GAASTRA, GLADDING & JOHNSON V. BISHOP'S LODGE CO., 1931-NMSC-021, 35 N.M. 396, 299 P. 347 (S. Ct. 1931)
GAASTRA, GLADDING & JOHNSON
vs.
BISHOP'S LODGE CO.
No. 3559
SUPREME COURT OF NEW MEXICO
1931-NMSC-021, 35 N.M. 396, 299 P. 347
April 30, 1931
Appeal from District Court, Santa Fe County; Holloman, Judge.
Suit by Gaastra, Gladding & Johnson, co-partners, against Bishop's Lodge Company. Decree for plaintiffs, and defendant appeals.
SYLLABUS
SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
COUNSEL
Francis C. Wilson and Thos. H. Dodge, both of Santa Fe, for appellant.
David Chavez, Jr., and Willis N. Birdsall, both of Santa Fe, for appellees.
JUDGES
Sadler, J. Parker and Hudspeth, JJ., concur. Bickley, C. J., and Watson, J., did not participate.
OPINION
{*396} {1} OPINION OF THE COURT The appellant, Bishop's Lodge Company, a corporation, employed the appellees, Gaastra, Gladding & Johnson, co-partners, as architects to furnish plans for certain improvements to be erected upon the premises of appellant. The contract between the parties called upon appellant to pay to appellees for plans only 3 1/2 per cent. of the total cost of the building. The appellees furnished plans only, so that this provision for compensation became operative.
{2} The building was constructed in substantial compliance with the plans furnished by the appellees and at a total cost of $ 39,288.15. On November 5, 1928, the appellees {*397} filed with the county clerk of Santa Fe county, N. M., a claim of mechanic's lien to secure the sum of $ 1,375.09, being 3 1/2 per cent. of the total cost of said building. From the decree of the district court of Santa Fe county foreclosing such lien, the appellant has prosecuted this appeal. The appeal presents a single question for review, to wit; Is an architect who furnishes plans actually used in the construction of a building entitled to a lien upon the same for his services thus rendered?
"Every person performing labor upon, or furnishing materials to be used in the construction, alteration or repair of any * * * building, * * * or any other structure, * * * has a lien upon the same for the work or labor done or materials furnished by each respectively, whether done or furnished at the instance of the owner of the building or other improvement, or his agent, and every contractor, sub-contractor, architect, builder, or other person having charge * * * of the construction, alteration or repair, either in whole or in part, of any building or other improvement, as aforesaid, shall be held to be the agent of the owner for the purposes of this article."
The decisions are not entirely harmonious upon the question whether the services of an architect as such are within the protection of mechanic's lien statutes, the right being denied in some jurisdictions on varying grounds. In Mitchell v. Packard, 168 Mass. 467, 47 N.E. 113, 60 Am. St. Rep. 404, and Stephens v. Hicks, 156 N.C. 239, 72 S.E. 313, 36 L. R. A. (N. S.) 354, Ann. Cas. 1913A, 272, the right to lien is denied an architect for plans and specifications upon the ground that the work of preparing same is not manual or onerous labor; whereas in Ames v. Dyer, 41 Me. 397, the ground for denying the lien is {*398} that such plans, or as it happened to be in that case, mould for a ship, do not enter into and become a part of the improvement.
"It may therefore be regarded as established by a decided preponderance of the cases that the right to a lien exists when the claim is for both plans and superintendence." 5 C. J. 267.
The decision of our territorial Supreme Court in Johnson v. McClure, 10 N.M. 506, 62 P. 983, is in accord with this weight of authority. The diversity of opinion is most marked, however, where the claim is based upon the furnishing of plans used in the building, without supervision or superintendence by the architect. There is no decided weight of authority the one way or the other on this phase of the question.
"The work or services of an architect are generally necessary in the construction of buildings and other works; not as necessary, in one sense, nor at all of the same character, as the work of a {*400} hod-carrier, for instance, in buildings of brick; but often, if not always, profitable to the owner in the greater enhancement of the value of his property in the erection of a better building through the architect's skill and services; and, though his work is not of the afterwards visible mechanical character, it is none the less advantageous work done in erecting the building. * * *"
"I can see no reason why superintending the building is any less 'service upon' the building than carrying bricks and mortar to the bricklayers, and I agree with the Vice-Chancellor (22 Gr. 315, 316) that drawing plans etc. is an essential thing 'to be done in the construction of the work,' and that he who draws such plans for a building 'actually does work upon it as if he had carried a hod'." Read v. Whitney, 45 Ont. L. R. 377.
"The contention that the word 'labor' in this statute means only manual labor or unskilled labor would put upon it a very narrow and strained construction. There is no reason in equity or in law why the architect who conceives and puts upon paper the design for such an immense building as this Hotel Victory is, and who puts upon paper with such minuteness of detail the specifications and drawings as to enable any one skilled in such business to erect, with perfect proportions and proper stability, such a mammoth structure, should not be protected in his contribution to the completion of such work, as well as the carpenter, the plumber, the painter, or the frescoer who performs manual labor. The court certainly ought not to strain the statute to exclude labor of this high character and grade, unless it is plainly the intent of the legislature that it should bear such interpretation."
"Now, if the work were started without any plans and specifications, and some one were hired to furnish all necessary information and directions as the work progressed, it could not reasonably be denied that his services were rendered 'in the construction' of the building. And, unless those words confine the lien to materials delivered and services rendered after the construction has been commenced, it can make no difference that the information necessary to the construction of the building has been embodied in plans and specifications prepared before such commencement. Of course, there can be no lien until some actual or theoretical increment of value has attached itself to the land by the commencement {*401} of the building; but if materials delivered before that time are thereafter incorporated in the building, or if services rendered before that time in the preparation of plans and specifications are thereafter utilized in its construction, the same logical and equitable basis for the lien exists as if the materials had not been furnished, or the services had not been rendered until after the commencement of the building. It seems clear, therefore, that the words 'in the construction of the building' relate to the fact of actual use in construction of the building irrespective of the time when the materials are furnished or the services performed; and that being so it must follow that the services of an architect in the preparation of plans and specifications, when they are afterward used in the construction of the building, are services rendered in its construction, for which the architect is entitled to a lien under our statute. Our conclusion appears to be in accord with the current of decision, although the question is in each state one of interpretation of the local statute." (Citations omitted.)
"The appellees contend that an architect who has prepared plans, specifications, and details for a building, is not, except as an incident to superintendence, entitled to a lien for his services. In Fiske v. School District, 58 Neb. 163, 78 N.W. 392, there is an intimation that an architect is entitled to a mechanic's lien upon a building which has been constructed in accordance with plans prepared by him under contract with the owner. We now hold that the work of drawing such plans enters into the construction of the building which is afterwards erected in conformity therewith, and that the architect in such case is within the purview of section 1 of the mechanic's lien law."
"The appellants say the lien is given only to a person who labors, and the architect and contractor did not labor. If they did not labor, what word will characterize the service they furnished? When the architect idealized the structure and put it upon paper, what was his effort if not labor? When the Master sent out 'other seventy' to do his work, he called them laborers."
Williamson v. Hotel Melrose, 110 S.C. 1, 34, 96 S.E. 407, 415.{*402} That our statute was not intended to apply alone to those who do toilsome or manual labor is apparent from its terms, for in express language it includes those who furnish materials. Nor, indeed, does the statute attempt to name the class of persons entitled to its protection. Any limitation in the act operates, not on the person, but upon the purpose for which the labor is "performed" or materials "furnished." "Every person" performing the labor or furnishing the materials contemplated by the act is afforded a lien by its provisions.
"To assume that an architect is not entitled to mechanic's lien for services in preparing plans and specifications used in the building, and then to hold that, because he superintends the construction of the building, he may have lien for both, cannot be supported in principle. That he renders a service for which he has right of lien does not give right of lien for another service not so favored under the law. The majority rule, which we should adopt, is that an architect who prepares plans and specifications actually used in the construction of a building is entitled to a mechanic's lien for the services."
"The theory of these cases and others cited by the plaintiff is that the labor of superintendence works the plans into the construction so that they actually become part of the building."