The District of Columbia’s mechanic’s lien statute “has been traditionally construed narrowly,”
Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Circle Equip. Co.,
I.
Pursuant to a 2003 contract, appellant (hereafter “McNair”) performed construction work on a building or buildings located at 1629 16th Street, N.W., then wholly owned by appellee, 1629 16th Street, L.L.C. (hereafter “1629 L.L.C.”). After a dispute arose between the parties over McNair’s performance and 1629 L.L.C.’s obligation to pay, McNair filed a notice of intent with the Office of the Recorder of Deeds on January 16, 2006, “to hold a Mechanic’s Lien against the interest of the current owner ... [of the] property located at 1629 16th Street, N.W...., Square ... 0193[,] ... Lot(s) 0152, 2075, [and] 2077.” The notice named the owner of the property as “1629 16th Street, L.L.C.”
In the meantime, however, by a Declaration dated April 7, 2005, 1629 L.L.C. had submitted the land and improvements “located on Lot 152 in Square 193 ... to the provisions of’ the District’s Condominium Act of 1976 (as amended in 1992), establishing “a plan of condominium ownership of the [property.” Specifically, the plan created five residential units plus two parking units and common elements. Once the plan was approved, the subdivided lots acquired the numbers 2072 through 2078 in the District’s land records. Thus, for example, unit number 4 and parking unit number 1 in the condominium declaration became “Lots 2075 and 2077, respectively,” in Square 193. On October 4, 2005, 1629 L.L.C. sold Lots 2075 and 2077 to Robert M. Taylor, its Managing Member. The remaining Lots, with one exception, had apparently also been conveyed to individual owners by the time McNair filed its mechanic’s lien notice in January 2006. The exception was Lot 2076, which 1629 L.L.C. had originally reserved as “convertible space” but then converted to a residential unit by amending the condominium
Following the dispute mentioned above, McNair filed its mechanic’s lien and, in April 2006, a complaint to enforce the lien, as well as for breach of contract and damages in quantum meruit. Simultaneously, McNair filed a notice of pendency of action (lis pendens). See D.C.Code § 42-1207 (2001). On 1629 L.L.C.’s subsequent motion for partial summary judgment, the trial court ruled that the mechanic’s lien was invalid for failure to name the correct owner of the subject property. Focusing primarily on Robert M. Taylor’s ownership of Lots 2075 and 2077, the judge concluded that “there is no material factual dispute as to the contents of the lien and who the record owner was at the time the lien was filed”: it was Taylor, not 1629 L.L.C. The court later “set[ ] aside the lis pendens ” because of invalidity of the lien to which it related. See D.C.Code § 42-1207(d).
II.
McNair appeals from the order cancelling the
lis pendens. See McAteer v. Lauterbach,
A.
McNair first contends that the trial court erroneously cancelled the lis pen-dens based on its grant of summary judgment respecting the mechanic’s lien, because that judgment “remains subject to revision” so long as McNair’s companion allegations of breach of contract and quantum meruit have not been resolved (Br. for McNair at 9). (Those claims were referred to arbitration by agreement of the parties, and had not been finally resolved at the time of oral argument in this appeal.) D.C.Code § 42-1207(d) provides that a lis pendens shall be cancelled “[i]f judgment is rendered in the action ... against the party who filed the notice,” and, in McNair’s view this means “judgment” as to all counts of the underlying complaint before a lis pendens can be nullified. Given the nature of the companion counts here, however, we do not agree.
The purpose of a
lis pendens
is “to enable interested third parties to discover the existence and scope of pending litigation affecting property.”
Heck v. Adamson,
B.
Under D.C.Code § 40-301.Q2(a)(l) (2008 Supp.), “[a] contractor desiring to enforce [a mechanic’s] lien shall record in the land records a notice of intent” to do so. Subsection (b) sets forth the information that the notice must contain, preceded by the warning (in subsection (a)(1)) that “[a] notice of intent that does not comply with subsection (b) ... shall be void.” Included in the necessary information is “[t]he name and address of the owner or the owner’s registered agent,” subsection (b)(2), and “[a] legal description ... of the real property.” Subsection (b)(6);
see also
subsection (a)(1) (notice must “identif[y] the property subject to the lien”).
3
Even before the legislature underscored the point expressly (a non-complying notice “shall be void”), it had been “well settled that a compliance with the statutory requirements is necessary in order to secure a valid and enforceable lien.”
Fidelity Storage Corp. v. Trussed Concrete Steel Co.,
Illustrating the point that courts may not “excuse those who claim [the mechanic’s lien statute’s] protection from the performance of precedent conditions,”
Lambie Co. v. Bigelow,
McNair does not dispute that at the time it filed the mechanic’s lien naming 1629 L.L.C. as owner of Lots 2075 and 2077, the record owner of those lots was Robert M. Taylor. But see note 2, supra. McNair argues, first, however, that it also named Lot 152 as part of the affected property and thus there is “a genuine issue of material fact concerning whether McNair’s notice of intent adequately identified 1629 [L.L.C.] as an owner of Square 193, Lot 152 in order to preserve McNair’s mechanic’s lien” (Br. for McNair at 15). McNair means here specifically the portion of the property denominated “convertible space” in the condominium declarations, which 1629 L.L.C. still owned at the time the mechanic’s lien was filed.
“Lot 152,” however, did not correctly describe the “convertible space” 1629 L.L.C. continued to own. That part of the property was renumbered Lot 2076 in the formation of the condominium regime, whereas Lot 152 described the entire property subdivided in the condominium conversion. New York Courts, applying a mechanic’s lien statute not unlike ours, have consistently held that a lien notice “filed after the recording of a condominium declaration on the subject building ... is invalid ... as against specific condominium units ... [if it] set[s] forth the former superseded single lot number for the entire building rather than the separate lot numbers assigned to each unit in connection with the conversion ... [and thus] fails to properly describe the specific units ... sought to [be] encumberfed].”
Northeast Restoration Corp. v. K & J Constr. Co.,
McNair had partial actual notice, at least, of the individual unit numbers because it identified two of them in the lien notice: Lots 2075 and 2077. More importantly, a diligent title search would have informed McNair of the Lot number as
McNair’s remaining argument is directed to its conceded failure to name the record owner of Lots 2075 and 2077 in the lien notice. It argues that there were triable issues of fact about whether the sale of the lots to Taylor was an “arm’s-length transaction” if, as McNair asserted, the transfer price on the face of 1629 L.L.C.’s deed conveying the lots was $287,000, “while Taylor had contemporaneously advertised [the u]nit ... for sale at a price of $2.3 million” (Br. for McNair at 16). In McNair’s view, a determination that the conveyance was “voidable” because calculated to defeat creditors’ rights would mean that ownership never effectively left 1629 L.L.C., the owner it named in the lien notice.
We are not persuaded. McNair cites the “rule” discussed (but not relied on) in
Maiatico v. Fletcher,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The legislative history of the District’s
lis pendens
statute is in accord, declaring that a purpose of the law is to "requirfe] that notice of litigation concerning real estate be filed with the Recorder of Deeds, thus providing persons with notice of litigation that could affect good title to real estate.” Report of the Council of the District of Columbia Committee on the Judiciary, on Bill 13-267, The “Fairness In Real Estate Transactions and Retirement
. In a separate suit for slander of title filed by 1629 L.L.C., McNair has pending a counterclaim alleging fraudulent conveyance of Lots 2075 and 2077 by 1629 L.L.C. to Robert M. Taylor. The lis pendens at issue, however, was not filed in regard to that claim.
. Among other things, § 40-301.02 requires the notice to include:
(1) The name and address of the contractor or the contractor’s registered agent;
(2) The name and address of the owner or the owner’s registered agent;
(3) The name of the party against whose interest a lien is claimed and the amount claimed, less any credit for payments received up to and including the date of the notice of intent;
(4) A description of the work done, including the dates that work was commenced and completed;
(5) A description of the material furnished, including the dates that material was first and last delivered;
(6) A legal description and, to the extent available, a street address of the real property. ...
. McNair's reliance on
Davidson v. E.F. Brooks Co.,
