three-story brick building, constructed and being upon the following described land, to wit,” etc.. This language is perhaps faulty, and open to some verbal criticism, but the meaning evidently is that the plaintiff, by virtue of a contract with McKendrick, furnished material to, be and which was used in the construction of a certain building, and, while it is not directly asserted • that the material was furnished to' McKendrick, such is the only inference to be drawn from the language employed. The lien notice is therefore sufficient: Rowland v. Harmon, 24 Or. 529 (34 Pac. 357).
6. It is next contended that the proof of the assignment by Rasmussen & Company of their lien to the plaintiff is in*501sufficient. On the trial there was offered and admitted in evidence the following writing: “We hereby assign and deliver to Nottingham & Company our claim against James McKendrick, $16.09, for material furnished on the Dam•meier building, corner Fifth and Morrison streets. [Signed] Rasmussen & Company, per J. P. Rasmussen.” It is argued that this writing is not sufficient to- constitute an assignment, and was not executed or delivered until after the commencement of this suit. There is some uncertainty in the testimony as to- when the writing was actually executed and delivered, but the cumulative result of the evidence is that it was made after the filing of the liens, and prior to the commencement of the suit. Both the plaintiff and Rasmussen testified that the writing was intended as an assignment, so as to vest in the plaintiff the title to the Rasmussen lien, in order that both might be foreclosed in one suit; and, inasmuch as plaintiff’s title is not questioned by Rasmussen & Company, the defendants are not entitled to a reversal because of a mere technical defect in the testimony on this question.
7. It is next insisted that the complaint is insufficient because it does not allege that the lien claims as filed contained a statement that the material furnished was actually used in the building. There is no merit in this objection, because the statute does not require a lien notice to- contain such a statement: Allen v. Elwert, 29 Or. 428 (44 Pac. 823, 48 Pac. 54). In the complaint ’the notices are pleaded according to their legal effect, and everything required by statute to be set forth in a claim o-f lien is alleged to- bq therein contained; hence the .complaint is sufficient.
8. It is further asserted that the liens cannot be enforced against the defendant Dammeier, for the reason that she gave notice, as provided in section 3672, that she would not be responsible for the repairs' or alterations mentioned in the complaint. Upon this point the court below found, in *502substance, that at some period during the time the work was being performed on the building the defendant Dammeier posted a notice upon one of the partition walls to- the effect that neither she nor the owner of the legal title would be responsible for any work or material furnished, but that such-notice was not posted, nor intended to be posted, in a conspicuous place upon the building or land, nor was it posted within three days after the defendants obtained knowledge of the work and repairs being done by the defendant McKendrick under his contract with Trammer. This finding is abundantly supported by the testimony. Mr. Dammeier, the agent of the defendant Dammeier, testified that Trammer, the lessee, objected to a notice being posted in a public place, and, in deference to his wishes, it was put on a partition wall, several feet bade from the street. Mr. Nottingham said that he was careful to- observe whether a notice had been posted, but did not see any; that, after the material had been furnished, he had a conversation with Mr. Dammeier about the matter, and the latter told him that “he was going to- post notices, and Mr. Trammer objected to- his posting them up where they would be seen, and that he put the notices in a little recess, he said, showing me on the corner of the building, and posted the notices in there in the little recess, where it would not be seen.”
9. It is next contended that a large part of the material furnished by the plaintiff and Rasmussen & Company was not used in the room rented by the defendant Trammer. Upon this point the evidence is to the effect that, after Trammer rented the room, he sublet a portion thereof for a cigar store; that McKendrick did a part of the work therein; and that probably some of the material furnished by the plaintiff and Rasmussen & Company was used in the latter place. But there is no evidence to show how much of it was so used, and the impression we get from an examination of the record is that it was small and inconsequential. In any event, *503it was used in the room: Trummer rented of the defendant Dammeier. It follows that the decree of the court below must be affirmed, and it is so ordered. Affirmed.