123 A. 845 | Conn. | 1924
The demurrer might better have been addressed to the special defense raised by the answer, than to the complaint, for the complaint contains no averment as to character of the plaintiffs' services, and the defense that an architect's services are not lienable, could not properly be raised in that way. But since that issue of law is necessarily determined by the judgment, and nobody makes any objection to the form in which it is presented by the appeal, we will decide the point.
Whether an architect's claim for services rendered in the preparation of plans and specifications and in supervising construction, subjects land and building to lien, depends wholly on the construction of our statute, § 5217, the relevant words of which are: "If any person shall have a claim . . . for materials furnished or services rendered in the construction, raising, removal or repairs of any building, . . . such claim shall be a lien on such land, building and appurtenances." The question is a new one in this court, though it was referred to and left undecided in Weinstein v.Montowese Brick Co.,
Turning first to the history of our statute, it appears that in this State mechanic's liens have never been limited to persons performing manual labor on the building.
The original Act of 1836 gave a lien for sums in excess of $200 due to "the contractor or contractors for such building or repairs." In 1849 the lien was extended *342 in favor of "any person" having "a claim for materials furnished or services rendered," exceeding the sum of $25. In 1895 the limit was reduced to $10, and the statute has since remained substantially unchanged in any respect material to the point in question.
Literally the plaintiffs' claim is lienable under the statute. They are persons having a claim for services rendered in the construction or raising of the building.
The plans and specifications practically construct the building up to the point where it can be apprehended by others. Without them or their equivalent the building could not be constructed at all: the contractor would have no basis for his bid, the materialmen would not know what materials to furnish, and the workmen would not know what manual labor to perform.
Now, if the work were started without any plans and specifications, and some one were hired to furnish all necessary information and directions as the work progressed, it could not reasonably be denied that his services were rendered "in the construction" of the building. And unless those words confine the lien to materials delivered and services rendered after the construction has been commenced, it can make no difference that the information necessary to the construction of the building has been embodied in plans and specifications prepared before such commencement. Of course there can be no lien until some actual or theoretical increment of value has attached itself to the land by the commencement of the building; but if materials delivered before that time are thereafter incorporated in the building, or if services rendered before that time in the preparation of plans and specifications are thereafter utilized in its construction, the same logical and equitable basis for the lien exists as if the materials had not been furnished, or the services *343 had not been rendered, until after the commencement of the building. It seems clear, therefore, that the words "in the construction of the building" relate to the fact of actual use in construction of the building, irrespective of the time when the materials are furnished or the services performed; and that being so, it must follow that the services of an architect in the preparation of plans and specifications, when they are afterward used in the construction of the building, are services rendered in its construction, for which the architect is entitled to a lien under our statute. Our conclusion appears to be in accord with the current of decision, although the question is in each State one of interpretation of the local statute. 5 Corpus Juris, 265; 16 L.R.A. 600; 36 L.R.A. (N.S.) 354; 9 Ann. Cas. 97; 26 Ann. Cas. 275.
The plaintiffs' claim for services is based on an agreement for a three per cent commission on $185,000, being the estimated cost of the building. It is found that one half of such compensation was for plans and specifications, and one half for services to be rendered in supervising construction. When the building was one third completed, work was stopped, because of defendants' financial condition. Plaintiffs thereupon filed a certificate of lien for $5,550, being the whole amount of their agreed commission. Because of the filing of the lien and the plaintiffs' refusal to release it until a bond was substituted, the plaintiffs were not called upon to continue to supervise the construction when work was resumed. They made no offer to do so, and in so far as the contract was not performed it was terminated by mutual consent.
The court has found that when the certificate was filed, the plaintiffs were entitled to $3,700 under their contract, for which amount, with interest, judgment was rendered. *344
Defendants claim that the lien is invalid (1) because for an amount substantially in excess of that due; (2) because it included a sum claimed as damages for breach of contract.
It is true that the services for the rendering of which a lien is sought must have been rendered before the certificate is filed. Booth v. VonBeren,
There is no finding that the statement of the amount due was intentionally false or fraudulent, and the conclusion and judgment of the court necessarily imports that it was not. The defendants' exceptions to the finding, so far as pursued in this court, are limited to the claim that the court should have found that the amount claimed included either a claim for breach of contract, or else a claim for work done in connection with another building. On the former point it is enough to say that there had been no breach of the contract when the certificate was filed, and on the latter point the evidence is conflicting. It appears from the memorandum of decision, which is made part of the finding, that the plaintiffs based a claim that the whole compensation contracted for was due, upon their construction of Healy v. Fallon,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.