*683 Opinion
Can a secured construction lender defeat a bonded stop notice claimant’s statutory priority to construction loan proceeds by segregating the fund into preallocated accounts and thereafter deducting charges and interest as accrued? The construction lender, Imperial Bank, appealing the summary judgment granted the stop notice claimant, Familian Corp., contends Civil Code section 3166 2 does not provide laborers and material-men with a priority over the construction lender to preallocated and disbursed loan funds. As we describe below, the lender’s position contravenes a strong public policy of this state to afford protection to laborers and materialmen who enhance the value of a lender’s security but are otherwise unable to assure compensation for their work. Consistent with the historical solicitude for laborers and materialmen embodied in the Constitution, statutes, and case law, the summary judgment is affirmed.
In September 1981, Imperial Bank agreed to loan $3.8 million to a limited partnership, Rim Crest Villas, Ltd., to finance the construction of 24 condominium units. The loan was secured by a deed of trust on the real property upon which the units were to be constructed. During construction, Imperial paid approximately $528,000 to itself for preallocated loan expenses including interest, loan fees, document preparation fees, and general and administrative expenses. Approximately $188,000 remained in unexpended construction funds when Imperial received stop notice claims for $105,000 and foreclosed on the property. After foreclosure, but within the statutorily allotted time to file claims, Imperial received additional stop notices for a total of $427,000. In its interpleader action, Imperial deposited $105,000 with the trial court claiming the laborers and materialmen were entitled to a pro rata share of this fund only.
Familian, one of the bonded stop notice claimants, was unwilling to accept a small percentage of its claim for plumbing materials supplied to the Rim Crest project after Imperial had debited the construction fund for bank charges and interest. In its motion for summary judgment, Familian argued the law does not allow a construction lender to profit at the laborer and materialmen’s expense by preallocating the costs of the construction loan, disbursing the loan proceeds to itself, foreclosing on its security made more valuable by virtue of the laborer and materialmen’s work, and then refusing to pay for the work because the construction funds have been expended. The trial court agreed, finding there were sufficient loan funds to pay all stop notice claimants, and granted judgment for Familian.
*684 I *
II
An entire body of constitutional, statutory, and case law is designed to protect the claims of laborers and materialmen. Out of this constellation of safeguards flickers section 3166, the focus of this appeal. It provides: “No assignment by the owner or contractor of construction loan funds, whether made before or after a stop notice or bonded stop notice is given to a construction lender, shall be held to take priority over the stop notice or bonded stop notice, and such assignment shall have no effect insofar as the rights of claimants who give the stop notice or bonded stop notice are concerned.” Imperial argues a predisbursement allocation of loan proceeds to existing or established costs owed to a lender does not constitute a section 3166 assignment; nor is a section 3166 priority achieved by a laborer or materialman whose claim arises after construction funds have been disbursed. Similar claims asserted by construction lenders have been consistently rejected by the courts.
A. Stop Notice Priority
The construction lender in
Calhoun
v.
Huntington Park First Sav. & Loan Assn.
(1960)
In
Rossman Mill & Lbr. Co.
v.
Fullerton S. & L. Assn.
(1963)
In
A-1 Door & Materials Co.
v.
Fresno Guar. Sav. & Loan Assn.
(1964)
Materialmen and laborers also prevailed in several cases on the theory their claims constituted equitable liens against the construction fund. (See, e.g.,
McBain
v.
Santa Clara Sav. & Loan Assn.
(1966)
In
Idaco Lumber Co.
v.
Northwestern S. & L. Assn.
(1968)
In summary, a stop notice claimant’s priority has been jealously safeguarded by the courts. Lenders cannot avoid a section 3166 priority by private agreement.
(Rossman Mill & Lbr. Co.
v.
Fullerton S. & L. Assn., supra,
B. Preallocation of Construction Loan Funds and Periodic Disbursements to the Lender
A-1 and Miller establish that loan proceeds “earmarked for construction purposes” are subject to perfected stop notices. Imperial contends a preallocation of loan funds to an interest reserve as a condition of the loan is not an assignment of funds by the owner or contractor which are earmarked for construction purposes. Instead, it is a “pre-loan disbursement” *687 of funds the bank intends to loan. In essence, the bank is specifying how much it is willing to loan for each aspect of the project and the borrower is not given the discretion to use the allocated funds in any other manner or for any other purpose. The argument is unsupported by the record, however, and counter to the purpose of section 3166.
On appeal, Imperial claims to have established a $3.8 million line of credit for the Rim Crest project. The building loan agreement, however, has no language suggesting the preallocation of funds to pay points, interest, and other non-construction costs was a precondition to disbursements on the line of credit. In any event, section 3166 expressly provides that any assignments made before or after receipt of stop notices are subordinate to the perfected claims of laborers and materialmen. The lender is at liberty to establish whatever reserves or other devices are necessary to protect its interests. Section 3166 does not prohibit Imperial’s practices; it simply assures priority to those who contribute the labor and materials to improve the property and increase the value of the lender’s security.
Extracting a short phrase from several cases, all of which ironically were decided against construction lenders, Imperial contends a stop notice claimant’s priority applies only to “unexpended” or “undisbursed” loan funds,
(Connolly Development, Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(1976)
Our holding is consistent with the Supreme Court’s recognition of the “protective policy [which] continues to serve the needs of the construction industry. As was pointed out in
Cook
v.
Carlson
[(D.S.D. 1973)]
We hold that a preallocation of construction loan funds and periodic disbursements to the lender are assignments within the meaning of section 3166. Therefore, “whether made before or after a stop notice or bonded stop notice is given to a construction lender,” the assignment does not take priority over the stop notice. (§ 3166.) Laborers and materialmen are entitled to retain the protection historically afforded under section 3166 just as lenders retain the right to foreclose on their security interest in the property, including its enhanced value as a result of the construction.
III *
The judgment is affirmed as modified to correct the mathematical error discussed in part I of the unpublished portion.
Scoville, P. J., and Parslow, J., † concurred.
