This is an action by a subcontractor to foreclose a mechanic’s lien against a landowner whose property was improved by the subcontractor’s work. The plaintiff, Rene Dry Wall Co., Inc., sued the defendant, Strawberry Hill Associates, to recover for work done pursuant to a contract with the defendant’s general contractor, United Construction Ltd. 1 The defendant’s principal defense was that it was excused from obligation to the plaintiff because of good faith payments to the general contractor before notice of the plaintiff’s lien and because of expenditures reasonably incurred to complete the construction project after the general contractor’s default. The trial court found that this special defense had been proved and rendered judgment accordingly. The plaintiff has appealed.
Many of the facts underlying this litigation are no longer in dispute. Strawberry Hill Associates (hereinafter Strawberry Hill), as owner, entered into a written contract on November 1, 1977, with
Rene Dry Wall had no direct contact with Strawberry Hill while United Construction was on the job. With respect to Rene Dry Wall’s first bill of April 27, 1978, in the amount of $10,060, Rene Dry Wall executed a partial lien waiver at the request of United Construction and of Strawberry Hill’s attorney. Rene Dry Wall never received this payment or any others, nor did it execute any further lien waivers. The day after Strawberry Hill’s termination of United Construction, on June 15, 1978, Rene Dry Wall served a notice of mechanic’s lien on Strawberry Hill. On June 19,1978, its mechanic’s lien was recorded on the Guilford land records. In late June, Rene Dry Wall, in a meeting with Strawberry Hill, made a direct demand for payment, which was refused.
During the spring of 1978, Strawberry Hill had made various progress payments, less ten percent
When Strawberry Hill took the project over from United Construction in mid-June of 1978, the work was not complete. Although Strawberry Hill then held retainages of $38,000, it eventually spent $49,311.85 in excess of the contract price to finish the job. Bene Dry Wall does not contest the fact that Strawberry Hill incurred these expenses, but it does challenge their reasonableness.
The legal issues in this case are framed by the statutory provisions governing mechanic’s liens. The two provisions most directly relevant are G-eneral Statutes §§ 49-33
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and 49-36,
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which define and
These provisions make it clear that a contractor’s right to recover on a mechanic’s lien is not unlimited, despite the contractor’s own good faith observance of the statutes. We have often noted that mechanic’s lien legislation is remedial in nature, designed to furnish security for a contractor’s labor and materials.
Camputaro
v.
Stuart Hardwood Corporation,
There was substantial evidence to support the trial court’s finding that the payments made by the defendant were made in good faith. The statute, § 49-33, imposes no duty of inquiry upon the owner but rather affords protection for bona fide payments “made by the owner before receiving notice of such lien or liens.” At best, the owner had information that the general contractor had been delinquent in making some payments to subcontractors, that the general contractor had requested that some checks be pre-endorsed to designated subcontractors, and that the plaintiff had executed one, only partial, lien waiver. In their totality, these facts do not demonstrate a lack of good faith. There was evidence neither of collusion with the general contractor designed to defeat the rights of the plaintiff, nor of misrepresentations by the defendant to the plaintiff to induce further performance than was financially warranted. The defendant’s conduct is therefore readily distinguishable from the egregious misconduct which this court
The trial court also made findings of fact, challenged on this appeal, about the reasonableness of the costs incurred by the defendant to complete the job after the default of the general contractor. The statute allows the owner a credit for “the reasonable cost ... of satisfactory completion of the contract plus any damages resulting from such default.” General Statutes § 49-33. The trial court found that the cost of completion exceeded the contract price by $49,311.85; the parties are in apparent agreement that the unpaid contract price, at the time of default, included retainages in the amount of $38,000. Although there was no explicit finding that the defendant’s expenditures were reasonable, such a conclusion is implicit in the trier’s findings, and is supported by testimony that the defendant engaged in arm’s length transactions with those whose work was required to complete the project.
The plaintiff’s most telling attack on the conclusion of reasonableness focuses upon testimony elicited from Russell Waldo, one of the defendant’s general partners. Waldo acknowledged that the defendant had paid a premium to some workmen to get the job done, and that the premium in some cases included paying former subcontractors for unpaid work performed while the general contractor was still in charge of the project. The plaintiff argues that it was unreasonable for the defendant to pay some hut not all of the subcontractors left unpaid after the general contractor had been terminated. The plaintiff in essence complains that it was unfair not to recognize its claim, upon substan
As an adjunct to its disagreement with the trial court’s finding of reasonableness, the plaintiff places special reliance on the fact that the contract between the general contractor and the defendant allocated certain funds as retainages, inter alia, for unsettled claims.
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The plaintiff asks us in effect to impose a trust upon the $38,000 retainage at the time of termination. A retainage enters into the calculation of the unpaid contract price and thus into the deter
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
Although there were other subcontractors also involved as parties in the litigation in the trial court, only the dispute between the plaintiff and the named defendant is currently before us on this appeal.
At the time of the filing of the lien General Statutes § 49-33 provided, in relevant part: “mechanic’s lien, precedence. eights op subcontractors. If any person has a claim for more than ten dollars for materials furnished or services rendered in the construction ... of any building . . . and such claim is by virtue of an agreement with or by consent of the owner of the land upon which such building is being erected . . . such building, with the land . . . shall be subject to the payment of such claim. Such claim shall be a lien on such land, building and appurtenances . . . and shall take precedence over any other encumbrance originating after the commencement of such services, or the furnishing of any such materials, subject to apportionment as provided in section 49-36. . . . No mechanic’s lien shall attach ... in favor of any subcontractor to a greater extent in the whole than the amount which the owner has agreed to pay to any person through whom such subcontractor claims subject to the provisions of section 49-36. . . . [T]he total of such lien or liens shall not attach ... to a greater amount in the whole than the amount by which the' contract price between the owner and such person exceeds the reasonable cost ... of satisfactory completion of the contract plus any damages resulting from
At the time of the filing of the lien General Statutes § 49-36 provided, in relevant part: “liens limited; apportionment; payments to original contractor. No such lien shall attach to any building or its appurtenances, or to the land on which the same stands ... to a greater amount in the whole than the price which the owner agreed to pay for such building and its appurtenances .... When there are several claimants and the amount of their united claims exceeds such price, the claimants, other than the original contractor, shall be first paid in full, if the amount of such price is sufficient for that purpose; but, if not, it shall be apportioned among the claimants having such liens, other than the original contractor, in proportion to the amount of the debts due them respectively . . . but, in determining the amount to which any lien or liens shall attach . . . the owner . . . shall be allowed whatever payments he has made, in good faith, to the original contractor or contractors, before receiving notice of such lien or liens. . . .” In the technical revision of title 49 in 1979, these parts of § 49-36 have become §§49-36 (a), 49-36 (b) and 49-36 (e). Public Acts 1979, No. 79-602, § 92.
It is uncontested that Bene Dry Wall properly gave notice of and filed its mechanic’s lien.
The contract between the owner and the general contractor contains, in article 5, provisions for progress payments “less such retainages as the Architect shall determine for all incomplete Work and unsettled claims.” The contract, therefore, did not allocate all retainages to the settlement of unpaid claims.
