56 N.J. Eq. 187 | New York Court of Chancery | 1897
The complainant Mrs. Seyfried has paid into court, under decree made on a bill of interpleader, the sum of $588.98, being tbe amount due from her to the defendant Andrew Stoll, upon a building contract made with him for the erection of a house upon lands of Mrs. Seyfried.
“ Hoboken, N. J., Oct. 31st, 1894.
“Mrs. Caroline Seyfried pay to J. Gahagan’s Sons one thousand 00/100 Dollars for material furnished your building on the west side of Monroe Street 75 feet north of 4th street.
“11,000.00. A. Stoll.”
At this time Stoll owed J. Gahagan’s Sons $1,109.27, but no. payment was then due from Mrs. Seyfried to Stoll under the contract, and the order does not appear to have been accepted. The entire balance of the contract price then unpaid was $1,125, the amount of the last payment, but the building was not then finished, and, the contractor afterwards defaulting, the owner completed the building, and after the expense of the owner for completing the building was deducted, as provided by the contract,' the balance due to Stoll was the sum paid into court. All of the other defendants are claimants under the provisions of the Mechanics’ Lien law, by notice to the owner after demand upon • the contractor, and the dates of the service of their respective notices upon the owner are as follows: Timothy MV. Dorsett, for $60.35, notice served January 4th, 1895; John Gardner, $366.06, January 25th, 1895; Vanderbilt & Schill, $76.77, January 29th, 1895. Upon the facts admitted there' seems to be no question that, these notices operated as valid equitable assignments of the fund according to their respective dates. The question is whether the order in favor of J. Gahagan’s Sons is an equi
The cases decided in our own courts hold that no particular form of assignment is necessary, and that equity, disregarding form, will hold any writing which plainly appropriates the fund to be an equitable assignment. Bower v. Hadden Bluestone Co., 3 Stew. Eq. 171; affirmed, 3 Stew. Eq. 340. But I have not been referred to any decision of our courts in which an equitable assignment has been held to have been made by an order, in which the order itself did not appear to designate and appropriate the fund in the owner’s hands, or part of it. This is the effect of the order in Bernz v. Marcus Sayre Co., 7 Dick. Ch. Rep. 275, 281 (Errors and Appeals, 1894). In Lanigan v. Bradley, &c., Co., 5 Dick. Ch. Rep. 201, the equitable assignment was made out altogether by parol agreement to assign and acts thereunder. Where the assignment depends upon the construction of the order itself, a plain.and sure test of construction is said to be whether the order or direction to the drawee, if assented
I will hear counsel, therefore, if they wish, as to disposing of the residue of the fund without further proofs.