Petitioner moves pursuant to subdivision (6) of section 19 of the Lien Law, for an order discharging the notice of a mechanic’s lien filed on June 1, 1973 in the office of the Suffolk County Clerk. Petitioner is the owner and sponsor of a large real estate development known as the Nob Hill Condominium Section I located in Hauppauge, Town of Islip, Suffolk County, New York. The lienor is a contractor engaged in the business of supplying and installing carpeting and it has filed a lien in the sum of $98,781.90 against the real property not yet conveyed by petitioner, as well as adjacent land owned by petitioner to secure a claim for labor and materials furnished or manufactured pursuant to a contract between the parties. The labor and materials consisted of the installation of floor carpeting, padding and related items.
Petitioner contends that the lien is invalid on the grounds that carpeting does not constitute a “ permanent improvement ” to real property as required by subdivision 4 of section 2 and section 3 of the Lien Law. Thus, the question to be decided here is whether this type of improvement is of such nature as to permit under the statute, the filing of a mechanic’s lien against real property.
The necessity and “permanency” of carpeting in today’s construction market is recognized by the fact that petitioner’s prospectus or offering plan — required to be filed and approved by the Attorney-General of the State of New York — makes the furnishing of carpeting the responsibility of petitioner in sharp contrast to the installation of ‘ ‘ other fixtures, equipment and hardware ” for which the condominium purchaser is responsible. There is thus no question that petitioner deemed carpeting to be the primary flooring and an integral part of the basic construction of the individual housing unit.
Lastly, the court notes that the entire carpeting contract had a value of $290,000, that the lienor supplied some $98,000 in labor and materials and is thus a substantial subcontractor for the Nob Hill development. To deprive the lienor of the benefits available to most subcontractors under the Lien Law, would afford tremendous leverage to the petitioner by relegating his carpet supplier to the vagaries of lengthy and costly litigation.
The application to discharge the mechanic’s lien herein is denied.
