Cargill, Inc., contracted with Henschien, Johnson & Crombie, Inc. (“HJC”), for the construction of a poultry processing plant on Cargill’s property. In turn, HJC contracted with Metromont Materials Corporation to provide concrete for the project. HJC immediately assigned its general contractor role to Henschien, Johnson & Crombie of Georgia, Inc. (“HJC-Georgia”). Metromont provided the materials as agreed. When neither HJC nor HJC-Georgia paid as agreed, Metromont filed a claim of lien against Cargill’s property. Cargill filed an interpleader and declaratory judgment action against Metromont. On February 14, 1995, Metromont filed an answer and counterclaim wherein it sought to foreclose on its lien claim against Cargill and asserted a cross-claim against HJC-Georgia to recover the amount of its lien claim. Although required by statute to do so, Metromont did not file a notice that it commenced the lien action within 14 days of asserting the cross-claim. See OCGA § 44-14-361.1 *854 (a) (3). In July 1995, after being notified that the lien claim was defective because the notice was not timely filed, Metromont dismissed and refiled its cross-claim against HJC-Georgia and also filed a cross-claim against HJC. This time, Metromont filed notices of the commencement of the actions within 14 days. Despite the refiling and notice, Cargill moved for partial summary judgment on Metromont’s lien claim, arguing that Metromont forever lost its right to enforce the lien by failing to file notice of the action within 14 days of commencing the first action. Metromont appeals from the trial court’s grant of that motion. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
For a materialman’s lien to be enforceable, it must be created and declared in accordance with the provisions set forth in OCGA § 44-14-361.1; on failure of any of the provisions, the lien is not effective or enforceable. OCGA § 44-14-361.1 (a). Those provisions require that (1) the materialman substantially complies with the contract; (2) he files his claim of lien within three months after completing the work; and (3) he commences an action for the recovery of the amount of his claim within 12 months after it becomes due
and he files a notice of the action with the clerk of court within 14 days after commencing the action.
“The lien comes into potential existence only when the statute is satisfied,” and if there is a failure to satisfy the statute, the lien is inoperative.
L & W Supply Corp. v. Whaley Constr. Co.,
In
Palmer v. Duncan Wholesale,
*855 Metromont’s attempts to distinguish Palmer are unpersuasive. Although the lien claimant in Palmer did not dismiss and refile the action, and then give the required notice, this distinction is insignificant. As the Supreme Court pointed out in Palmer, the lien claimant’s rights to enforce the claim of lien were extinguished when the notice requirement went unmet. Thus, any action Metromont took to enforce the lien after the notice period expired was ineffectual. Having determined that its lien enforcement rights were extinguished as a result of Metromont’s failure to comply with the notice requirement, we need not reach the issue of whether HJC and HJC-Georgia were alter egos of one another.
This result may seem harsh, but it is consistent both with the requirements of the lien statute, see OCGA § 44-14-361.1 (a), and with the longstanding principle that statutes involving material-man’s liens must be strictly construed in favor of the property owner and against the materialman.
D & N Elec. v. Underground Festival,
Judgment affirmed.
