One George E. Ryan had a contract for furnishing the electrical supplies for the Roman Catholic church on Randall’s Island. On May 26, 1914, Ryan gave to the Central Electrical Supply Company a paper which reads in part as follows:
“ I hereby assign to the Central Electrical Supply Company for value received, moneys due me from the Department of Charities for labor and material for the complete electrical plant in the Church of the Sacred Heart, Randall’s Island, amount $899.00, proposition No. 166.”.
This assignment was not filed until the 1st day of August, 1914, when it was filed with the proper officers. The defendant, appellant, has asked for an affirmative judgment, directing the payment of these moneys pursuant to the terms of this assignment.
It appears that Ryan after having obtained this contract made a subcontract with the Enos & Watkins Company, the plaintiff’s assignor, for the full performance of the work. This work was apparently completed on or about May 10, 1914, and upon May twenty-eighth, two days after the assignment to the defendant, appellant, the Enos & Watkins Company filed a mechanic’s lien under the statute.
The defendant’s assignment was held void by the court, according to the opinion rendered, upon the ground that it did not contain a copy of the contract or a statement containing its substance, as required by section 15 of the Lien Law.
The plaintiff seeks to defend this judgment, however, upon another ground, to wit, that at the time of the assignment there were in fact no moneys due under the contract. In
- In Words and Phrases ([2d ed.] vol. 2, p. 160) it is said: “ The word ‘ due ’ in its larger sense is often used to cover liabilities, matured or unmatured, or as importing an existing obligation, whether the time of payment has arrived or not.” In Bouvier’s Law Dictionary [Rawle’s 3d Rev.], at page 946, volume I, it is said: “ The word ‘ due,’ unlike ‘ arrears’ has more than one signification, and expresses two distinct
Even if the word “ due ” must in this case be construed to mean “ to become due,” the intention of the assignor appears so clear from the naming of the exact contract price that the court will effectuate that intention by so construing the wording of the assignment. This is not the case of construing an assignment as against a subsequent lienor, because the plaintiff is held to have no lien; nor is it a case of the withholding of an assignment from the record for the purpose of misleading a third party to advance moneys upon the faith of Ryan’s ownership, because the assignment itself was not made until after the work had been substantially finished, and there was needed only the certificate of the city department to make the same payable. With this construction of the assignment, in the absence of a superior lien, the defendant was clearly entitled to the'relief demanded in its answer and the judgment so far as appealed from by the defendant, appellant, should be reversed and judgment directed in favor of the defendant for the relief demanded in its answer, with costs against respondent as assignee in this court and in court below.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Page and Shearn, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed and judgment ordered for defendant as stated in opinion with costs in this court and in the court below. Order to be settled on notice.
See, also, Lien Law, § 16, as added by Laws of 1911, chap. 873. Since amd. by Laws of 1916, chap. 507.—- [Rep.