204 A.D. 769 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1923
D. A. Schulte, Inc., was lessee for ten years of some real property in Bridgeport, Conn. It leased to the Aimwell Company, Inc., the said premises. The Aimwell Company made a contract with plaintiff for certain repairs on the property. This contract and these repairs were made with the consent of D. A. Schulte, Inc., as expressed in the lease itself, who exacted a bond from the Aimwell Company to pay for all the material used and work put upon the premises in the making of these repairs. This action is upon that bond. Both defendants are defending. These repairs were not paid for by the Aimwell Company, and upon December 18, 1917, this plaintiff filed a mechanic’s lien against the property. This lien was canceled in consideration of an assignment by the Schulte Company to the plaintiff of this bond, and this action is brought by the plaintiff as such assignee.
If this Hen was a vaHd Hen, the fact that it was canceled upon assignment of the bond to plaintiff cannot destroy the liability of the surety. The condition of the bond was the payment of the bills incurred by the AimweU Company. The proof of the filing of the Hen was only necessary to show harm to the Schulte Company. If that harm existed, liability attached and the canceHation of the Hens upon assignment of the rights of the Schulte Company upon the bond did not satisfy that liability. That assignment is effective to give to plaintiff all the rights of the Schulte Company before the assignment and before the cancellation of the Hens in consideration of such assignment.
The hen was found to be invalid by the trial court upon three grounds: First, that plaintiff, as henor, had willfully and intentionally misstated that the work was finished when the hen was filed in December, 1917. It appears that the contractor had omitted to put a railing upon the roof above the coping to give further protection against persons falling off the roof of the building over the coping. When the attention of the contractor was called to the matter, he notified the person in charge of the iron work, who immediately put the railing upon the roof. Thereafter the plaintiff filed two other hens, on September 27 and 28, 1918 (upon which, however, no claim is here made), which claims stated that the work was completed at a later date than that specified in the first hen filed. Before the first hen was filed, however, the Aimwell Company itself overlooked the omission of the railing and actually gave its note for the balance due on the contract. The finding of a fraudulent intent to deceive was based solely upon the facts as thus stated. In my judgment this finding was against the weight of evidence. It is held in Ringle v. Wallis Iron Works (149 N. Y. 439) that the hen is good where some work remains to be done if the contract has been substantially performed. Liens have frequently been sustained where the contractor was required, after the filing of the hen, to do some shght work which had been inadvertently omitted at the time that the hen was filed. This Lien Law should be liberally construed as a remedial statute. (Gates & Co. v. National Fair & Exposition Association, 225 N. Y. 142.) In the Ringle Case (supra) Judge O'Brien says: “ This court has not yet been committed, so far
In Kiel v. Carll (51 Conn. 440) it is said: “ The first error assigned is that there was a discrepancy between the amount alleged to be due in the certificate of lien, and the amount found due by the court. The certificate states the amount due as $3,500; the amount found due by the court was $733.41. The statute requires that the amount due shall be stated in the certificate as nearly as the same can be ascertained. But this court has repeatedly held that an honest mistake either of law or of fact, by reason of which the amount due is overstated, in the absence of fraud, or of intention to deceive, and where no one has in fact been deceived or misled to his injury, will not vitiate the lien. (Bank of Charleston v. Curtiss, 18 Conn. 349; Hopkins v. Forrester, 39 id. 351; Marston v. Kenyon, 44 id. 349.)”
In American Mortgage Co. v. Butler (36 Misc. Rep. 253) the late Mr. Justice McAdam states the law as follows: “ It cannot be inferred from the mere fact that the referee decided that Cook claimed too much that the lienor forfeited his equitable claim upon the property, nor is there anything in the evidence warranting that conclusion. In Ringle v. Wallis Iron Works, 149 N. Y. 439, it is intimated that the statements that make a notice of lien ineffectual must be not only untrue, but ‘ wilfully and intentionally ’ false in some important or material respect. So, in Aeschlimann v. Presbyterian Hospital, 165 N. Y. 296, the court held that where in such case it appears that the plaintiffs intentionally and by pretense of a fictitious and fabricated demand enormously exaggerated their claim, with intent to defraud, no recovery could be had on the hen. The court carefully observed the obvious distinction between honest mistakes of fact as to value, and wilful and intentional exaggeration fraudulently made. In this respect the rule is similar to that applicable to false swearing in proofs of loss on insurance policies, which by the conditions thereof vitiates the contract, but, to have this effect, the swearing. ‘ must be intentionally false, whether by a fraudulent overvaluation of the goods destroyed, or a statement
It appears that the contract for this iron work, which included the putting in of this railing, was a subcontract, and, without further evidence of an intentional and willful misstatement that the work had been completed in November, 1917, it cannot be held that the lien was defeated thereby. The omitted work was of so little importance that it escaped the notice of the Aimwell Company, which, as stated, gave its note for the last remaining installment upon the contract prior to the putting up of this iron railing. If, as under the cases cited, a misstatement of an amount due upon a contract cannot be deemed to be of itself so far intentional and fraudulent as to defeat the lien, it would seem clear that a misstatement as to the fact that the building was completed would come within the same rule, and unless intentionally and willfully made, and with intent to deceive, of which there is no proof, the court cannot condemn this hen upon .that ground.
Another reason assigned by the court for holding the lien invalid was that the hen itself did not mention that the Schulte Company had consented, nor did it mention the Aimwell Company. The statute of Connecticut is quoted, which shows what the certificate of hen must contain. That statute simply requires the hen to be filed within sixty days after the work should be completed, and that the premises should be described, the amount claimed as a hen thereon, and the date of the commencement of the performance of services and furnishing of materials, stating that the claim is justly due, as near as can be ascertained; and this statement is required to be sworn to by the claimant. The statute of New York (Lien Law, § 9, as amd. by Laws of 1916, chap. 507) required other matters to be stated in the certificate or notice of hen and provides (§ 10, as amd. by Laws of 1916, chap. 507) a different time for filing. The lien filed stated all of these particulars required by the Connecticut statute (Conn. Gen. Stat. 1918, § 5218; Conn. Gen. Stat. 1902, § 4136), and it further stated that the making of the repairs was consented to by the owner of the fee of the land, one Elbridge G. Wheeler. It did not state that the claim was made simply against Wheeler, nor was it necessary, under the Connecticut statute, to state who was in fact the owner of the land or that any consent was given by any one, or to name any party against whom the claim was made. If the claim is filed against the land, proof may be made upon the trial to bind any party who has an interest in the land without the statement of the name of such party in the notice of the lien.
In 18 Ruling Case Law (at p. 886) the text in part reads: “ In some jurisdictions there are statutory provisions extending mechanics’ liens to leasehold estates, but, regardless of such provisions, it seems settled that the word ‘ owner ’ in a'statute giving a mechanic’s lien on the interest of an owner is not limited in its meaning to an owner of the fee, but also includes the owner of a leasehold estate.” I find no cases holding otherwise, and there are several cases holding this rule. (Poole v. Fellows, 25 R. I. 64; Forbes v. Mosquito Fleet Yacht Club, 175 Mass. 432; Daniel & Co. v. Weaver, 5 Lea [Tenn.], 393; Hathaway v. Davis, 32 Kans. 693; Moore v. Vaughn, 42 Neb. 696.)
In this case there is nothing to show that Wheeler consented, but that the Schulte Company consented is shown by the provisions of the lease. In Gates & Co. v. National Fair & Exposition Association (supra), Judge Chase, in writing for the court, says: “ Full knowledge and general acquiescence in the improvement of the real property considered in connection with the covenants and agreements contained in the lease are some evidence of consent on the part of the owner within the meaning of the statute.” (Citing authorities.)
The lien has further been held invalid on the ground that there was no such consent by the Schulte Company as would authorize
The Connecticut statute in this respect is like our own. (See N. Y. Lien Law, § 3.) The materials must have been furnished or the work done under contract with or by consent of the owner in order to authorize the filing of the lien. This provision is in the alternative, and to hold that such a consent is necessary as would raise an implied contract to pay, would, to my mind, be entirely subversive of the alternative provision of the statute. In New York State the statute has been construed to authorize the lien where there is no contract expressed or implied to assume a personal obligation to pay for the materials. (Gates & Co. v. National Fair & Exposition Association, 225 N. Y. 142; Pearce v. Kenney, 152 App. Div. 638; Kerwin v. Post, 120 id. 179.) It is true that the consent must be such as to imply an assent that the contractor may look to the interest of the owner in the land through his mechanic’s lien for his pay. That was all that was necessary to be held in Avery v. Smith (supra). There was no such consent by the Young Women’s Christian Association in that case as to indicate an assent to the filing of a mechanic’s lien. In the Peck case the materials were furnished upon request of the owner. It may be also that, if there be a specific agreement that the owner of the land is not in any event to be liable for materials furnished or work done in making repairs, the permission to go ahead and make the repairs is not such a consent as would authorize the filing of a mechanic’s hen as against the owner’s interest. But, assuming for the argument that these cases go to the full extent of holding that such consent must be such as to imply an obligation of the consenting owner to pay the claims, it is difficult to see how there could be any stronger consent than is indicated in the lease from the Schulte corporation to the Aimwell corporation. The repairs are to be made. They are to be subject to the approval of the Schulte corporation. A bond is to be given
No question is made by respondent on this appeal that this claim was not within the provisions of the bond, because of the extra work ordered to be done, .so that the question does not arise as to whether a recovery could be had upon the bond for such extra work.
It follows that the judgment of the Trial Term should be reversed, with costs, on law and fact, and judgment should be entered for the plaintiff for the relief demanded in the complaint, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling and Page, JJ., concur. •
Judgment reversed, with costs, and judgment directed for relief demanded in the complaint, with costs. Settle order on notice.