Mitchell v. Monarch Elevator Co.

Morgan, C. J.

This action was brought to recover damages against the defendant for the conversion of grain on which the plaintiff claimed a thresher’s lien. The case was submitted to the court for decision upon stipulated facts. No objections were taken at the trial except that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and that it appears upon the face of the complaint that the plaintiff is not entitled to maintain the action. The trial court made findings of fact and conclusions of law in plaintiff’s favor and judgment was duly entered thereon. The defendant has appealed from the judgment. The specifications of error are directed against the sufficiency of the complaint and the sufficiency of the statement for a lien to sustain the judgment as a matter of law. The principal objection to the complaint is to the following allegation thereof: “That heretofore and in the fall of 1904, said plaintiff did thresh for S. Almklov and Cryst Steinborn, 495 bushels of wheat and 918 bushels of oats and barley at the reasonable value and agreed price of 12 cents for wheat and 7 cents for oats and barley for threshing the same. That although said threshing was done on or about the 3d, 4th and 5th days of October, and frequent demands have been made for said threshing amounting to $123.66, it is entirely due and wholly unpaid, except the sum of $56.00, leaving a balance due said plaintiff of $67.66.” It is claimed that the complaint fails to state a cause of action for two reasons: (1) That it and the statement for a lien fail to state the number of bushels of oats and the number of bush*498els of barley that were threshed; (2) that the time when the threshing was done is indefinitely stated, so that it cannot be determined from the complaint whether a lien was filed within time or not. It is also contended that the defendant is not liable under the facts as it was an innocent purchaser of the grain.

We'will dispose of these objections in the order above given. The statute providing for a thresher’s lien, is chapter 83 of the Revised Civil Code of 1899. Section 4823 of that chapter is as follows: “Any owner or lessee of a threshing machine who threshes grain for another therewith, shall, upon filing the statement provided for in the next section, have a lien upon such grain for the value of his services in threshing the same from the date of the commencement of the threshing.” Section 4824: “Any person entitled to a lien under this chapter, shall within thirty days after the threshing is completed, file * * * a statement in writing * * * showing the amount and quantity of grain threshed * * * and a description of the land upon which the grain was grown. Unless the person entitled to the lien shall file such statement within the time aforesaid, he shall be deemed to have waived his right thereto.” Section 4825: “Such lien shall have priority over all other liens and incumbrances upon such grain.” It is claimed that the statement for a lien is fatally defective for the reason that it fails to state the exact number of bushels of oats and the exact number of bushels of barley. The statute does not require the number of bushels of each kind of grain threshed to be stated. It only requires the amount and quantity of- the grain threshed to be stated. In showing only the aggregate number of bushels of oats and barley threshed, we think the statute was complied with. The amount of the lien is definitely stated, and can be computed from the facts stated in the affidavit for a lien. In view of the broad language of the statute, we cannot assume that it was the intention of the legislature that the statement should necessarily specify the amount of each kind of grain threshed, when the amount of the lien claimed appears definitely by computation from the facts given in the statement. The statement must contain everything required by the statute before the lien becomes enforceable, but no more particularity than is necessary Under the language of the statute, a lien is given upon all the grain threshed, for threshing any part of it. In this case the question as to the enforcement of the lien for threshing any particular kind of grain *499upon other kinds of grain threshed at the same time and under the same contract, as against other lien, prior in point of time, is not material The lien is to be construed in this case the same as though the question were between the owner of the grain and the thresher. In case of other existing liens upon the grain, the mode of enforcing the lien so as to protect the interests of all concerned need not be considered or decided.

The next objection is that the complaint does not definitely set forth when the threshing was done. It states that the threshing was done on or about 3d, 4th or 5th of October, and that the statement was filed on October 15th. The claim is that the complaint does not show that the statement was filed within 30 days after the threshing was done. The testimony submitted in the stipulation of facts is that the threshing was done on the 3d, 4th and 5th days of October. This testimony was not objected to. Hence the. indefinite allegation of the complaint becomes immaterial even if it be conceded that the objection made to the complaint would cover the objection now made and that such objection was good.

It is also urged that the statement for a lien does not contain a description of the land on which the grain was grown. The statement specifically sets forth that the grain was threshed on land specifically described therein, and gives the number of bushels threshed and the sum paid on the bill. The statement then contains the following language: “for which this affiant claims a lien upon said grain grown upon the above land.” This was a definite statement that the grain was grown upon the land that had been previously described. The statement for a lien contained everything set forth' in the statute as necessary to be stated, and was in compliance therewith in every respect.

n more difficult question is next presented. It is stipulated that the grain was purchased and paid for at the regular market price and mingled with other grain and shipped out of the state before the claim for a lien was filed and without any knowledge of plaintiff’s claim, and without any knowledge that plaintiff had threshed the grain. These facts are set forth as a basis for the contention that the defendant was an innocent purchaser of the grain. The language of section 4823, supra, does not warrant the conclusion from such facts that the defendant was an innocent purchaser. That section gives owners or lessees of threshing *500machines a lien for threshing done. It gives them 30 days in which to file a claim for such lien after the threshing is done. After the filing of the claim for a lien, the lien relates back to the commencement of the threshing. The right to file a lien exists during the whole of the 30 days. It is the doing of the work that constitutes the right to a lien by virtue of the statute. The filing of a claim for a lien makes the lien enforceable from the commencement of the threshing. During the 30 days a lien exists by virtue of the statute and without filing and the filing makes it enforceable from the commencement of the threshing. The law gave the defendant' notice that a statement for a lien might be filed for the threshing of the grain during 30 days after the work was done. The grain itself was evidence that it might be subject to a lien for threshing it. The object of the statute is to give security for threshing grain. The statute is remedial in its nature. It should be construed liberally to carry out its object, if that can be done by a reasonable construction of its language.

To construe this statute so that purchasers of the grain during the '30 days could purchase it without liability, would defeat the purpose of it to a great extent. The intention of the legislature clearly was to subject the grain to a lien for the threshing during the 30 days and this lien became enforceable upon the filing of the claim during the 30 days. The following cases sustain this construction of similar statutes concerning liens. Matthews v. Burke, 32 Tex. 420; Kennard v. Harvey, 80 Ind. 37; Campbell v. Bowen (Ind. App.) 53 N. E. 656; Richardson Bros. v. Peterson, 58 Iowa, 724, 13 N. W. 63; Doolittle et al. v. Plenz, 16 Neb. 153, 20 N. W. 116; Holden v. Cox, 60 Iowa, 449, 15 N. W. 269; McCoy v. Cook (Wash.) 42 Pac. 546. This decision is not in conflict with Richmire v. Elevator Co., 11 N. D. 453, 92 N. W. 819. The statute authorizing the lien in that case did not give the filing of the statement for a lien the effect of relating back to the doing of the work.

There is no question involved as to the constitutionality of the statute. The question is whether the plaintiff had a lien on the grain from the time of the threshing, after he had filed a claim therefor. The owner of the grain could not transfer any better title to it than he himself had, and defendant purchased the grain knowing that the statute gave the thresher a lien thereon from the commencement of the threshing. Section 4825 gives threshers’ *501liens priority over all prior claims and incumbrances. From this appellant argues that innocent purchasers take the property exempt from the lien. As we construe the statute, there can be no innocent purchasers of the grain during the 30 days following the completion of the threshing. It was necessary to define the relative rights of existing lien holders on the crop with respect to the thresher’s lien created by this law. After the filing of claim for a lien, the lien exists as a matter of law against all liens or claims. The statute deprives the purchaser of nothing. He gets all that the owner had a right to sell to him. He knows as a matter of law that the owner cannot lawfully sell, except subject to the lien of the thresher, if it develops that he has any. The statute is notice to the purchaser of the right to a thresher’s lien on the grain, up to 30 days from the threshing. McCoy v. Cook, supra. The defendant bought the grain with notice which was as effectual as though the statement for a lien was on file. He acted at his peril, and the statute deprives him of no constitutional or vested right of property.

(107 N. W. 1085.)

The judgment is affirmed.

All concur.