139 Misc. 265 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1930
Action to foreclose a subcontractor’s hen on work done in connection with the erection of a building for the Department of Mental Hygiene of the State of New York. According to the last certificate of the State Architect, the general contractor had executed approximately ninety-one per cent of the work required by the contract when he defaulted. The defendant surety company, pursuant to the contractor’s bond, thereupon completed the work at the request of the State. In accordance with the provisions of the contract, the State had retained at the time of each payment fifteen per cent of the amount certified by the architect as the value of the work performed. This retained sum was not payable to the contractor until he had finished the work and had furnished satisfactory evidence that there were no outstanding hens or claims for material furnished or labor performed on the work. Shortly prior to the default and during a period thereafter a number of subcontractor’s hens were filed. Some of these hens were discharged by order of court after the deposit of certified checks with the State. Prior to the time of fifing any of the hens involved, an assignment was executed by the contractor to defendant Bank of Yorktown as collateral security for money loaned. This assignment was filed with the State pursuant to section 16 of the Lien Law (as amd. by Laws of 1930, chap. 859). It purported to transfer to the bank ah of the con
The surety company’s claim for the cost of completion is based on the theory that it became subrogated to the rights of the State. This right is well recognized. (Laski v. State, 126 Misc. 360; affd., 217 App. Div. 420; affd., 246 N. Y. 569; Prairie State Bank v. United States, 164 U. S. 227.) Whether or not this right of subrogation gives the surety company priority over the mechanic’s lienors is not so clear. It seems that the State would have priority over lienors if it had completed the work itself. The contract so provided. Subrogation, however, is an equitable doctrine, and, if the subcontractors had not furnished the labor and materials represented by their hens, the surety would have been compelled to expend larger sums in completion. Therefore, equitably, the lienors have some claim for precedence. Furthermore, as all the provisions of the contract applicable to its principal also apply to the surety, it would be required to establish that all subcontractors were paid before becoming entitled to receive its money.
The consideration of the rights of the assignee bank requires a separate determination with relation to the claims of the lienors and those of the surety, both with respect to the items of retained percentage and the balance of nine per cent. The assignee took only such rights as its assignor, the contractor, had. As to sums it had actually advanced to the contractor, it acquired, upon complying with the statutory requirements of filing, an absolute title to any sum due and payable to the contractor. Such a right would be superior to those of subsequent lienors as to all sums advanced at the time the liens were filed. (Riverside Contracting Co. v. City of New York, 218 N. Y. 596; Paine v. City of New York, 190 App. Div. 681.) The bank’s claim was not based on its right to a lien, but its title to the fund was dependent upon the terms and force of its assignment. A hen can only be acquired by one furnishing material or labor, and is not assignable. As to these claims I will assume that provision requiring the consent of the State to validate assignments was for the State’s benefit and it had been waived. However, the only moneys which the assignment affected were the sums due to the contractor at the time of its execution and those sums which became due. When the contractor defaulted, his assignee stood in the shoes of a defaulting contractor. Under the contract, the
Whatever might be the effect of the waiver by the State of its right to refuse to recognize an assignment as to sums due prior to the default, it is clear that the State could not so waive as to moneys becoming due thereafter without releasing the surety. (Prairie State Bank v. United States, supra.) As to the subcontractors who filed notice of hen prior to June 18, 1929 (the date of filing the lis pendens), but who failed to obtain orders extending their hens, I hold that their hens have lapsed. Filing of hens or orders extending same in the offices of the State Comptroller and either the office of the Department of Public Works or the Department of Mental Hygiene is held sufficient. Liens filed after June 17, 1929, required no order of extension, due to commencement of the present action. The amounts of the various subcontractors’ hens are fixed as indicated on the trial. Plaintiff is awarded costs and an extra allowance of $200, defendant surety company, costs not to exceed $100, and other henors appearing on the trial whose hens have been allowed, costs not to exceed $50 each. Interest is allowed on the principal sums fixed. If plaintiff’s lien, plus interest and costs,
Submit findings and judgment in accordance with the foregoing.