Fleming v. Greener

Decision Date17 January 1908
Docket Number6,105
PartiesFLEMING ET AL. v. GREENER ET AL
CourtIndiana Appellate Court

From Dubois Circuit Court; E. A. Ely, Judge.

Suit by Andrew Greener and others against Robert H. Fleming and others. From a decree for plaintiffs, defendants appeal.

Transferred to Supreme Court. (For decision on merits, see -- Ind. --.).

M. W Fields, Harvey Harmon, W. E. Cox and R. W. Armstrong, for appellants.

Leo H Fisher, A. L. Gray, W. A. Traylor and Bomar Traylor, for appellees.

OPINION

RABB, J.

The appeal in this case is from the judgment of the court below rendered in favor of the appellees against the appellants, Southern Railway Company, the Southern Railway Company of Indiana, and others, declaring and enforcing, along with other relief granted, a laborer's lien upon said railroad in favor of said appellees and against the railway companies. The railway companies, appellants herein, entered into a contract with appellant McDonald for the construction by McDonald on the line of their road of a cement bridge and culvert. McDonald sublet a part of the work to appellant Waidley. McDonald and Waidley employed a large number of persons to perform work and labor in the construction of said bridge and culvert, and purchased from various persons a large amount of material to be used in said work. They issued to those to whom they became indebted for such labor and material written evidences of such indebtedness, called "time checks." The holders of these checks, without having filed notice of an intention to hold a lien on the railroad for their claims, as provided by the statute, assigned said time checks, by indorsement in writing, and for a valuable consideration, to the appellees, who afterwards in their own names and in the names of their assignors, filed in the office of the recorder of the county wherein said work was done notice of their intention to hold a lien on said road for said labor claims, to which notice they also appended the names of their assignors, without authority, however, to do so, except as such authority might be inferred from the assignment of the time checks.

One of the questions presented by this appeal, upon which the judgment of the court below in declaring the lien upon appellants' road for the amount of such claims so assigned to appellees must stand or fall, is whether the assignment of said labor claims, as aforesaid, carried with it any right in the assignee to perfect the lien allowed by the provisions of § 8305 Burns 1908, Acts 1889, p. 257, § 6.

This precise question was presented to the Supreme Court in the case of Midland R. Co. v. Wilcox (1890), 122 Ind. 84, 23 N.E. 506, and it is there affirmed that such assignment carried with it the right in the assignee to perfect and enforce the lien. The distinction between the assignment of a debt secured by the perfected lien, and the assignment of a debt not thus secured, but which might by the act of the original creditor be so secured, does not seem to have been in the mind of the court in the rendition of this decision, and the assignment is discussed in the opinion of the learned judge who spoke for the court as though the question involved in the case was simply whether or not a perfected mechanic's lien is assignable.

It is the opinion of this court that § 8305, supra giving liens to persons who perform work or furnish material in the construction of railroads, etc., was intended for the sole benefit of the persons named in the law, and that no lien attaches securing claims for such services or material until notice has been filed in the office of the proper county, as provided in § 8306 Burns 1908, Acts 1883, p. 140, § 13; and that the assignment of such claims by the persons performing such work, or furnishing such material, and entitled under the law to perfect the lien therefor, before such lien is perfected, carries with it no right in the assignee to a lien. The law was not intended for the benefit of such assignee. This view we think harmonizes with the manifest purpose of the statute, the general principles of law, and the great weight of the decided cases. It is supported by the following cases: Mills v. Le Verne Land Co. (1893), 97 Cal. 254, 32 P. 169, 33 Am. St. 168; McCrea v. Johnson (1894), 104 Cal. 224, 37 P. 902; Dano v. M. O., etc., R. Co. (1872), 27 Ark. 564; Tewksbury v. Bronson (1880), 48 Wis. 581, 4 N.W. 749; Mason v. Germaine (1870), 1 Mont. 263; Brown v. Smith (1880), 55 Iowa 31, 7 N.W. 401; Langan & Noble v. Sankey (1881), 55 Iowa 52, 7 N.W. 393; Merchant v. Ottumwa Water Power Co. (1880), 54 Iowa 451, 6 N.W. 709; Frailey v. Winchester, etc., R....

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