88 N.J. Eq. 506 | New York Court of Chancery | 1918
This bill is to enforce municipal mechanics’ liens. Comp. Stat. p. 3315. The Newton Paving Company paved Nottingham Way under contract with the board of freeholders of Mercer county. The lienors, Delaware River Quarry and Construction Company, furnished material and the Holbrook Cabot & Rollins Corporation claims to have 'performed labor in the execution of the contract. The Newton company has been declared a bankrupt and the trustee in bankruptcy resists the claims to liens; the Holbrook corporation because its debt is not protected by the act and both claims on the common ground that the lienors failed to perfect their liens in the maimer prescribed by the statute. Section 1 gives a lien to any person who shall in conformity with the terms of any contract for any public improvement, made between any person and any municipality, perform any labor or furnish any material towards the performance or completion of any such contract, on complying, with the provisions of the act. Section 2 prescribes the manner of giving notice of liens and defines what it shall contain, among which is that the claimant shall state “the terms, time given, conditions of his contract.” Section 4 provides that the lien shall not be binding unless within ninety days from the filing of the same action be com
The view strenuously urged by the trustee that only those who personally labor are within the protection of the statute, is too narrow, and the cases cited are not authority for the proposition. Tod v. Kentucky Union Railway Co., 52 Fed. Rep. 241; Vane v. Newcombe, 132 U. S. 220; State v. Rusk, 55 Wis. 465; Adams v. Goodrich, 55 Ga. 233; Lehigh Coal and Navigation Co. v.
The objection that notice of the pendency of the suit was prematurely given cannot prevail. The bill was filed on January 20th, 1917, and on the same day notice of the suit was served upon the proper financial officer of the county. Subpoenas were not issued and served until four days later, but all was done within ninety days of the filing of the lien. Suits in chancery are commenced by the issuance and service of subpoena or the making of a bona ficle attempt to serve it after the bill has been filed (Haughwout v. Murphy, 22 N. J. Eq. 531; Hermann v. Mexican Petroleum Corporation, 85 N. J. Eq. 367; Haupt Company v. Board of Education of Edgewater, 100 Atl. Rep. 337); and a notice filed under the Lis Pendens act (Comp. Stat. p. 3175) before the action is thus commenced, is ineffectual, as suits in equity were before the act was passed; innocent purchasers being charged with constructive notice of the pendency of tire suit only by the filing of the bill and the service of the subpcena. A reason for this rule of practice may be found in the hardship imposed on innocent third parties by the doctrine of lis pendens, but no such reason can be advanced for its application to the Municipal Mechanics’ Lien act where no innocent parties are .involved. Here the notice is actual, not constructive, and it serves an entirety different purpose. The financial officer must keep’ the fund intact for ninety days after the lien is filed, during which time the action must be commenced and the officer notified
The complainant’s bill to enforce another lien for materials furnished to the same contractor for the paving of the River road, in Mercer county, is controlled by tire foregoing and will be allowed. The complainant is entitled to costs.