3 Daly 213 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1870
By the Court.
It was held by Judge Loew, at the special term, in Matthews v. Daley, (special term, January, 1870),
If no such proceedings have been instituted within the year, then the 12th section has provided for the mode in which it is to be discharged ; that is, by the entry of an order of any judge of a court of record, upon due proof that the year has elapsed, that no proceedings have been had, and upon the certificate of the clerk that no notice of any proceeding has been filed with him. In all other cases the lien ceases after a year, without any discharge, by the express words of the statute, unless it has been continued. But in a case where no proceedings have been instituted within the year, it must be discharged by the entry of an order of a judge of a court of record, for the reason that the statute has made express provision for its discharge, in that manner, in such a case.
The statute has given to the owner or to any person affected by the lien the right to have it discharged after a year,
A person consulting the lien docket, may learn upon inquiry of the county clerk, whether any notice of an action or proceeding to foreclose the lien has been filed with him, and if none has been filed such person, if entitled to do so, may take steps at once to have it discharged by the order of a judge of a court of record, and if notice of such a proceeding has been filed, and there has not been, after a year, a new docket, stating that it is continued by order of the court, then he knows that, by the provision of the statute, it has ceased and is at an end.
In this case the year expired on the 30th of May, 1868, and Judge Brady’s order, on the 24th of May, 1869, if it had been entered, which, it appears it was not, could have no effect. Judge Barrett’s order of the 10th of June, 1869, discharging the lien, was equally of no effect. It did not discharge the lien. It was already discharged through the omission of the plaintiff to obtain and enter an order for its continuance before the expiration of the year. It was not a case, moreover, in which an order, discharging a lien, could be granted, for a proceeding had been instituted by the first contractor, to which the plaintiff was, by the fifth section, a necessary party, and had, in fact, been made so by the order of the court. It was not necessary, therefore, for him to give notice of the proceeding to the county clerk, but it was necessary for him to have his lien continued, and a new docket made before the expiration of the year. The order of Judge Brady, of 22d of June, 1869, setting aside Judge Barrett’s order, and directing the county clerk to make the necessary entry in his books renewing and continuing said lien, was without authority. It was held in Poerschke v. Kedenburg (6 Abb. Pr. N. S. 172), that the application for the lien must be made within the year; that the statute is imperative, and invests neither court or judge with any dis
Order reversed.
Matthews v Daley.—This motion was for an order directing the county clerk " to discharge of record certain mechanics’ liens. It appeared that the plaintiff was the owner of premises No. 38 Broad street, in the city of New York; that, in August, 1868, he entered into a contract with the defendant Jones for the erection of a building on said lot; that said Jones made a sub-contract with one Joyce for the carpenter, work; that in order to carry out his said contract, Joyce made parol agreements with
OmtiON.—Under the Mechanics’ lien law of 1863 (laws of 1863, chap. 800), a lien ceases after one year from the time of filing the notice of lien, unless, by an order of the court obtained before the expiration of the year, the lien is continued, and a new docket made stating such fact (§ 11 of the act, Welch v. The Mayor &c., 19 Abb. Pr. 132; Poerschke v. Kedenburg, 6 Abb. Pr. N. S. 172). And it makes no difference that a proceeding was commenced before the. expiration of the year to enforce or foreclose such lien. The decision of this court in the case of Paine v. Bonney (4 E. D. Smith, 734), which has been cited as deciding the contrary, has no application, as it was made under the law of 1881, which provided that every lien created under that act should continue until the expiration of one year from the expiration thereof, “ and until judgment rendered in any proceedings for the enforcement thereof.” I am aware that in Poerschke v. Kedenburg (supra), which was decided under the Act of 1863, Judge Barrett was of the opinion that in such a case the lien continues after the expiration of the year, without the procurement of an order of the court. But while I entertain the greatest respect for the opinion of that learned Judge, and while I concede that there is a discrepancy or incongruity between tbe 10th and 11th sections of the act which would seem to favor his view, still I cannot in this instance agree with him. The language of section 11 is clear and explicit, that “ liens shall in all cases cease after one year, unless by order of the court, dsc.” We must bear in mind that this statute is in derogation of the common law, and should be construed strictly. In addition, it will be found on examination that the opinion of Judge Brady, in the case of Poerschke v. Kedenburg (supra), and also the cases of Welch v. The Mayor (supra), and Freeman v. Cram, (3 N. Y. 308), sustain the view of the case which I have taken.
It follows that the conditions prescribed by the act must be complied with, or the liens will be lost (Blauvelt v. Woodworth, 31 N. Y. 288).
The liens in this case having ceased ipso facto, no order directing the county clerk to discharge them is necessary. But even if it were otherwise, the court has no power to make such an order. Section 10 of the act specifies in what cases liens may be discharged by order of the court or otherwise, hut does not include
X may add that I have consulted with my two associates, Judges Daly and Van Brunt, and am permitted to say that they both concur in the conclusions which I have arrived at in this case.
The motion must he denied.
Niles & Bagley, for motion; Francis Byrne, opposed.