166 P. 6 | Cal. | 1917
This appeal is by one of the plaintiffs in a consolidated mechanic's lien suit from the judgment and from the order denying his motion for a new trial. It presents an unusual situation. Wilson, as owner, made a contract with Finlayson and Stettin, general contractors, to do all of the work and furnish all of the materials here involved in the erection of a building in the city and county of San Francisco. The contract price was $77,211. The terms of payment were seventy-five per cent of the value of the labor and material used in the construction of the building, to be paid on the first day of each month during the continuance of the contract and the remaining twenty-five per cent payable thirty-five days after completion and acceptance, payments to be made on written certificates of the architect. The contractors abandoned their contract on February 15, 1911. At that time they had received $36,026.12. Before that time certain notices to withhold, or "stop notices," as they are commonly called, had been served upon the owner. Thereafter lien claims were filed by those who had served "stop *425 notices" and by others. On February 20, 1911, Stettin, the appellant, served upon the owner a "stop notice" for $1,645.50. He filed no claim of lien and prosecuted his action therefor not against the real property of the owner but against the funds in the owner's hands. The court found the amount which had been paid to the contractors as above given, found the amount necessarily expended by the owner in the completion of the building as being thirty-five thousand five hundred dollars, and concluded that the fund in Wilson's hands available to the lien claimants was the difference between the contract price and the two amounts above given, and was $5,684.88. It awarded this amount proportionately among the lien claimants and excluded this appellant from participation therein. It found and adjudged that the total amount of the valid lien claims was $16,559.87, and it decreed that the sum of $5,684.88, the difference between the contract price and the total cost of construction was all that was secured by liens on the property, and gave personal judgment against the contractors to the lien claimants for the balance, amounting to $10,874.99. As has been said, it refused to allow this appellant to share in the $5,684.88 and awarded him only a personal judgment against the principal contractors. This judgment was accepted by all the other plaintiffs saving this appellant, and as to them has become final. But (and here appears the singularity in this case) the court found that at the time of the abandonment by the principal contractors the value of the work and material done and furnished by the contractors, measured as near as possible by the standard of the whole contract price, was $49,098.27. Now, as admitted and found by the court, the total amount paid to the contractors was the sum of $36,036.12, and it inevitably results that in contemplation of law there was in the hands of the owner and available in payment of the demands of the successful claimants the difference between these two amounts, or $13,072.15. Further, it is argued, that as the court erroneously awarded to the lien claimants whom it allowed to share in the fund only $5,684.88, it necessarily results that in contemplation of law there is $7,387.28 in the hands of the owner, which money, at the instance of the lien claimants and this plaintiff, should have been subjected to the payment of their demands. And, finally, that as the other parties plaintiff to the action accepted the lesser amount *426 and their acceptances have become final, the legal conclusion is unescapable that there is in the possession of the owner $7,387.27, subject to the lien which appellant acquired by virtue of his "stop order" for the amount which the court found to be due him, namely, $1,645.50.
Respondents, while conceding as they must under the authority of Ganahl Lumber Co. v. Weinsveig,
So much of the judgment as is here involved in the appeal of Stettin is reversed with directions to the trial court to enter judgment in his favor against the owner or against his substituted representatives for the amount which the court found due. There being no attack upon that portion of the judgment in favor of this appellant and against the original contractors, it is not affected by this determination.
Melvin, J., and Lorigan, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.