23 N.Y.S. 1019 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1893
This action was commenced in the city court to foreclose a mechanic’s lien filed against the property on the northeast comer of Amsterdam avenue and Ninety-First street, in this city. It was brought on the theory that the defendant Arendt, as the owner of the property, consented to the furnishing of the materials, and to the improvement of his property thereby, and that, inasmuch as such owner had made no contract with anybody for the furnishing of the labor and materials^ he was liable to the plaintiffs by reason of such consent. This theory was maintained with much ingenuity both on the trial and on the appeal to this court, but we do not think the facts found by the court below sustain the contention, or the conclusions of law reached by it. Even on respondents’ theory, this judgment cannot be maintained, in its integrity, for it appears from the findings that one Edward Smith was the immediate predecessor of the defendant Arendt in the ownership of the property in question, subject to a mortgage held by the defendants Kind & Lipman, and was such owner when he.entered into a contract with the defendant John W. Hutton to furnish, among other things, the hardware required in the buildings on this property, and when Hutton made his subcontract with plaintiffs. It also appears that the property was sold under a decree of foreclosure and sale of the above-mentioned mortgage on the 31st day of August, 1891, at public auction, and bid in and purchased by the defendant Arendt, but that the deeds for the same were not acknowledged or delivered to the purchaser until the
In the case at bar, Smith, the owner of the equity redemption, was in possession at least to the 20th of November, and the mortgagees, Kind & Lipman, were never in possession. It follows, therefore, that none of the appellants could be regarded as owners before Arendt received his deed, and that none of them could object to anything going on about the building, nor could they enforce any rights or obligations, nor be bound to pay merely because they knew what work was done or material furnished.' They were neither legal nor equitable owners, and it required more than mere knowledge to bind them. No one can be said to impliedly consent to a thing he cannot stop, nor can his estate be bound without his consent, and against his will. Riggs v. Chapin, (City Ct. N. Y.) 7 N. Y. Supp. 765; Havens v. Power Co., (Sup.) 20 N. Y. Supp. 764. The word “owner” is carefully defined in paragraph 1 of the mechanic’s lien act to be the “owner in fee, or of a less estate, a lessee for a term of years, or vendee in possession under a contract existing at the time of the filing of the notice of lien, or the owner of any right, title, and interest in real estate which may be sold under execution.” Arendt’s bid and right to the deed was a chose in action, if anything, and not subject to levy or sale under execution. Paragraph 5 of the act expressly provides that, in cases when the owner has made an agreement to sell and convey the premises to the contractor or other person, such other shall be deemed to be the owner, within the intent and meaning of the act, until the deed has been actually delivered and recorded, conveying the premises pursuant to the agreement.
The court below, however, found that $225 worth of the materials furnished by the respondents under their contract with Hutton was delivered after the 20th day of November, 1891,—that