We granted leave in this case to consider a question of first impression arising under the Michigan ownership rights in dies, molds, and forms act, MCL 445.611 et seq., also known as the molder’s lien act. The precise question before us is whether an enforceable molder’s lien attaches absent some form of permanently recorded information on the mold, die, or tool identifying the name of the moldbuilder, its street address, city, and state. We hold that an enforceable lien demands the presence of permanently affixed identifying details on the mold, die, or tool and that the dies at issue lacked this essential record. We reverse the circuit court’s ruling to the contrary and remand for further proceedings.
I. UNDERLYING FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Plaintiff, C.G. Automation & Fixture, Inc., manufactures tool and die equipment and sells its products to *335automobile parts suppliers. Defendants Key Plastics L.L.C. and Autoliv A.S.P, Inc., supply parts to automobile manufacturers. Autoliv agreed to sell defendant Chrysler L.L.C. spoke covers for use in its JS41 vehicle platform. Chrysler applied the spoke covers as decorative features on the spokes of Chrysler Sebring steering wheels.
In September 2005, Autoliv sent Key Plastics a letter of intent to purchase spoke covers for JS41 vehicles. Defendant Autoform, Inc., quoted Key Plastics a price for the tooling necessary to manufacture the JS41 components. The tooling included production molds and metal trim dies. Key Plastics agreed to buy the tooling at the price quoted by Autoform. Autoform then turned to C.G. Automation for the design, fabrication, and manufacture of a portion of the JS41 tooling that Autoform had agreed to sell Key Plastics. C.G. Automation duly produced the required molds and dies and provided them to Autoform. The dispute before us concerns only the dies.
In September 2006, C.G. Automation shipped the dies to Autoform. On the date of shipment, C.G. Automation placed an identification tag on the risers accompanying the dies. According to Michael Elliott, C.G. Automation’s plant supervisor, a riser is
a precise metal bar that is machined and bolted to the bottom of the tool to establish a shut height or a tool shut height. You buy the die set.... If it doesn’t meet the required shut height, you put risers underneath it, and you bolt them to the bottom, so when they go into a press, they meet a certain shut height.[1]
*336Elliott admitted that the risers could be removed from the die and transferred to another tool. Nonetheless, Elliott characterized “the risers” as “part of the die.” When C.G. Automation shipped the dies to Autoform, C.G. Automation also filed a financing statement under the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) identifying its possession of a lien on the tooling.
Autoform never paid C.G. Automation for the dies, and Autoform entirely ceased its operations in 2007. However, before Autoform closed its doors, it sold the dies to Key Plastics.2 The parties agree that the dies arrived at the Key Plastics facility without the tagged risers. The dies currently reside in a Key Plastics plant in Pennsylvania, where the company has used them since 2007 in the manufacture of JS41 plastic parts. The record does not reveal the current location of the risers formerly attached to the dies.
In September 2007, C.G. Automation sued Autoform, Key Plastics, Autoliv, and Chrysler pursuant to the Special Tools Lien Act, MCL 570.541 et seq., and moved for immediate possession of the tooling. C.G. Automation’s complaint also alleged breach-of-contract and unjust-enrichment claims. C.G. Automation later amended its pleadings by adding a claim under the molder’s lien act. In November 2007, the circuit court denied the motion for immediate possession and entered a stipulated order dismissing the breach-of-contract and unjust-enrichment claims against Key Plastics, Autoliv, and Chrysler. Subsequently, the circuit *337court entered a default judgment against Autoform and in favor of C.G. Automation.
In February 2008, C.G. Automation filed a second amended complaint and moved to enforce the molder’s lien act and take immediate possession of the tooling if payment in full was not rendered. In May 2008, the circuit court conducted an evidentiary hearing, at which several witnesses testified. In a June 2008 written opinion and order, the circuit court explained, in pertinent part, that it would grant C.G. Automation’s motions:
3. The testimony of the representatives of C. G. Automation are that the devices that left their plant... had the markings which are required to be on a device pursuant to MCL 445.619(4) and UCC lien registrations were filed by C. G. Automation. This testimony was credible and believed by the Court.
4. As a result of the identification tags being placed ... and the UCC liens being registered for the devices ... the plaintiffs [sic] are entitled to immediate possession and/or payment by the entity in possession of the [dies].
In October 2008, this Court granted Key Plastics’ application for leave to appeal. CG Automation & Fixture, Inc v Autoform, Inc, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered October 24, 2008 (Docket No. 286361).
II. ANALYSIS
The construction and application of the molder’s lien act presents a question of law that this Court considers de novo on appeal. Delta Engineered Plastics, LLC v Autolign Mfg Group, Inc, 286 Mich App 115, 119; 777 NW2d 502 (2009). We review for clear error a circuit court’s findings of fact. MCR 2.613(C). “Clear error exists when the reviewing court is left with a definite *338and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.” Massey v Mandell, 462 Mich 375, 379; 614 NW2d 70 (2000).
In Gateplex Molded Products, Inc v Collins & Aikman Plastics, Inc, 260 Mich App 722, 726; 681 NW2d 1 (2004), another case arising under the molder’s lien act, we restated the following general principles governing statutory interpretation:
The primary goal of statutory interpretation is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the Legislature in enacting a provision. Statutory language should be construed reasonably, keeping in mind the purpose of the statute. The first criterion in determining intent is the specific language of the statute. If the statutory language is clear and unambiguous, judicial construction is neither required nor permitted, and courts must apply the statute as written. However, if reasonable minds can differ regarding the meaning of a statute, judicial construction is appropriate. [Citation and quotation marks omitted.]
In this case, the parties ask that we construe several sections of the molder’s lien act and determine whether, when harmonized, the act supports the imposition of a molder’s lien. In undertaking this task, we must avoid construing the statute in a manner that renders any statutory language nugatory or surplusage. Robinson v City of Lansing, 486 Mich 1, 21; 782 NW2d 171 (2010). When discerning legislative intent, we read the entire act and interpret a particular word in one statutory section only “after due consideration of every other section so as to produce, if possible, a harmonious and consistent enactment as a whole.” Grand Rapids v Crocker, 219 Mich 178, 182-183; 189 NW 221 (1922). This Court considers both the plain meaning of critical words or phrases comprising the statute and their placement and purpose in the statutory scheme. People v Blunt, 282 Mich App 81, 84; 761 NW2d 427 (2009). In *339summary, “[w]e construe an act as a whole to harmonize its provisions and carry out the purpose of the Legislature.” People v Hill, 269 Mich App 505, 515; 715 NW2d 301 (2006) (citation and quotation marks omitted).
The pertinent portion of the molder’s lien act, MCL 445.619, states as follows:
(1) A moldbuilder shall permanently record on every die, mold, or form that the moldbuilder fabricates, repairs, or modifies the moldbuilder’s name, street address, city, and state.
(2) A moldbuilder shall file a financing statement in accordance with the requirements of section 9502 of the uniform commercial code, 1962 PA 174, MCL 440.9502.
(3) A moldbuilder has a lien on any die, mold, or form identified pursuant to subsection (1). The amount of the lien is the amount that a customer or molder owes the moldbuilder for the fabrication, repair, or modification of the die, mold, or form. The information that the mold-builder is required to record on the die, mold, or form under subsection (1) and the financing statement required under subsection (2) shall constitute actual and constructive notice of the moldbuilder’s lien on the die, mold, or form.
(4) The moldbuilder’s lien attaches when actual or constructive notice is received. The moldbuilder retains the lien that attaches under this section even if the mold-builder is not in physical possession of the die, mold, or form for which the lien is claimed.
(5) The lien remains valid until the first of the following events takes place:
(a) The moldbuilder is paid the amount owed by the customer or molder.
(b) The customer receives a verified statement from the molder that the molder has paid the amount for which the lien is claimed.
*340(c) The financing statement is terminated.
The plain language of MCL 445.619(1) dictates that a moldbuilder permanently record identifying information on every die, mold, or form it produces. The statute does not define the term “permanently record.” “When considering a word or phrase that has not been given prior legal meaning, resort to a lay dictionary such as Webster’s is appropriate.” Citizens Ins Co v Pro-Seal Serv Group, Inc, 477 Mich 75, 84; 730 NW2d 682 (2007) (citation and quotation marks omitted). According to Random House Webster’s College Dictionary (1997), p 971, the relevant definitions of “permanent” include “1. existing perpetually; everlasting,” “2. intended to serve, function, etc., for a long, indefinite period,” and “3. long-lasting or nonfading[.]” The relevant definition of “record” is “1. to set down in writing or the like, as for the purpose of preserving evidence.” Id. at 1087.
In MCL 445.619(2), our Legislature adopted a second requirement, which is that the moldbuilder file a financing statement in conformity with MCL 440.9502, part of the UCC. In MCL 445.619(1) and (2), the Legislature clearly and unambiguously commanded that moldbuilders seeking an enforceable lien undertake two actions: “permanently record” specified identifying information on every die, mold, or form and “file a financing statement” under the UCC. Thus, the introductory subsections of the statute, (1) and (2), set forth two obligations relevant to the creation of a lien and its attachment. By placing these mandates at the beginning of the statute, the Legislature meant to convey that a moldbuilder seeking the benefits conveyed in the balance of the statute must comply with the predicate requirements.
Subsection (3) begins, “A moldbuilder has a lien on any die, mold, or form identified pursuant to subsection *341(1) .” MCL 445.619(3). This is the only portion of the statute directly addressing the creation of a lien. Notably, the Legislature elected not to create a lien effected through the filing of a financing statement. It could have done so by adding a second sentence here, stating to the effect that “a moldbuilder has a lien on any die identified pursuant to subsection (2).” Moldbuilder’s liens are nonconsensual, and they exist even absent privity of contract. Because those who ultimately acquire the tooling may have never agreed to a lien or entered into a security agreement with the moldbuilder, as occurred in this case, the statute creates a remedial security interest in the moldbuilder.
After addressing the amount of a moldbuilder’s lien in subsection (3), the statute turns to the manner in which the moldbuilder must supply the world with notice of the lien it acquired by complying with subsection (1). The third sentence of subsection (3) reads, “The information that the moldbuilder is required to record on the die, mold, or form under subsection (1) and the financing statement required under subsection (2) shall constitute actual and constructive notice of the moldbuilder’s lien .. . .” MCL 445.619(3) (emphasis added). With this sentence, the Legislature indicated that a moldbuilder who complies with both requirements has given the world actual and constructive notice of the lien.
Having established the legal components of an enforceable molder’s hen, we now consider whether the circuit court clearly erred by finding that C.G. Automation had permanently recorded identifying information on the dies. The record evidence agreed that C.G. Automation permanently affixed its identifying information to metal risers that could be separated from the dies and transferred for use with other tools. A Key Plastics engineer testified that *342the risers “are just steel spacers that [sic] if you needed to adjust heights for some reason, but they would not be necessarily specific to a specific die.” Although a C.G. Automation plant supervisor insisted at one point during the evidentiary hearing that the risers constitute a “part of the die[s],” substantial other evidence refutes this pronouncement. Abundant evidence establishes that a riser is not a die, but a separate and distinct device used in conjunction with a die. The two serve entirely different functions. “To treat them as synonymous... would be reminiscent of Lewis Carroll’s Humpty-Dumpty as he scornfully chastised Alice ‘when I use a word it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less.’ ” Maki v East Tawas, 385 Mich 151, 159; 188 NW2d 593 (1971).
By directing moldbuilders to “permanently record on every die, mold, or form” identifying information, MCL 445.619(1), the Legislature clearly intended that subsequent possessors of a die would receive actual notice of the name and address of the moldbuilder. The Legislature elected to achieve this end by requiring a die fabricator to perpetually preserve its identity “on every die. . . .” Id. (emphasis added). The circuit court’s determination that a moldbuilder could comply with the statutory mandate by permanently affixing its information to objects readily removable from the dies contravenes the plain meaning of MCL 445.619(1). Furthermore, the fact that Key Plastics has successfully used the dies without the accessory risers confirms that the risers simply are not equivalent to the dies. Consequently, our review of the entire relevant record leaves us with the definite and firm conviction that the circuit court made a mistake by finding that C.G. Automation had placed its identifying information on the dies. See Massey, 462 Mich at 379. Because C.G. Automation failed to perfect its lien in the manner prescribed under *343MCL 445.619, we reverse the decision of the circuit court and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
“Die shut height is defined as the height of the die in the shut or closed position.” Smith, Quick Die Change (Dearborn: Society of Manufacturing Engineers, 2d ed, 2004), ch 11, p 237. “In general, the shut height of a press is the maximum die height that can be accommodated *336for normal operation .. . .” Auto/Steel Partnership, Stamping Task Force, Selected Stamping and Formability Measurements, § 3.1.2 <http://www.a-sp.org/database/viewsee.asp?sec=594> (accessed October 5, 2010).
Key Plastics and Autoform fought a separate legal battle over the dies in the Washtenaw Circuit Court. They resolved their differences after Key Plastics agreed to pay Autoform for the tooling.