Lauer v. . Dunn

115 N.Y. 405 | NY | 1889

Under a contract between the defendant, as owner of certain property, and one Herle, for the construction of several buildings, these plaintiffs, as sub-contractors, furnished labor and materials. The day after their completion, for a portion of the sum remaining due them, they received this writing from the contractor, Herle, viz.:

"ROCHESTER, N.Y., April 19, 1888.

"Mr. B. DUNN:

"Please pay A.E. Lauer Co. seven hundred dollars and charge to contract and oblige.

"WILLIAM HERLE."

Plaintiffs presented to defendant Dunn, the same day, their order, but, after some discussion about paying, he did not then accept it and put them off, and this suit is to recover the amount specified. There was due from the defendant to his contractor, on the completion of the buildings the sum of $750, and there is no controversy on this head.

By the terms of the contract eighty per cent of the estimated value of labor and materials, furnished from time to time, was to be paid as the work progressed, and "the remaining twenty per cent of the contract-price within thirty days after the final completion of the work and its acceptance by the architect."

It was also provided in the contract that "in case any lien or liens * * * shall exist upon the property * * * at the time or times when * * * any payment is to be made such payment, or such part thereof as shall be equal to not less than double the amount of or for which such lien or liens shall or can exist, shall not be payable at the said stipulated times, notwithstanding anything in this agreement to the contrary contained."

The appellant argues that when the order was given nothing was due by him to the contractor, and, therefore, the order was inoperative to confer any right upon the plaintiffs. The *408 argument is based on the idea that because the contract gave thirty days within which to make the final payments, after the completion of the work, that period must expire before anything could be said to be due to the contractor. A few days after the giving of this order liens were filed by various parties, and, if the order was not operative to assign to the payees the right of the contractor to the moneys specified in it, then the subsequent lienors would have a lien upon the whole $750, payable to the contractor when the building was completed. It was conceded on the argument that, if the owner had paid the amount of the order to plaintiffs, when presented by them, he would have been protected in so doing. The proposition is undoubtedly true. The liability of the property owner to lienors is limited by the lien law to the sum remaining unpaid under the contract at the time of the filing of the lien. Even where the owner has paid in advance of the terms of his contract, in order to hold him to any liability for so doing, it must be made to appear that he did so for the purpose of avoiding the provisions of the act, or by some collusion. (Laws 1885, chap. 342, §§ 1, 2.) No honest payment of his debt by the owner, in conformity with the contract between him and the building contractor, can be attacked by subsequent lienors. The question, therefore, here is, whether the order, which the contractor gave to these plaintiffs, amounted in law to an assignment pro tanto of the fund in the owner's hands. We think that it did. When the building was completed the contractor had earned his moneys, though he might not be able to enforce payment thereof until thirty days had expired. That provision for time we look upon as one of grace to the owner. He was not bound to wait, but he had the right to elect to do so. During the running of that time other parties than the contractor might, through the filing of their notices of lien, acquire the right to be paid from the fund, but that consideration is not one which influences the determination of the case. If, before any liens were filed, the contractor had been paid, or had assigned his interest in the fund, in good faith and for a *409 valuable consideration, in payment of a claim of the sub-contractor, and the owner is notified, no subsequent liens could operate to affect the owner with any further liability.

Had the plaintiffs filed a prior lien they would have accomplished the same result as was effected. I fail to see how the defendant, the owner, is at all interested in opposing payment to the plaintiffs. If he had paid them, he could not have been prejudiced by doing so. The provisions of the contract quoted, with respect to the owner's right to retain double the amount of any lien filed, were for his protection and meant simply that if, when moneys are payable to the contractor, liens exist, the owner may reserve double the amount claimed under the liens from the fund in his hands. The effect of the giving of the order in question was to substitute the plaintiffs as the recipients pro tanto of the balance payable to the contractor. Concededly it was earned under the contract, and the postponement of its payment, by the exercise of the owner's option, did not make it any the less a debt to the contractor, however possible for other legal claims to it to arise meanwhile. After notice of this order, which was, as we have said, in effect an assignment of the contractor's interest in the moneys in the owner's hands, the owner was bound to apply the fund to its payment and to no other purpose. Such was the rule asserted in Brill v. Tuttle (81 N.Y. 454), and which is well settled by authority. The questions are so fully discussed in the General Term opinion as to call for no further consideration here.

We think that it was error for the trial judge to set aside the verdict for the plaintiffs and to order a nonsuit, and the order of the General Term reversing that order should be affirmed, with costs.

All concur.

Order affirmed. *410