59 Cal. App. 2d 318 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1943
Plaintiff filed a complaint entitled “Complaint to Enforce Equitable Lien,” naming as defendants Borchers Bros., a copartnership, the members thereof and the said San Jose Abstract and Title Company, hereinafter called the title company. Plaintiff prayed that Borchers Bros, be compelled to pay into court the sum of $402.40; that an equitable lien be declared thereon in favor of mechanic’s lien claimants; and that a pro rata participation therein by the mechanic’s lien claimants be ordered. The cause was tried upon an agreed statement of facts, which was incorporated into the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. The trial court entered an ordinary money judgment in favor of plaintiff and against defendants in the sum of $144.20. Defendants appeal from said judgment upon the judgment roll.
Plaintiff’s complaint and the trial court’s judgment were based upon the theory that plaintiff had an “equitable lien” under the authority of Smith v. Anglo-California Trust Co., 205 Cal. 496 [271 P. 898], We are of the view, however, that the agreed statement of facts presents an entirely different situation from that presented in the cited ease. The Smith case involved a controversy between the administratrix of the estate of the deceased owner of real property and certain mechanic’s lien claimants, whose mechanic’s liens had been wiped out by the foreclosure of a second deed of trust, over the unexpended balance of a construction loan, secured by a first deed of trust, which unexpended balance remained in the hands of the lender. The court there stated on page 501 that it had found no authority directly in point governing the rights of
In the present case the unexpended balance in the construction loan fund at the time the building was completed was $402.40. At about the time of the foreclosure of the second deed of trust, the lender of the construction loan sent the balance of $402.40 to the defendant title company with the authorization “to disburse these funds when you can furnish us with a report showing title free and clear of all liens. ’ ’ It was stipulated that the liens of the mechanic’s lien claimants had been “wiped out” by the foreclosure of the second deed of trust. Shortly thereafter and on August 21, 1940, the title company disbursed the entire, balance of $402.40 to Borchers Bros., one of the mechanic’s lien claimants, in partial payment of its claim of $489.93. The validity of said claim is not questioned. Borchers Bros, gave the title company an indemnity agreement with respect to the payment of said balance. Subsequently plaintiff herein first advised the title company that plaintiff claimed “an equitable lien upon the funds remaining in that certain building and loan account held by” the title company. But at that time there were no “funds remaining” in said account, said funds having been previously expended in their entirety.
It is thus apparent that this is not a controversy between the owner of property and mechanic’s lien claimants over an existing balance of a construction loan fund remain
The judgment is reversed with directions to the trial court to enter judgment in favor of the defendants.
Nourse, P. J., and Pooling, J. pro tern., concurred.