Judges: BkogdeN
Filed Date: 1/27/1931
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
On or about 7 August, 1928, Ed Graves and John McDonald and Will Garrett made a contract with the defendants, Rolin Dockery and N.W. Mintz, according to the terms of which the plaintiffs "agreed to cut and log the timber belonging to said Dockery and Mintz on Anderson Branch on Wiggins Mill Creek in Graham County, at and for $10.00 per thousand feet. It was further agreed that if any one should stop logging, he forfeited to his partners any unpaid balance due *Page 318 him." Payments for logging were to be made by John A. Tatham upon monthly statements furnished by Dockery and Mintz. Thereafter Garrett withdrew from the logging operations and the plaintiffs succeeded to his interest. The plaintiffs proceeded with the work until about 1 October, 1928. They allege that about said date the defendants, Dockery and Mintz, breached the contract by failing and refusing to pay plaintiffs for work already done, and Tatham also declined to pay plaintiffs any further sums "for and on account of said Dockery and Mintz." Plaintiffs further allege that by reason of said breach they were unable to go on with the work under the contract. The plaintiffs further allege that there were other dealings between the parties and that as a result of all the transactions there was due them the sum of $578.75 "for logging and labor."
On 3 December, 1928, plaintiffs filed a lien for $578.75 "on all the lumber cut from the lands on Wiggins Mill Creek — being about 50,000 feet of lumber on the yard at the railroad siding at Sweet Gum." Plaintiffs allege that thereafter the defendant, John A. Tatham, with notice of plaintiffs' right and lien, removed or caused to be removed a large quantity of said lumber covered by plaintiffs' lien, and converted the same to his own use. Answers were filed by Mintz and Dockery and by Tatham. Thereafter, on 16 June, 1930, the Sterling Lumber Company filed an interplea claiming that it had purchased the lumber on which the lien was filed, prior to 16 September, 1928. The cause came on for trial and judgment was entered "that the plaintiffs are not entitled to a lien on the property described in the complaint or in the lien recorded in the lien docket of Graham County," from which judgment the plaintiffs appealed. The only assignment of error contained in the record is the ruling made by the trial judge "that plaintiffs were not entitled to a lien on the property described in the complaint or in the lien." Therefore, the question of law arising is whether prior to chapter 69, Public Laws 1929, a person cutting and hauling logs to a mill can thereafter acquire a lien upon the lumber by virtue of C. S., 2436.
C. S., 2436, provides a lien upon lumber for "every person doing the work of cutting or sawing logs into lumber," etc. This statute was construed in Glazener v. Lumber Co.,
While it was held in Thomas v. Merrill,
Recognizing the narrow construction put upon the statute, the General Assembly by Public Laws of 1929, chapter 69, included within the benefit of a lien those who were engaged in logging the mill. This legislative enactment constitutes strong proof of the fact that those who were therefore engaged in logging, did not come within the purview of C. S., 2436. However, this case arose before the act of 1929, and must be governed by the law existing at the time.
We are therefore constrained to hold that the judgment was correct.
No error.