Stephens v. Duffy

On Petition for Rehearing.

Roby, C. J.

1. In support of the petition for rehearing appellants’ attorneys insist that the holding that a lien might be had upon two separate buildings was not justified in the absence of a showing that the two buildings were appurtenant to each other. The premise is not correct. The first witness examined testified that the real estate is “what is known as the ‘Old Stephens Homestead’.” One of defendants’ witnesses testified as follows:

Q. Now this barn and this house are both on the same piece of land in Center township? A. Ves, sir.

Q. You are in charge of this farm? A. Yes, sir.

Q. You made this contract for them, and attended to everything that was needed? A. Yes, sir.

There is no lack of evidence to support the finding, aside from the above.

*3882. *387The description of real estate contained in the notice of *388intention to hold a lien was sufficient. “ Any description of the lot or land in a notice of a lien will be sufficient if, from such description, or any reference therein, the lot or land can be identified.” Acts 1889, p. 257, §3, §8297 Burns 1908. The appellee testified that the buildings upon which the work was done were situated upon the real estate described in his amended complaint. The notice of lien containing a sufficient description, appellee’s proof of a more accurate description of the same real estate entitled him to a decree foreclosing upon such specific description, and this was given. No question of reformation was in issue. The proof simply identified the land with particularity. The imperfect description in the notice was supplemented by extrinsic evidence. Dalton v. Hoffman (1893), 8 Ind. App. 101; Davis & Rankin, etc., Mfg. Co. v. Vice (1896), 15 Ind. App. 117.

3. It is finally insisted, renewing the contention first made in the original brief, that appellee was a sub-subcontractor, and therefore not entitled to the benefit of the statutory lien. The statute provides: “contractors, subcontractors, mechanics, journeymen, laborers, and all persons performing labor or furnishing, material,” etc. §8295 Burns 1908, Acts 1899, p. 569. The ejusdem generis rule is invoked in support of the claim, in effect, that the phrase, “all persons,” adds nothing to the enumeration of those who may acquire a lien.

Applying it to the act under consideration, the phrase “all persons” includes a person who comes within the spirit of the act, and who, like subcontractors and the employes of subcontractors, contribute labor or material necessary to the completion of the work which the owner has contracted to have done. Appellants’ proposition comes to this: A laborer employed by the day to do a job of work which takes one day is within the protection of the law, but if he agrees with the same man to do the same work for $2 the law is not for him. The work done was inseparably incidental to the *389improvement that appellant contracted to have done. Had the snb-siibeontractor employed appellee to do this work under a contract to pay him therefor by the day, the statute would have been available. Wells v. Christian (1906), 165 Ind. 662. Counsel have supported their proposition, that a sub-subcontractor cannot acquire a lien, by the citation of eleven eases decided in other jurisdictions in which statements to that effect are made. The cases are necessarily confusing without an examination of the statutes with reference to which the decisions were made. There are three classes of mechanics’-lien statutes in the United States, and the cases cited by appellants do not relate to the class which has been enacted in Indiana. These classes are: (1) Those which create a lien without regard to any contractual relation with the owner of the building or structure; (2) those which confine the lien to those who have contractual relations with the owners of the building or structure; (3) those which have regard to the contractual relation of the parties and limit the persons, who, besides the owners, can create a contractual relation under which a lien can be taken. Central Trust Co. v. Richmond, etc., R. Co. (1892), 54 Fed. 723, 726. Our statute must be included in the first class. It does not demand a contract relation with the owner. The courts have frequently declared that the work must be contracted for by the owner, otherwise a mere interloper could acquire a lien. Littler v. Robinson (1906), 38 Ind. App. 104; Ogg v. Tate (1875), 52 Ind. 159; Hopkins v. Hudson (1886), 107 Ind. 191, 195; Alvey v. Reed (1888), 115 Ind. 148, 149, 7 Am. St. 418; Littler v. Friend (1906), 167 Ind. 36. The Oregon statute involved in Fisher v. Tomlinson (1900), 40 Ore. 111, 60 Pac. 390, 66 Pac. 696, will serve as an example of those statutes coming within the third class. It is in part as follows: ‘ ‘ Every * * * person '::= * * fumishing * * * material of any kind to be used in the construction * ® * of any building * * * shall have a lien upon the same for the * * * material furnished *390at the instance of the owner of the building * * * - or his agent; and every contractor, subcontracter, architect, builder, or other person having charge of the construction * * * of any building * * * shall be held to be the agent of the owner for the purpose of this act.” Hill’s Anno. Laws (Ore.) §3669. The wording of the federal statute, under which the case of Monroe v. Hannan (1889), 7 Mackey 197, 3 L. R. A. 549, was decided, is in part: ‘£ Shall be subject to a lien in favor of the contractor, subcontractor, material-naan, journeyman, and laborer, respectively, for the payment for work done or materials contracted for,” etc. Act of congress of 1884, ch. 143, 23 Stat. (U. S.) p. 64. Under such statutes it is necessarily held that one who neither deals with the owner, nor with any other person expressly empowered by the statute to bind the owner, cannot acquire a lien, and the distinction between such statutes and our own differentiates the cases cited by appellant. In holding that one who does work for a subcontractor is within the statute, nothing is added to the terms of the statute. The consent of the owner, to evidence which some contract obligation on his part is required by the decisions, exists in this case as it does where the laborer is employed by the day by a sub-subcontractor. Pere Marquette R. Co. v. Smith (1905), 36 Ind. App. 439; Wells v. Christian, supra.

Petition for rehearing overruled.