
    BUSH BROS. LUMBER & MILLING CO. v. EASTWOOD et al.
    (Court of Civil Appeals of Texas.
    Oct. 29, 1910.
    Rehearing Denied Dec. 8, 1910.)
    1. Master and Servant (§ 82) — Labor Liens — Requisites.
    In order to fix a lien for labor under Sayles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1897, art. 3339a (Gen. Laws 1897, c. 152, § 1), it must appear that the person claiming such lien is within the class named in the statute, and that the labor or services performed by him were performed under the conditions named in the statute.
    [Ed. Note. — For other cases, see Master and Servant, Dec. Dig. § 82.]
    2. Master and Servant (§ 82) — Labor Liens — “In Any Manufactory or Mill oe Any Character.”
    Under Sayles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1897, art. 3339a (Gen. Laws 1897, c. 152, § 1), giving a lien to the class of persons named therein who may labor or perform services in any office, etc., manufactory, or mill of any character, etc., the term “in any manufactory or mill of any character” refers to labor performed in or about such place, and no lien exists where the services are wholly performed at a place miles distant from the mill and have no immediate connection with the operation thereof, and hence one engaged at a distant place in cutting and hauling logs to be sawed at the mill was not entitled to a lien.
    [Ed. Note. — For other cases, see Master and Servant, Dec. Dig. § 82.
    
    For other definitions, see Words and Phrases, vol. 4, pp. 3461-3465; vol. 8, p. 7683.]
    ■ Error from District Court, Montgomery County; L. B. Hightower, Judge.
    Action by A. J. Eastwood against Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company and others. Judgment for plaintiff, and the defendant named brings error.
    Reversed and rendered.
    John G. Tod, Jno. C. Williams, and W. H. Reid, for plaintiff in error. C. W. Nugent, for defendants in error.
    
      
      For other cases see same topic and section NUMBER in Dec. Dig. & Am. Dig. Key No. Series & Rep’r Indexes
    
   PLEASANTS, C. J.

Defendant in error, A. J. Eastwood, who was plaintiff in the court below, brought this suit against W. P. Terrell and A. L. Kayser, composing the firm of Terrell & Kayser, and the plaintiff in error, to recover various sums of money alleged to be due plaintiff Eastwood by said firm of Terrell & Kayser for labor performed by him and various other persons named in the petition under an oral contract of employment made by said firm with plaintiff and the other persons named in the petition, all of whom, it is alleged, had transferred and assigned their claims to plaintiff, and to foreclose an alleged laborer’s lien for the amount of said indebtedness upon property of plaintiff in error described in said petition and alleged to be of the value of $4,000.

The allegations of the petition by which the lien is alleged to have been fixed, and the property upon which said lien is claimed is described, are as follows: “Plaintiff avers that on or about the 23d day of September, A. D. 1908, and up to and including the 29th day of September, A. D. 1908, and all within 30 days from and after the date on which said several sums were due the said respective parties for labor, as aforesaid — that is to say, within 30 days after the same and every part thereof had accrued — all of said parties, laborers as aforesaid, hereinbefore named, furnished to the defendants, and to each of them, an’ itemized, verified statement showing the said several sums due, as aforesaid, the contract of employment under which same accrued, the time of the performance of said labor, the time' when, due, the character of labor performed, a description of the property used by said laborers in performing said services for the defendants, as aforesaid, and at the same time filed a copy thereof in the office of the county clerk of Montgomery county, Tex., and had same duly recorded, as provided by articles 3339a and 3339b of Sayles’ Annotated Civil Statutes of Texas of 1897, and then and there and thereby preserved and fixed, under the laws of the state of Texas, a laborer’s lien for said several sums so due, as aforesaid, and in favor of the said several parties hereinbefore named, ‘upon and against that certain shay engine, logging cars, tools, chains, axes and appurtenances and appliances belonging to and with said engine and cars, and all and singular all railroad iron and steel rails, bolts, fish plates, fastenings and other attachments used in connection therewith and all switches, railroad cross-ties and all appurtenances and appliances owned by the said Terrell & Kayser and said Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company, and in their possession at and near the said Minnock Switch, and all of which has been used, in connection with said labor performed and in getting out, transporting, and shipping logs for the said Terrell & Kayser, and for the said Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Co., as aforesaid, and all and singular all logs and all timber of every character and kind that may have been cut and handled in any manner by the said respective laborers, as aforesaid, and in connection with their said employment that were then in the woods along, at or near to said tramroad, or at or near the International & Great Northern Railroad, or at or near the said Minnock Switch, and all lumber manufactured from said logs at or near Spring, Texas, all of said property being of the reasonable value of $4,000.00.’ ” The defendants, Terrell & Kayser, answered only by general denial. The defendant below, plaintiff in error here, Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company, answered by general demurrer, special exception, and general denial, and specially denied that either defendant in error Eastwood, or his assignors, did any work upon the property described in defendant in error Eastwood’s original petition in the court below, and specially alleged that the plaintiff Eastwood and his assignors worked only for the defendants Terrell & Kayser; that said work was of the nature only of cutting and sawing logs and timber, and was not such work as under the Constitution and laws of the state of Texas gave the plaintiff or his assignors a lien upon the property of plaintiff in error. Plaintiff in error further specially pleaded that all of the property described in defendant in error Eastwood’s petition, upon which he sought to foreclose a lien, is, and was, the property of plaintiff in error, and never was the property of defendants Terrell & Kayser, but same was leased by the plaintiff in error to defendants Terrell & Kayser. The trial in the court below without a jury resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the full amount of his claim against the defendants Terrell & Kayser, and for foreclosure of the lien claimed by plaintiff. The decree further directed that execution should first issue against Terrell & Kayser, and, if plaintiff was unable to make the amount of his judgment by such execution, that an order of sale of the property described in the petition, or so much thereof as might be required to satisfy plaintiff’s judgment, should issue, and if said property, or a sufficient amount there to satisfy plaintiff’s judgment, should not be found, execution should issue against plaintiff in error. It was further ordered that plaintiff in error have judgment over against Terrell & Kayser for whatever sum it might be required to pay in satisfaction of said judgment.

The agreed statement of facts upon which the case'was tried in the court below, after reciting the nature of the suit, and that the plaintiff in error is a private corporation having its general office in the city of Houston and being engaged in the business of operating a sawmill for the manufacture of lumber at the town of Spring, in Harris county, Tex., out of logs procured from lands in Montgomery county near Minnock Switch on the International & Great Northern Railroad, and further that plaintiff is the legal holder of the claims of all of the parties named in the petition, contains the following:

“That the plaintiff A. J. Eastwood, and all of his said assignors hereinbefore named, performed the services as laborers for the said Terrell & Kayser during the times, and that the said several parties earned the said several respective sums, set out in said petition as in said petition stated; that the said several amounts were due at the times and dates stated in said petition; that said services were performed by the said several parties for the said Terrell & Kayser, and that no part thereof has ever been paid.

“That all of the said labor performed by said several parties hereinbefore named was done in the matter of sawing, cutting and hauling logs with wagons, teams, engines and cars, in the filling of a certain logging contract between the said Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company and the said A. L. Kayser, the said W. P. Terrell having associated himself with the said A. L. Kayser subsequent to the making of said contract, to which association the said Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company never directly or indirectly, assented or objected.

“That the particular labor performed by the said several parties- was as follows: “Walter Brown, swamping logs, or bunching logs in the woods with teams preparatory to hauling them with other teams.

“Dave Thomas, hauling logs with teams.

“Alfred Johnson, loading logs on tram cars.

“A. J. Eastwood, woods boss, whose duties were to assist generally, in getting out logs, from the cutting at the stump until their final delivery on the railroad cars, being subordinate to and under the direction and control of W. P. Terrell, who was then performing the duties of superintendent and foreman.

“Will Young, sawing logs and hauling logs with teams.

“Chas. Young, sawing logs.

“Bob Campbell, fireman on tram engine.

“Chas. Daniels, loading logs on tram cars.

“Henry Lowe, engineer on tram engine.

“Sam Tompkins, blacksmith, whose duties were repairing wagons, carts, and engines and trucks and logging cars.

“J. N. Pillott, hauling logs with teams.

“Chas. Harvey, hauling logs with teams.

“Ed. Williams, hauling logs with teams.

“Tom Spicer, laborer on tram and logging .road, whose duties were to keep said tram-road in proper condition for hauling logs .over said tram with engine and cars.

“That the labor performed by the said several parties hereinbefore named, as laborers, was a part of the general work of putting out and furnishing logs for the said Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company by tbe said A. L. Kayser and W. P. Terrell, under the said contract between the said Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company and the said A. L. Kayser, and that said logs were transported from the forest to the International & Great Northern Railroad with the engine, trucks, and logging cars and appliances of the said Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company, and over their said tramroad and steel and iron rails and appurtenances which said engine, locomotive, cars, trucks, and appurtenances and tramroad, iron and steel rails, and attachments, etc., were then and there the property of and owned by, the said Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company, and was then in the possession of the said Terrell & Kayser, having been loaned by the said Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company to the said A. L. Kayser, and placed in his possession to aid and assist him in getting out and furnishing him with logs, as aforesaid, and that no part thereof was owned by the said A. L. Kayser, and that the ownership of said property of the said Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company was not known to said A. J. Eastwood, the plaintiff herein, nor to any of his said assignors.

“That all of said laborers hereinbefore named, including the plaintiff, within 30 days after the accrual of any part of said several sums so due them, as aforesaid, made out duplicate accounts of their said several accounts showing the amounts due them, respectively, stating in each case the amount of labor performed, the agreement under which the same was performed, the price to be paid therefor, the several amounts, and the aggregate amounts due each of them, and when due, and supported the same by affidavit, and within said time delivered a copy thereof each to the said W. P. Terrell, A. L. Kayser, and Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company, and demanded of each of them payment therefot, and immediately, and within the said 30 days, after the accrual of any part of said indebtedness, caused such sworn statements to be filed and recorded in the office of the county clerk of Montgomery county, Tex., the county in which said services were performed, as provided by articles 3339a and 3339b of Sayles’ Annotated Civil Statutes of Texas of 1897, and subsequently complied with said statute for the fixing and preservation of said liens, so far as same could by law be fixed by the said several parties upon the said property hereinbefore named, and upon the logs cut and hauled by the said several laborers, as aforesaid, and upon the products thereof, the affidavit to all of said respective claims having been made by the respective laborers except in the case of Alfred Johnson, which affidavit, was; made by Ed. Williams, Dave Thomas, which affidavit was made by Éd. Williams and Walter Brown, which affidavit was made by Chas. Harvey, the question of the validity or invalidity of the claims of the character of the ones in controversy being made by aD agent or representative of the laborer to be submitted to the court.

“That all of the logs cut, hauled, and delivered by the said several laborers, as aforesaid, aggregating about 300,000 feet, were delivered to said Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company at Minnoek Switch on the said International & Great Northern Railroad in Montgomery county, Tex., and by them transported and delivered to their said sawmill at Spring, Harris county, Tex., and there, by the said Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company, manufactured into lumber, and all of which lumber is either now in the possession of said Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company at Spring, Tex., or has been sold by them upon the market, and that the market value of said lumber so manufactured from said logs was, and is, of the aggregate value of $3,000, and that the reasonable market value of said logging engine, tram-road, steel, iron rails, and appurtenances and logging cars and appurtenances is of. the aggregate sum of $2,000, and that at and before the beginning of the performance of any of the labor, as aforesaid, and during all of the time that said several laborers were performing their aforesaid services, that said logging engine, cars, trucks, and appurtenances and tramroad, steel and iron rails and appurtenances hereinbefore mentioned, and all of which were used in handling, procuring, and transporting said logs, as aforesaid, were then in the possession of the said Terrell & Kayser, and of the said A. L. Kayser.

“That on March 12, 1908, the defendant Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company entered into a contract with the defendant A. L. Kayser, by which the defendant A. L. Kay-ser was to cut sawlogs from timber owned by Bush Bros.' Dumber & Milling Company on the Richard Yince half league of land in Montgomery county, Tex., and deliver the same on the cars of the International & Great Northern Railroad at Minnoek Switch for $3.50 per thousand; said logs to be scaled at the mill of the defendant company. At the same time Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company agreed to furnish and lend to defendant Kayser an engine, logging cars, railroad iron, fish plates, etc., with which to build a tramroad on which to operate said engine and logging cars for the purpose of transporting the logs from the woods to said railroad at Minnoek Switch in order that said logs might be loaded on the ears of the International & Great Northern Railroad and shipped to the defendant Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company. Said engine, logging ears, iron and steel .rails, etc., being the same that the plaintiff is .endeavoring to foreclose a lien ,on 3,n -this suit.. That, the defendant Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company did deliver said engine, logging cars, iron and steel rails, etc., to defendant A. L. Kayser, and he constructed a tramroad upon which to operate said engine and logging cars, and did operate the same in hauling logs thereon until after the performance by plaintiff and his assignors of the labor and services sued for herein, since which time the defendant Bush Bros. Lumber & Milling Company have retaken possession of said engine, ears, logging cars, iron and steel rails, etc., and are now in possession of same.”

Under an appropriate assignment of error plaintiff in error complains of the judgment of the court below on the ground that upon the facts disclosed by the record defendant in error had no lien upon the property of plaintiff in error to secure the indebtedness due him.

Article 3339a of Sayles’ Annotated Civil Statutes of 1897, upon which defendant in error bases his claim of lien, and which is section 1 of chapter 152 of General Laws of 1897, reads as follows: “Whenever any clerk, accountant, book-keeper, artisan, craftsman, factory operative, mill operative, mechanic, quarryman or common laborer, farm hand, male or female, may labor or perform any service in any office, store, saloon, hotel, shop, mine, quarry, manufactory or mill of any character, or upon any farm, under or by virtue of any contract or agreement, written or verbal, with any person, employer, firm, corporation, or his, her or their agent or agents, receiver or receivers, trustee or trustees, in order to secure the amount due by such contract or agreement, written or verbal, the hereinbefore mentioned employés shall have a first lien upon all in'oducts, machinery, tools, fixtures, appurtenances, goods, wares, merchandise, chattels or thing or things of value of whatsoever character that may be created in whole or in part by the labor of such persons, or necessarily connected with the performance of such labor or service, which may be owned by, or in the possession of, the aforesaid employer, person, firm or corporation, or his, her or their agent or agents, receiver or receivers, trustee or trustees; provided, that the lien herein given a farm hand shall be subordinate to the landlord’s lien now provided by law.”

In order to fix a lien under the provisions of this statute, it must be shown that the person claiming such lien is within the class named in the statute, and that the labor or services performed by such person was performed under the conditions named in the statute. It may be conceded that the defendant in error and his several assignors are within the class named in the statute; but, unless it can be held that the labor or services performed by them was performed under the conditions named in the statute, they acquired no lien to secure the amount due them for such labor. The statute only gives a lien to the class -of persons named therein who “may labor or perform service in any office, store, saloon, hotel, shop, mine, quarry, manufactory or mill of any character, or upon any farm,” etc. While this statute should not be so strictly construed as to defeat the manifest intent of the Legislature, it should not be construed so as to give a lien for services not included in those named in the act merely because such services are apparently as much entitled to protection as those named. We think the term “in any manufactory or mill of any character” should be construed to mean in or about any such place, and the laborer performing service at a mill and in immediate connection with its operation would have a lien for such services if performed outside of the buildings in which the machinery of the mill is operated, or the actual business of the mill carried on; but we do not think that the lien is given when the services for which the lien is claimed are wholly performed at a place miles distant from the mill and have no immediate connection with the actual operation of the mill, though they may be in furtherance of the business of the mill. In the instant case the defendant in error and his assignors were not working for the owner of the mill, and their services were performed in a different county and many miles distant from the mill, and we think it would be judicial legislation for the courts to say that they are entitled to a lien which the statute only gives to secure compensation for services performed “in a mill.”

If the contention of the defendant in error is sound, then one who labors in picking cotton belonging to the owner of a cotton gin or factory, such labor being performed on a farm distant from the cotton gin or mill, would be given a lien under this statute for labor performed “in the mill,” because the cotton so picked was intended for manufac-tory in said cotton mill and was so used. The statute cannot be so construed.

There may be no sound reason for giving a lien to those who work in the mill and denying it to persons who perform services at some other place for the benefit of and in furtherance of the business of the mill; but the law is so written, and it is for the Legislature, and not for the courts, to correct this inequality, if it be one.

Such being our conclusion on this question, it is unnecessary to discuss the other assignments of error presented in brief of plaintiff in error.

We are of opinion that the judgment of the court below should be reversed, and judgment here rendered for plaintiff in error, and it is so ordered.

Reversed and rendered.  