DocketNumber: No. 12,111.
Citation Numbers: 269 P. 894, 84 Colo. 279
Judges: Walker, Butler
Filed Date: 7/2/1928
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
delivered the opinion of the court.
Peter K. Orrison was the owner of 160 acres of land in Adams county. December 9, 1925, by lease duly recorded on that date, he demised the land unto one K. G. Lambertson, “for the sole and only purpose of mining and operating for oil, gas, hydrocarbons and minerals of all kinds, and laying pipes, filling tanks, power stations and structures thereon, to produce, save and take care of said project, for a term of five years and as long thereafter as such minerals shall be produced by the lessee.” Orrison was to receive a one-eighth part of all'oil produced and other prescribed royalties on other minerals. A specified rental was to be paid unless oil wells were drilled as prescribed in the lease. The privilege of assigning in whole or in part was expressly allowed to both parties to the lease. Other provisions of the lease are immaterial for the purposes of this opinion. Lambertson assigned the lease prior to its recording, to a corporation known as the Municipal Oil Inc., one of the plaintiffs in error. The Municipal Oil Inc., entered into a contract with the Terminal Drilling Co. Inc., one of the plaintiffs in error, for the drilling of an oil and gas well upon the premises so leased. The record does not disclose the terms of the drilling contract. After the making of the drilling'contract, the Terminal Company erected a standard derrick and rig upon the site, with the customary frame building. The rig was erected on concrete corners, and was equipped with rig irons, calf wheel irons, sand reel, steel crown block rig, and other parts necessary to
Pursuant to this contract, Stringer brought to the location, engine, boiler, tanks, and numerous tools and other articles of equipment. He then prosecuted the work of sinking the well, until about the 9th day of July, 1926, when financial and other difficulties compelled the abandonment of the project without the completion of the well to the contemplated depth.
The defendants in error were employed by Stringer; Jones in the hauling of equipment to the location, Bell as a driller, and Shull as a tool dresser. When they went upon the job they found the rig and derrick set up. Their claims for labor aggregated approximately $3,000, and were unpaid. Plaintiff in error, Mahan McCarty & Besse, a common law" trust, had taken a chattel mortgage from the Termina) Company upon the drilling rig, wdiich chattel mortgage was not recorded until after defendants in error had commenced their work for Stringer. Plaintiff in error, Panuco Exploration Company (of which plaintiff in error Powell was an officer), claiming to be the real owner of the engine and other equipment which had been placed upon the Orrison land by Stringer, removed that equipment some months after the work had ceased.
The questions presented by the several assignments of error which are filed in support of the three separate writs of error prosecuted to the decree below, may be classified as follows: (1) Those pertaining to the validity of chapter 141, S. L. 1903, being sections 6466, 6467, C. L. 1921, and relating to liens of laborers and others on oil and gas wells, and (2) those questions which affect the validity of the liens as against particular interests in the land, leasehold estate, oil well, derrick and other equipment belonging to the several plaintiffs in error, as hereinafter set forth.
1. Defendants in error say that their liens may be sustained either under the general mechanic’s lien statute, being chapter 118, Laws of 1899, as amended by chapter 116, Laws of 1915, being sections 6442-6461, inclusive, C. L. 1921; or under chapter 141, S. L. 1903, above mentioned; or under both statutes, construed in pari materia. The title of the act of 1903 reads as follows: “An act to secure to person or persons who perform labor or furnish material, machinery or supplies, for constructing, altering, repairing, digging, boring, operating or completing gas, oil or other wells.”
Plaintiffs in error say that the title of this act does not clearly or at all express the subject, because it is not stated in the title what is secured to the persons therein described. But if the word “to” following the word “secure” be omitted, the title becomes intelligible. To secure means to make safe; to put beyond hazard of losing or not receiving. Webster’s New International Dictionary. A superfluous, redundant or erroneously inserted word may be dropped from the title of an act in determining the sufficiency thereof. 36 Cyc. 1033; Brook v. City of Blue Mound, 61 Kan. 184, 59 Pac. 273; Thomas v. State, 124 Ala. 48, 27 So. 315; State of Florida v. Green, 36 Fla. 154, 18 So. 334. Plaintiffs in error further say that the second section of the act of 1903 violates section 24, art. 5, of our State Constitution, which provides that the provisions of no law shall be “extended or conferred by reference to its title only, but so much thereof as is revived, amended, extended or conferred, shall be re-enacted and published at length.” But the rights conferred by the second section of this act are remedial and procedural only, and therefore the constitutional inhibition does not apply. Denver Circle R. R. Co. v. Nestor, 10 Colo. 403, 15 Pac. 714.
Again, plaintiffs in error say that the act of 1903 was repealed by chapter 164, S. L. 1911, and that the latter act, having been itself repealed by the act of 1915, hereinabove mentioned, without an express revival of the act of 1903, the act of 1903 is no longer in force, under section 6518, C. L. 1921, which provides that the repeal of the repealing act shall not revive the repealed act. The
If the act of 1911, so far as it concerns oil wells, could be construed to supersede the provisions of the 1903 act, as to that special description of property, still the repeal of the later act would revive the provisions of the former upon that subject. The rule against implied revival applies only where the statute itself is repealed, and not where it is left in force, but certain cases are impliedly excepted from its operation by the effect of the subsequent enactment. Heinssen v. State, 14 Colo. 228, 23 Pac. 995; Smith v. Hoyt, 14 Wis. 252. The act of 1903, we hold, has not been repealed, and is not unconstitutional.
2. The liens upon the fee estate of plaintiff in error Orrison cannot be sustained. As to him, the complaint states only that he was the owner, and that he gave an oil and gas lease to the Municipal Company. This was the only relationship which he individually sustained to the
3. The drilling of the well constituted an improvement upon the leasehold estate of the lessee, and one for which it had contracted. Under section 6442, O. L. 1921, Stringer, subcontractor under the driller, was the agent for the purposes of that act, of the owner of the leasehold estate who had contracted for the improvement, and such leasehold interest was clearly “assignable, transferable and conveyable” within the meaning of section 6444, Id. Under these sections of the 1899 act, which we hold to be
4. The most difficult question presented upon this review arises from the claim of liens upon the derrick, rig and other equipment. Section 6442, cited supra, gives a lien to “all persons of every class performing labor upon * * * any other structure or improvement, upon land.” By section 6445, Id., the provisions of the Mechanic’s Lien Act, including section 6442, are made applicable to all persons who shall do work “for the working, preservation, prospecting or development of any mine, lode or mining claim or deposit yielding metals or minerals of any kind or for the working * * * in search of any such metals or minerals; and to all persons Avho shall do work upon * * * any shaft, tunnel * * * draining or other improvement of or upon any such * * * deposit.” Section 1 of the act of 1903, being section 6466, C. L. 1921, reads as follows: “That any person or persons, company or corporation, who perform labor or furnish material or supplies for constructing, altering or repairing, or for the digging, drilling or boring, operating, completing or repairing of any gas well, oil well or any other well, by virtue of a contract. Avith the OAvner or his authorized agent, shall have a lien to secure the payment of the same upon such gas Avell, oil well, or such other well, and upon the materials and machinery and equipment and supplies so furnished, and in case the contract is with the owner of the lot or land, then such lien shall also be upon the interest of the OAvner of the lot or land upon which the same may stand, and in case the contract is Avith the lease holder of the lot or land then such lien shall also be upon the interest of the lease holder on the lot or land upon which the same may stand or in relation to which such material or supplies are furnished.”
These various enactments manifest the intention of the legislative body to give practical security for the payment
5. The property carried away from the location of the oil well by the plaintiff in error, Panuco Exploration
For the reasons hereinabove given, the supersedeas is denied, the decree in so far as it awards a lien upon the fee estate of plaintiff in error Orrison, and in so far as it gives a judgment against plaintiff in error Panuco Exploration Company and Powell, is reversed. In all other respects the decree is affirmed. Plaintiffs in error Orrison, the Panuco Exploration Company, and Powell, shall have their costs incurred in this court.
Me. Justice Butler dissents.