184 Iowa 246 | Iowa | 1918
On April 30, 1914, Arthur Errington, a builder, entered into a written contract with the defendant to provide the necessary materials and labor and to construct a certain church building in the city o-f Des Moines, and to complete the same on or before September 1, 1914. The contract price of the building was fixed at $9,880. Payments in installments not to exceed 85% of-the material and labor actually furnished by the contractor were to be made from time to time as the building progressed, — not oftener than once each week, — and the re
“If, at any time,, there shall be evidence of any lien or claim for which, if established, the owner of said premises might become liable, and which is chargeable to the contractor, the owner shall have the right to retain out of any payment then due or thereafter to become due, an amount sufficient to completely indemnify the owner against such lien or claim. Should there prove to be any such claim or lien after all payments are made, the contractor shall refund to the owner all moneys that the owner may be compelled to pay in discharging any lien on said premises made obligatory in consequence to the contractor’s default. Prior to the making of the final payment, and as a condition precedent thereto, the contractor agrees to furnish and deliver to the owner receipts in full for all materials and labor furnished and used in said church building. The contract- or further agrees to indemnify against any and all mechanic liens that may be placed against said church building.”
The building was not completed within the contract period; and, in January, 1915, the work being still unfinished, the contractor abandoned it; and, on February 18, 1915, instituted suit to recover an alleged remainder due him of $2,735, and for the enforcement of a mechanics’ lien to that amount upon the property. On March 6, 1915, the defendant appeared in said suit and filed its answer, denying any indebtedness to plaintiff, and alleging, in substance, that he had failed to perform his contract or perform the conditions upon which the contract price was made payable. There was also a plea of payment. In May, 1915, the Maryland Casualty Company gave a written notice to the defendant that it had received from Errington an assignment
The issues having been settled, they were referred to W. G. Harvison, Esq., to hear, try, and report thereon, with findings of fact and conclusions of law. Trial was had to the referee, who made and filed his report in due form. For the purposes of this appeal, it is unnecessary to set out the report in full. Briefly stated, the referee found that, as between the plaintiff and its assignor, Errington, on the one hand, and the defendant Evangelistical Union on the other, there was a remainder due the plaintiff to the amount of $1,362.43, for which sum it was entitled to have its claim for a mechanics’ lien established. This relief, was, however, made subject to the claims of the intervenors, to whom it was found Errington was indebted in the aggregate sum- of $1,009.21, for labor and materials furnished
“Sec. 3089. Every person who shall do any labor upon, or furnish any materials * * * for, any building, * * * by virtue of any contract with the owner, * * * contractor or subcontractor, * * ' shall have for his labor done, or material * * * furnished, a lien upon such building erection or improvement * * to secure payment for such labor done or material, machinery or fixtures furnished.”
“Sec. 3092. Every person, ivhether contractor or subcontractor, who wishes to avail himself of the provisions of this chapter, shall file with the clerk of the district com t of the county in winch the building, erection or other improvement to be charged with the lien is situated, a verified statement or account of the demand due him, after allowing all credits, setting forth the time when such material was furnished or labor performed, and when completed, and containing a correct description of the property to be charged with the lien, which statement or account must be filed by a principal contractor within ninety days, and by a subcontractor within thirty days, from the date on which the last of the material shall have been furnished or the last of the labor was performed; but a failure to file the same within said periods shall not defeat the lien, except against purchasers or encumbrances in good faith, without notice, whose rights accrued after the thirty or ninety days, as the case may be, and before any claim for the lien was filed.”
Sec. 3094. A subcontractor may, at any time after the expiration of said thirty days, file his claim for a lien with the clerk of the district court,.and give written notice thereof to the owmer, or his agent or trustee, ® ■■ and from and after the service of such notice his lien shall have the same force and effect, and be prosecuted or vacated by bond, as if filed within the thirty days, but shall be en*252 forced against the property or upon the bond, if given by the owner, only to the extent of the balance due from the owner to the contractor at the time of the service of such notice upon him, his agent or trustee; but if in such case the bond is given by the contractor, or person contracting with the subcontractor filing the claim for a lien, such bond shall be enforced to the fiill extent of the amount found due the subcontractor.”
“Sec. 3095. The liens provided for by this chapter shall take priority as follows: * * *
“2. They shall take priority of all garnishments of the owner for the contract debts, whether made prior or sub- • sequent to the commencement of the furnishing of the material or performance of the labor, without regard to the date of filing the claim for such lien.”
Taking all these provisions together, it will be seen that the contractor or subcontractor contributing to the building or improvement has a lien for his payment from the instant the labor is performed or the material furnished, although there be nothing yet placed upon or filed of record. The provisions which follow, with reference to the filing of a proper statement and the giving of notice, are not essential to the creation or existence of the lien, as between the subcontractor, contractor, and owner. Section 3092 expressly provides that the failure to file the statement for a lien shall not operate to defeat it, except in the interest of “purchasers or incumbrances in good faith, without notice” whose rights accrued after the expiration of the prescribed period for filing. Section 3094 is clearly intended to continue the subcontractor’s right to a lien without filing a statement beyond the 30 days’,limit, and at the same time provide protection to the property owner, who might otherwise, in the absence of notice, be nnable to make final settlement with the principal contractor without risk of loss.
Again, it is urged that Section 3094, while recognizing the continued existence of Hie subcontractor’s lien after the expiration of 30 days, makes such extended right to depend upon the service of written notice by the lien claimant upon the owner. Such notice not being shown, counsel draw the conclusion that the intervenors are entitled to no relief. The argument involves what we conceive to be a misconception of the purpose and effect of the statute. The notice is one to which the owner only is entitled; and, as we have already intimated, it is to protect him against such prolonged extension of the lien as might embarrass him or imperil his rights in a settlement with the contract-'of. He alone may insist upon the notice; and if, having still in his hands an amount due the principal contractor, which will protect him if the lien be established, he waives or does not elect to rely upon the failure of notice, neither the principal contractor nor his assignee is in a position to object, or to assert that the lien has been lost. The authorities cited and relied upon by the appellant are in no wise inconsistent with this conclusion. The decision in Independent School Dist. v. Hall, 159 Iowa 607, which is particularly pressed upon our attention, is not at all in point. There, the contractor had undertaken to construct a public building, a schoolhouse; and the claims of the subcontractor were not made or recognized as existing under the general mechanics’ lien act, Code Sections 3089 et seq., which we have already cited, as governing the case now be
There is in this case no contest or conflict between the subcontractors over the order of priority of their several claims, and it is unnecessary for us to consider or decide how the parties to such a dispute, if one existed,- would be affected by failure to serve the notice provided for in Code Section 3091. It is enough, for present purposes, to hold that, where the property owner raises no objection on that score, neither the principal contractor nor one claiming under him, as an assignee of his demand against the owner, has any standing to assert priority over the subcontractor.
It should also be said, concerning the facts in this case, that the substituted plaintiff, though a surety company, is not a surety upon the contract here under consideration. It appears, however, that said company is, or was, Errington’s surety for the performance of another contract for a third party; that Errington defaulted therein, thereby involving-the company in liability for the resulting loss; and that, to reimburse or secure his said surety, Errington made to it the assignment of his cause of action in the present suit.
Tt is further to be noted that this condition requiring payment for material and labor before the final, installment of the price should become due, is not limited to claims constituting liens; and, so far as that provision is concerned, it is immaterial whether the subcontractors had or had not observed all the provisions of the mechanics' lien statute.
Other questions have been argued by counsel, but those we have considered appear to be decisive of the appeal, and further discussion is unnecessary.
The decree of the trial court is right, and it is — Affirmefl.