Opinion by The plaintiff alleged that he fixed and secured his lieu by filing a duplicate copy of the bill of particulars, under oath, with the. clerk of the District Court of McLennan county on the thirtieth day of December, 1874, and by serving a copy of tbe same on the defendant Patterson, as required by law.
The special demurrer and exception of the defendant Corlew to the plaintiff’s petition is, that there is no averment contained in it that plaintiff’s said claim, and notice of claim of lien, was ever recorded in the proper office of McLennan county.
Article 7112, Paschal’s Digest, provides for fixing and securing a. lien of this character as follows:
■ “ In order to fix and secure the lien herein provided for, the contractor, mechanic, laborer or artisan furnishing material shall have the right, at any time within six months after such debt becomes due, to file his contract in the office of the district clerk of the county in which such property is situated, and cause the same to be recorded in a book to be kept by the district clerk for that purpose. * * * When such contract is filed and recorded, it shall be deemed sufficient diligence to fix the same from the date it is filed for record, and secure the lien herein provided.”
It is the well established doctrine of our Supreme Court, that to fix the lien under the act in question, and similar statutes having relation to the same subject, enacted since that of 1871, that the provisions of the statutes which fix and secure the lien must be complied with in every essential particular. (Ferguson v. Ashbell, 53 Texas, 245; Lee v. Phelps, 54 Texas, 370; Lee v. O’Brien, Ibid, 636; Poole v. Sandford, 52 Texas, 620.)
Unquestionably, under our decisions, where “material-men”
Both the act of 1871 and that enacted in 1876 (Laws Fifteenth Legislature, 91), regulating mechanics liens, etc., contained, in substance, the same provisions, as to the requisites to fix and secure the lien, contemplated by those statutes respectively.
A reference to the cases which have been cited (Lee v. Phelps, Lee v. O’Brien, Ferguson v. Ashell, and other cases which might be added), show a consistent enforcement by the Supreme Court of the rule that the right to the lien depends on a substantial compliance with the statute which confers it.
. Lee v. Phelps, supra, and Lee v. O’Brien, supra, construing the act of 1876, held it to be essential in order to secure an artisan’s or mechanic’s lien, that a copy of particulars should be delivered to the debtor, notwithstanding that the plaintiff’s account or bill of particulars, with the affidavit thereto, had been duly filed and recorded by the clerk of the county court, in compliance with the statute then in force. The statute gives the lien upon the performance of two essential acts, viz., the service upon the party owing the debt, with the copy of the bill of particulars, and the filing and recording of the contract or account. Both of these acts must be done in substantial compliance with the statute, or else this constructive or artificially formed contract or obligation created by the law and denominated a lien cannot exist. The lien is not created by the contract of the parties, but when it exists at all, is the creation of the statute, and exists upon the conditions prescribed for its formation and its continuation.
The plaintiff, .in his petition, alleges that on the the thirtieth day of December, 1874, he did fix and secure his lien upon said premises for said labor, lumber, and material, by filing a duplicate copy of the bill of particulars, under oath, with the clerk of the district court, and serve a copy on Patterson as required by law. The account duly sworn to on the thirtieth of December, 1874, with service accepted by J. K. Patterson, is attached as an exhibit to the plaintiff’s petition, without a file mark of the district clerk, or certi
The allegation of the petition just now quoted does not allege that the account or bill of particulars had, in fact, been recorded,, or had been filed for record. The allegation that it had been filed with the district clerk is not equivalent to, nor does it supply the want of, the allegation that he had caused it to be recorded.
“ The requisites of the statutes are necessarily descriptive of the lien, and if omitted in the pleadings, should subject them to demurrer.” (Poole v. Sandford, supra, 634.)
We think that the petition was obnoxious to the defendant’s demurrer; that the requisites prescribed by the statutes are declaratory of what shall be sufficient to fix and secure the lien, and that, the petition failing to allege that the plaintiff had caused the bill of particulars to be recorded, it was subject to the demurrer and special exceptions filed by the defendant (Corlew).
The statute extends to the beneficiaries of it six months after their cause of action for the debt may have accrued within which to file and record a contract or account, as the case may be, and it extends the benefit of the^lien to anindefinite period beyond that limited period by fixing and securing "thedien,-provided the credltorjdiall .comply with the conditions of law as they have been 'stated.
The language used by the statute seems to contemplate that the performance by the creditor of those things required, in order to fix and secure the lien, are to be finished and completed within the time specified; that time Jp npade_ byJ;he law the essence of the privilege offerecTby the statute, and that laches or want of diligence to do "tEose^ things required "within the time required will discharge the lien.
The statute says: “When such contract or account is filed and recorded, it shall be deemed sufficient diligence to fix the same from the date it is filed for record and secure the lien herein provided.”
The fair implication fromTthe language' used in connection with a preceding clause of the same section, prescribing for the recording aforesaid, is that the lien shall not be deemed to be fixed_and secured until the prdper reeord or registry has been made.
‘ We conclude thartlieié was ho error in sustaining the exceptions, so far as relates to the sufficiency of the petition in setting up a valid lien. It may be competent, by amendment, to allege facte
The court erred in sustaining the petition as a cause of action for the money alleged to be due, and dismissing the cause, because the amount in controversy wras less than $500. When the suit was brought, the district court had jurisdiction of all sums over $100. The jurisdiction of that court was extended to $500 by the Constitution of 1876, which took effect on the eighteenth day of April of that year.
Section 27, article 5, Constitution, provides “ That the Legislature shall, at its first session, provide for the transfer of all business, civil and criminal, pending in the district courts, over which jurisdiction is given by this Constitution to the county courts or other inferior courts to such county or inferior courts, and for the trial or disposition of all such causes by such county or inferior courts.” The Constitutiotion conferred on the county courts jurisdicttion over sums between $200 and $500.
In Tinsley v. Boykin, decided at Galveston at the recent session of the Supreme Court (1882), it was held that the want of evidence to show that the contract under which the mechanic claimed a lien had ever been recorded was decisive against the judgment in favor of the mechanic fixing and securing his alleged lien. In that case the plaintiff .alleged that he had fixed and secured the lien by causing the contract to be recorded, but, as the evidence failed to show that tlie contract had been recorded, it was held that the judgment, so far as it foreclosed the lien, was not supported by the evidence. The suit was between the original parties to the contract, and to foreclose the plaintiff’s alleged lien upon the defendant’s, homestead.
This cause was tried in June, 1S76. The Constitution provided that the first session of the ensuing Legislature should begin on the eighteenth day of April, 1876. It did convene accordingly, at that time, and was in session at the date of the rendition of the judgment in this case during the session. The judgment was rendered June 13, 1S76, and on June 16, 1876, the Legislature, in compliance with the section above quoted from the Constitution (Acts Fifteenth Legislature, 1876, sec. 7, p. 19), enacted a statute transferring to the county courts from the district courts the cases contemplated by the Constitution, which took effect from its passage.
' If the Legislature even had not acted upon the subject matter at as early a period of the session as it did do, the court, nevertheless, ought rather to have continued a- cause subject to he transferred to the county court, until the Legislature should have acted, thus preserving the rights of litigants, rather than to dismiss such causes.
Such a course would manifestly be in accordance with the exercise of proper judical discretion, under the peculiar state of things which existed under the transition the State was passing through in its accommodation to a new-uonstitution which had effected fundamental changes in the jurisdiction of the courts.
We are of the opinion that the judgment ought to be reversed and cause remanded to the district court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion, directing the district court to transfer this cause to the county court, unless, by proper amendment, the plaintiff may be able to show that he has fixed and secured the lien which he relies on.