In this case we hold that a mechanic’s lien claimant with a contractual right to attorney’s fees, which prevails in an action against the property owner for breach of contract and foreclosure of the mechanic’s lien, is not entitled to have its attorney’s fees included in the mechanic’s lien.
I. Background
Respondent Abbett Electric Corporation entered into a written contract with Storek & Storek Environmental Center (Storek) to perform electrical work on Storek’s property at 530 Bush Street, San Francisco. The contract provided for attorney’s fees to the prevailing party in case of any dispute. In 1981, respondent recorded a mechanic’s lien against the subject property. A few weeks later respondent filed a complaint against Storek for breach of contract and foreclosure of its mechanic’s lien, at the same time recording a lis pendens. The complaint prayed for judgment in the sum of $314,652, plus estimated attorney’s fees of $100,000 pursuant to the contract.
After an initial mistrial, the case proceeded to trial in May of 1989. During the pendency of those proceedings, appellants Citicorp Real Estate, Inc., and Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co., each recorded a deed of trust against the subject property. In October 1989, the trial court rendered a tentative decision in respondent’s favor that provided inter alia for reasonable attorney’s fees, but did not indicate whether the fees were to be included in the mechanic’s lien. The court permitted appellants, as junior lienors, to intervene on the question of whether the lien could properly include those fees.
The statement of decision filed in March of 1990 found that respondent was “entitled to a judgment against [Storek] both on the contract and to enforce its Mechanic’s Lien rights.” The judgment awarded the sum of $113,827.36, together with prejudgment interest thereon, costs of suit in excess of $27,000, and attorney’s fees of $230,000 pursuant to Civil Code section 1717. Over appellants’ objection, the judgment provided that the attorney’s fees were included in the mechanic’s lien, and appellants have appealed that portion of the judgment. 1
Attorney’s fees are not available to a prevailing litigant absent a contractual agreement or statutory authorization, and no statute provides for attorney’s fees in mechanic’s lien foreclosures.
(Wilson’s Heating & Air Conditioning
v.
Wells Fargo Bank
(1988)
It is not disputed that Storek is personally liable for attorney’s fees under its contract with respondent, and there is no question that the judgment in this combined action for breach of contract and foreclosure of the mechanic’s lien may include an award of those fees. (See Civ. Code, § 3152 [personal action to recover debt may be maintained in action to foreclose mechanic’s lien].) The issue is whether the fees are properly included in the mechanic’s lien against the subject property.
Respondent submits that this issue is well settled in its favor, but none of the cases it cites is dispositive. Claims under contracts providing for attorney’s fees were joined with actions to foreclose mechanics’ liens in
Vitek, Inc.
v.
Alvarado Ice Palace, Inc.
(1973)
We find no persuasive distinction between our case and Wilson’s Heating. Respondent has no more right to attorney’s fees under the mechanic’s lien statutes than did the subcontractors in Wilson’s Heating, and no greater contractual claim to those fees against any lender that is not a party to its contract. If we were to hold that respondent’s attorney’s fees were included in its mechanic’s lien by virtue of its contract with Storek, this would subordinate appellants’ deeds of trust to a lien for those fees, even though appellants were strangers to the contract. This would produce the result Wilson’s Heating found to be untenable.
Respondent notes that, unlike the lender in
Wilson’s Heating,
appellants have not foreclosed. If appellants were to foreclose, however, they would be in the same position as the bank in
Wilson’s Heating,
and we fail to see why they should be subject to a lien for respondent’s fees, when the bank in
Wilson’s Heating
was not, simply because they have not yet exercised their
This conclusion is consistent with Civil Code section 3123, subdivision (a), which makes no provision for attorney’s fees when it limits the amount of a mechanic’s lien to “the reasonable value of the labor, services, equipment, or materials furnished or for the price agreed upon by the claimant and the person with whom he or she contracted, whichever is less.” (See also Cal. Const., art. XIV, § 3 [providing mechanics’ liens only “for the value of such labor done and material furnished”].) Civil Code section 3123 was recently cited by Division Three of this district in
Lambert
v.
Superior Court
(1991)
It has been said that the purpose of a mechanic’s lien is “to prevent unjust enrichment of a property owner at the expense of a laborer or material supplier”
(Burton
v.
Sosinsky
(1988)
Respondent argues that its attorney’s fees may be included in the mechanic’s lien as costs of suit under Civil Code section 3150, which provides that: “In addition to any other costs allowed by law, the court in an action to foreclose a [mechanic’s] lien must also allow as costs the money paid for verifying and recording the lien, such costs to be allowed each claimant whose lien is established, whether he be plaintiff or defendant.” Respondent reasons that costs allowable under this statute are included in the lien, and that “other costs allowed by law” in this case include the attorney’s fees to which it is entitled by contract, because Civil Code section 1717 deems such fees to be costs of a suit on the contract. Assuming arguendo that costs under Civil Code section 3150 incident to a mechanic’s lien foreclosure are included in the lien, notwithstanding the limitation of the lien to labor and materials under Civil Code section 3123, we are not persuaded that those costs include attorney’s fees payable solely because an action on a contract has been joined with the foreclosure. Civil Code section 1717 provides for attorney’s fees only in contract actions. It does not extend to mechanic’s lien foreclosures where, as previously noted, such fees are not recoverable.
Respondent next contends that appellants are subject to a lien for attorney’s fees because a lis pendens was recorded that put them on notice of this case before they recorded their deeds of trust. It has been stated that “[t]he effect of such notice is that anyone who acquires an interest in the property after the action has been filed will be bound by any judgment which may thereafter be rendered in the action.”
(Urez Corp.
v.
Superior Court
(1987)
Respondent’s interpretation of the effect of the lis pendens is too broad. Since a lis pendens “ ‘is purely incidental to the action wherein it is filed,’ ” and “[i]ts effectiveness depends entirely on the action of which it is a part”
(Albertson
v.
Raboff
(1956)
Much the same response is applicable to respondent’s final point, that its mechanic’s lien should not be “subverted” by a bank’s “poor lending decision made with full knowledge of respondent’s superior rights.” Appellants’ loans against the subject property have no bearing on respondent’s entitlement to a lien for attorney’s fees except insofar as they have given appellants an incentive to litigate the issue. In this regard respondent’s quarrel is with the Legislature and not appellants.
Conclusion
The judgment is reversed to the extent that it includes attorney’s fees in the mechanic’s lien, and the case is remanded for modification of the judgment in light of this opinion. Appellants are entitled to their costs on appeal.
Anderson, P. J., and Poché, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied August 15, 1991.
Notes
Storek is not a party to this appeal and apparently has filed for bankruptcy protection under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code.
A
commentator has observed that: “In the basic action to foreclose a lien or enforce a stop notice as such, there is no right to attorneys’ fees (except possibly in cases where there is a written contract providing for such fees; but even with such a written provision, the lien claimant is still faced with the restrictive language of Civil Code section 3123, which confines the
lien
to the agreed price or the reasonable value,
whichever is less.
However, it can do no
It appears that the mechanics’ liens had priority as the subcontractors sued for a declaration of priority of their liens, and the parties stipulated to an entry of judgment in favor of the subcontractors. (Id., at pp. 1328-1329.)]
