Gould v. Wise

By the Court,

Belknap, J.:

Foreclosure of mechanics’ liens. The Boca Mill Company, *258a corporation, was the owner of reduction works, and the land upon which they are situated. One Torrey entered into the possession of the premises under a written lease, duly recorded, for the term of two years. During Torrey's term the plaiutiff and iutervenors furnished materials and labor which were used in repairing and “carrying on” the mill. This suit is brought against defendant, as the successor in interest of the Boca Mill Company to the property, to enforce lien claims for the materials and labor so furnished.

The first question presented is whether Torrey, the lessee, could create a lien upon the premises that would affect the estate of the lessor. Section 1 of the lien law provides that “ every person performing labor upon or furnishing materials * * * to be used in the construction, alteration, or repair of any building, * * * has a hen upon the same for the work or labor done, or materials furnished, by each respectively, whether done or furnished at the instance of the owner of the building or his agent; and every contractor, sub-contractor, architect, builder, or other persons * * * having charge of the construction, alteration, or repairs, either in whole or in part, of any building, or other improvement as aforesaid, shall be held to be the agent of the owner for the purposes of this chapter. ” (Stat. 1875, 122.) It may be conceded for the purposes of this case that to authorize a lien there must be an employment by the owner of the building, or his authorized ageut, and that an employment by a lessee does not constitute the employment contemplated by the statute; and, further, that to constitute the contractor, sub-contractor, architect, builder, or other person the statutory agent of the owner, such person must have been employed, directly or indirectly, at the instance of the owner, or his conventional agent. But the interest of the owner may be subjected to lien claims, notwithstanding the labor and materials have not been furnished at his instance, if, knowing that alterations or repairs are being made or are contemplated, he fail to give notice that he will not be responsible therefor, as provided *259in section nine of the act. The provision is as follows:

“Sec. 9. Every building or other improvement mentioned in section one of this act, constructed upon any lands, with the knowledge of the owner or the person having or claiming any interest therein, shall be held to have been constructed at the instance of such owner or person having or claiming any interest therein, and the interest owned or claimed shall be subject to any lien filed in accordance with the provisions of this chapter, unless such owner or person having or claiming an interest therein shall, within three days after he shall have obtained knowledge of the construction, alteration, or repair, or the intended construction, alteration, or repair, give-notice that he will not be responsible for the same, by posting a notice in writing to that effect in some conspicuous place upon said land, or upon the building or other improvement situate thereon.”

The evidence showed that the corporation had an agent residing in the vicinity of the premises, who personally visited the reduction works and knew that the work was being done and the improvements made. This evidence was prima facie sufficient to charge the corporation with knowledge of the fact. No notice having been given by it that it would not be responsible for the materials and work, it results from the provisions of this section that its estate is chargeable with the liens.

Again, the consideration fbr the lease was that the lessee, “ at- his own cost and expense, * * * make all necessary repairs and improvements in and about said mill and reduction works, and furnish all necessary materials to place the same in good condition for crushing,” etc. The money so used, together with that expended in paying taxes and insurance, the lease provides, “shall be in full payment and satisfaction for'the rent of said premises for the first year.” This of itself shows knowledge on the part of the corporation of the “intended construction, alteration, or repair,” within the meaning of section 9.

A question growing out of the provisions of this section is whether persons performing labor in operating the mill *260can acquire a lien against the estate of the lessor. Section nineteen, as will be hereafter shown, provides liens for ■labor performed in “carrying on” .mills, manufactories, and hoisting works, and declares that all of the provisions of the lien law respecting the mode of filing, recording, securing, and enforcing liens shall be applicable to the provisions of this section. The provisions of the lien law preceding .section nineteen were, with two exceptions, immaterial to this case, enacted with reference to liens for work done or materials furnished in the construction, alteration, or repair of buildings. In extending the right of lien to a new class, it was natural for the legislature to ordain that the general .rules governing liens should also be extended. And in section nineteen these general provisions were made applicable in so far as they ar'e appropriate to the new subject of lien. This conclusion is warranted , by the phraseology of the statute, and by the presumed intention of the legislature, to create an harmonious and not an incongruous law.

The question also arises whether the law, as it now stands, contemplates lien-claims for work performed in “carrying on” reduction works. At the session of the legislature of 1869 the following supplement was made to the mechanic’s lien law :

“All foundrymen and boiler-makers, and all other persons performing labor, or furnishing machinery, or boilers, or eastings, or other'material, for the construction, or repairing, or carrying on of any mill, manufactory, or hoisting works, shall have a lien on such mill, .manufactory or hoisting works, for such work or labor done, or for such machinery, or boilers, or castings, or other material furnished by each respectively.” (Stat. 1869, p. 61.)

At the next session the lien law underwent some alterations, but this section was re-enacted without change, save that the italicised word “ for ” was omitted. The employment of this word in the original enactment was unnecessary, and its omission worked no other alteration in the law.

The supplemental law provides for two classes of lien claimants.. One class consists of foundrymen, boiler-makers, *261and persons furnishing machinery, boilers, castings, or other materials. The other class consists of persons performing labor. Gown to the time of its enactment persons performing labor or furnishing materials for the purpose of operating mills, manufactories, or hoisting works were not entitled to liens under the lien law. The only object of the provision was to extend the right of lien to this class of claimants. Foundrymon, boiler-makers, and others furnishing labor or materials in constructing or repairing were already secured in their right of lien by the provisions of section 1 of the lien law, and the provisions of the supplemental law did not confer upon them additional rights.

In the year 1875 the law was again revised, and the revision constitutes our present law. The section under consideration was then re-enacted without change other than this:'The italicized word “on” in the following quotation was inserted in lieu of the word “or” in the original enactment. The section as changed stands as follows:

“Sec. 19. All founclrymen and ‘ boiler-makers, and all persons performing labor, or furnishing machinery or boilers, or castings, or other materials for the construction, or repairing, or carrying on of any mill, manufactory, or hoisting ■works, shall have a lien on such mill, manufactory, or hoisting works for such work or labor done on such machinery, or boiler, or castings, or other material furnished by each respectively. * * *” (Stat. 1875, 126.)

If this language be followed the right of lien is restricted to “work and labor done on such machinery, or boiler, or castings, or other materials ” as the lien claimant may have furnished, and is withheld from persons furnishing labor without materials; and, also, from those furnishing the many articles of mining and milling supplies upon which no labor is bestowed by the vendor. The section, as it appears in the published statutes and in the enrolled bill, is delusive. It purports to provide for two distinct classes of lieu claimants, but in fact provides for only one class. No reason can be assigned why the pretended provision for “persons *262performing labor ” should have been nullified by the inconsistent provisions succeeding, nor for the senseless discrimination in favor of those laboring’ upon materials furnished by themselves, and against those laboring upon materials furnished by others. If the intention of the legislature had been to change the law, it is reasonable to presume that language fairly expressive of such intent would have been employed, and that so radical a change would not have been brought about by the simple changing of the word “or” to “on.” Instead, however, of fairly expressing a change in the law, the phraseology of the statute, unless attributable to clerical mistake, is intentionally misleading. No intention to mislead can be indulged, and we conclude that the change arose through a clerical mistake, and should be disregarded. The error may be accounted for by the similarity in appearance of the words “or” and “on” as ordinarily written. By mistaking the former word for the latter the error doubtless originated.

The principle that courts will disregard clerical errors apparent upon the face of a legislative act has been frequently recognized. In U. S. v. Stern, 5 Blatchf. 513, the court had occasion to consider a statute providing for the indictment of persons convicted of bribery. If effect were given to the clause concerning convictions, the whole act would be rendered meaningless. In order to carry out the intention of congress the clause was disregarded.

A statute of the state of Minnesota, providing for the removal of actions to the supreme court, declared, by its first section, that “a judgment or order in a civil or criminal action in any of the district courts may be removed to the supreme court, as provided in this chapter.” The second section was in these words : “All penal judgments in the district courts may be examined and affirmed, reversed or modified by the supreme court; * * * such examination may be made upon writ of error or appeal as hereinafter provided.” The court held that the manifest design of the statute was to subject all judgments of the district courts to examination by the supreme court; that the second *263section contained the only provision touching the manner of removing judgments ; that if it were construed according to its letter, the whole statute would be rendered ineffectual; that the substitution of the word “final” for the word “penal” would render the whole chapter effectual, and consistent with its intent and purpose, and thereupon the court concluded that the use of the word “penal” instead of the word “final” was a clerical or typographical error, and that the section should be treated as if the word “final” were substituted for the word “penal.” (Moody v. Stephenson, 1 Minn. 401, (Gil. 289.) Decisions involving the same principle were made in the following cases: Jenks v. Langdon, 21 Ohio St. 370; Turner v. State, 40 Ala. 21; Nazro v. Merchants’ Ins. Co. 14 Wis. 295; Haney v. State, 34 Ark. 268; People v. Onondaga, 16 Mich. 254; Blanchard v. Sprague, 3 Sumn. 279; People v. Hoffman, 97 Ill. 234; McConkey v. Alameda Co. 56 Gal. 83; Frazier v. Gibson, 7 Mo. 272.

The meaning attaching to the words “ carrying on,” as used in section 19, was construed by the district court of the United States for this district, in the year 1871, to the effect that a teamster, in hauling quartz to a mill, performed labor for carrying on the mill and was entitled to a lien against it. (In re Hope M. Co. 1 Saw. 710.) In 1875, as before stated, the legislature re-enacted the provision so construed. It has frequently been held that the re-enactment of a statute without substantial alteration, after an authoritative construction has been placed upon it, is a legislative adoption of the construction. The cases in which the rule is announced are generally those in which the construction has been given by the highest court of the state; no ease has falleu under our notice in which the construction was given to'a statute of the state by the courts of the United States. The rule is based upon the presumption that the legislature knew of the construction.

In Hunter v. Truckee Lodge, 14 Nev. 39, this court felt safe in holding that before an official publication of a decision by the supreme court of California “there ought to be *264no presumption that the decision was known to our legislature. ” “In frequent instances,” saj-s the court in that case, “the courts have takeu pains to show, by comparison of dates and otherwise, that it was reasonable to presume that the previous construction of borrowed statutes was actually known to the legislature by which they were adopted; and in one case, Campbell v. Quinlin, 3 Scam. 289, some stress was laid upon the fact that the decisions had not only been made, but the ‘ reports published to tlie world’ prior to the adoption of the statute in question.”

The federal decision to which we have referred was published in the year 1873, in the reports of cases determined by the United States courts within the district embraced by the state of Nevada. If the presumption of knowledge on the part of the legislature is based upon the fact that publicity is given to the construction by publication of the decision, as this court appears to have held, we see no reason why the presumption of legislative adoption of the judicial construction of the statute in this case should not apply with the same force as in the cases decided by the state courts.

Again, courts frequently refer to the history of a statute, and to any circumstance evidencing its object, for the purpose of ascertaining the intention of the legislature. Such reference is based upon the presumption that legislatures are conversant with the subject matter upon which they are acting. The decision in the first of Sawyer’s reports forms part of the history of the lieu law, and it is reasonable and just to assume that in legislating upon the subject of mechanics liens it was not overlooked. Independently of these considerations, we are convinced that persons furnishing labor or materials used in operating the mill are entitled to liens, because, first, the language of the statute so declares; and, second, as stated in another portion of this opinion, the enactment of section 19 was unnecessary, unless its object was to extend the right of lien to these classes of claimants.

The last point made is that’there was no testimony show*265ing how much of the land, upon which the reduction works stood, was necessary for its convenient use and occupation. When the reduction works were leased the land determined by the court as subject to the lieu was embraced within the demised premises. And when the defendant acquired the property he purchased this land and the reduction works. This testimony showing that the land and reduction works had been leased together, and sold together, tends to prove that the property subjected to the liens has been treated as a unit and used for a common purpose. With this testimony the court, in the absence of any suggestion to the contrary, (and none was made at the trial) might properly have inferred that the land so used and treated was reasonably convenient for the use of the reduction works.

The judgment and order of the district court overruling the motion for new trial are affirmed.