44 N.Y. 489 | NY | 1978
OPINION OF THE COURT
The issue on this appeal is whether plaintiff’s prior recorded mortgage for materials and labor provided for the construe
The property in question was originally owned by Muriel White and Sherry Linder and was subdivided into 77 lots in section 3 of Harbor Trees in Kings Park, Smithtown, New York. On July 30, 1973 White and Linder contracted to sell 27 lots to plaintiff corporation, which is wholly owned by their husbands, Samuel Linder and Stanley White, and in addition contracted to sell the remaining 50 lots to defendant mortgagor, Trifort Realty. All of the parties contemplated construction of one-family residences on their lots and it was known that Smithtown would not issue certificates of occupancy until improvements for the entire tract, such as roads, curbings, drainage and sewer lines had been installed. Pursuant to contracts executed by all parties on July 30, 1973, plaintiff obligated itself to install such improvements in the streets for the entire 77 lots and Trifort obligated itself to pay 50/77ths of the cost thereof, with a ceiling of $270,000. In accord with this agreement and simultaneously with the execution of the contract to purchase the land, W. L. Development and Trifort signed a written agreement which declared that W. L. Development "is about to commence construction of all off-site public improvements within the area shown on the Map of Harbor Trees, Sec. 3, which said improvements will enure to the benefit of [Trifort] and W. L. Development” and that "the parties hereto wish to provide by written agreement for the construction and installation of said public improvements and for the payment by [Trifort] to W. L. for a proportionate share of the cost of said work.”
On January 28, 1974, pursuant to the contract of purchase, Trifort acquired title to the 50 lots and simultaneously executed a bond and mortgage to W. L. Development in the sum of $270,000 to secure payment of its share of the improvements. The mortgage was recorded on February 11, 1974. When Trifort received title to the 50 lots, its share, as of that time, of the cost of the off-site improvements which W. L. Development had already provided for Trifort’s 50 lots under the July 30, 1973 agreement, was $52,643. By February, 1975 W. L. Development’s work under the contract was substantially completed and Trifort’s maximum cost obligation had been reached.
In November, 1974 Ace Hardwood Flooring Co. began in
Special Term held that a mortgage may be validly given to secure future advances or future obligations (Knapp v McGowan., 96 NY 75; Truscott v King, 6 NY 147) and that a prior recorded mortgage has priority over a subsequently filed mechanic’s lien (Lien Law, § 13, subd [1]). Although section 7 of the Lien Law provides that a mortgage "made by an owner of real property, for the purpose of avoiding the provisions of this article, with the knowledge or privity of the person to whom the conveyance is made or in whose favor the mortgage * * * is created, shall be void and of no effect as against a claim on account of the improvement of such real property, existing at the time of the making of the conveyance or the creation of such mortgage” the court found that Ace’s claim was not in existence at the time the mortgage was given and thus section 7 was inapplicable. The court noted that section 7 proscribes inequitable or preferential treatment among lienors at a time when their claims are coexistent and both maker and receiver of the mortgage have knowledge of the existence of other claims and no such situation exists here.
The Appellate Division reversed the judgment, with one Justice dissenting, on the ground that a supplier of materials and labor should not be able to obtain a priority for its claim by use of a mortgage as compared to a mechanic’s lien when the Lien Law establishes a policy that all such "liens shall be on a parity” (Lien Law, § 13, subd [1]). The Appellate Division reasoned that there was no authority for the use of an "open-ended mortgage device” (58 AD2d 377, 383) to secure priority over mechanics’ lienors. Recognizing the validity of mortgages
In analyzing the case before us, we must first determine whether the services performed by plaintiff are covered by the Lien Law. Section 3 of the Lien Law provides, in pertinent part, that a "contractor, subcontractor, laborer. * * * who performs labor or furnishes materials for the improvement of real property with the consent or at the request of the owner thereof * * * shall have a lien”. Subdivision 4 of section 2 defines improvements as including "the demolition, erection, alteration or repair of any structure upon, connected with, or beneath the surface of, any real property and any work done upon such property or materials furnished for its permanent improvement, and shall also include any work done or materials furnished in equipping any such structure with any chandeliers, brackets or other fixtures or apparatus for supplying gas or electric light and shall also include the drawing by any architect or engineer or surveyor, of any plans or specifications or survey, which are prepared for or used in connection with such improvement”. The question is whether the construction of streets, curbs, road drainage, sewer mains, and gas and electric service mains, constitutes an improvement of
Courts in other jurisdictions have found similar construction work to give rise to mechanics’ liens (Christ Constr. Co. v Willete Assoc., 47 NJ 473; Ladue Contr. Co. v Land Dev. Co., 337 SW2d 578 [Mo]; Mitford v Prior, 353 F2d 550; 36 Am Jur, Mechanics’ Liens, § 64). There can be no dispute that the improvements provided by plaintiff are necessary to make the homes in the subdivision habitable in a manner consistent with reasonable standards of comfort and health and that they enhance the value of property. Indeed, the improvements are required before certificates of occupancy would issue. As was so aptly stated in Ladue Contr. Co. v Land Dev. Co. (337 SW2d 578, 585 [Mo], supra): "It is much too late in these modern times to embrace argument that the [streets, curbs, gutters and sanitary sewers] ought not to be treated as essential to the comfortable and convenient use of the dwellings. * * * [D]wellings without streets for ingress and egress * * * or without efficient sewer systems are just no longer constructed in urban areas. To hold that [these] items are outside the terms of the lien statute would be to turn the clock back to another century.”
On the record before us it is unclear whether the roadbeds upon which plaintiff’s work was performed are owned by the original grantees, or are part of each subdivided lot or have been dedicated to Smithtown. Even assuming that the roadbeds were owned by someone other than Trifort, the work still constitutes an improvement of Trifort’s land since it enhanced the value of that property and was necessary to make the homes being constructed suitable for habitation (see Kenney v Apgar, 93 NY 539, 548, supra; Christ Constr. Co. v Willete Assoc., 47 NJ 473, supra; 36 Am Jur, Mechanics’ Liens, § 64). The fact that the work may have been done on land owned by someone other than Trifort in no way alters our conclusion that, under these circumstances, the work constitutes an improvement made at the request of and under contract between Trifort and plaintiff.
Now we must turn to the issue whether a mortgage given to secure payment for future work pursuant to a written construction contract constitutes a valid mortgage. There can be no doubt as to the validity of mortgages to secure future advances or liabilities as this has become a recognized form of security frequently used in the transaction of business (Ackerman v Hunsicker, 85 NY 43, 47; Knapp v McGowan, 96 NY 75, 86, supra; 3A Warren’s Weed New York Real Property, Mortgages, § 1.05; Rasch, Real Property Law and Practice, § 1702). The Appellate Division distinguished this rule on the ground that it covers future loans and advances involving the receipt of money and not money due on account for the performance of work in the future. This distinction is far too tenuous to be established as a rule of law. The mere fact that the mortgagee provides both work and financing should not place him in a lesser position than a banker who provides financing only, which would be used to pay for work performed by another. Although the mortgagee serves both as banker and contractor this should not diminish his right to take a valid mortgage.
Likewise, nothing in the Lien Law itself prohibits a contractor and an owner from entering into a mortgage agreement. A mortgage being an agreement between two parties requires no specific statutory authorization to be valid as contrasted with a mechanic’s lien, which is an ex parte acquisition of an encumbrance on one’s land, and clearly needs legislative sanction to be valid. The mere availability of the mechanic’s lien provisions does not automatically preclude the use of a mortgage. Section 7 of the Lien Law provides protection against the granting of collusive mortgages used for the purpose of avoiding the provisions of that law. Where a contractor takes a mortgage when mechanics’ lienors already possess claims against the property, then it may be assumed that the mortgagee seeks to take precedence over the others and section 7 would void that mortgage as to the other lienors (Foxson v Elmus Bldg. Corp., 276 NY 30). But this provision implies that a mortgage honestly given in good faith prior to the existence of any such claims will be valid.
Both lower courts found, as a matter of fact, that the mortgage herein was given in good faith and that there was no evidence to indicate an intent to avoid the provisions of the Lien Law. When the mortgage was given there were no persons who possessed claims for providing either labor or materials for the improvement of the property. In January, 1974 when the mortgage was executed, plaintiff had already completed approximately 20% of the required work and the remainder was finished by February, 1975 at a cost in excess of the amount of the mortgage. On the other hand Ace did not commence its work until November, 1974, some nine months after the recording of the mortgage and its lien was not filed until another 13 months later. When Ace began the flooring
To treat this mortgage as a mechanic’s lien, as the Appellate Division did, would constitute an impairment of the obligations of the contract that the parties chose to make. Absent clear statutory authorization to do so, the court should not interfere with such rights. We should not read such an important power into the Lien Law absent more explicit language. Notable, again, in this context is section 7 which protects lienors from the abusive use of the mortgage, but does not prohibit the good faith use thereof.
A valid prior recorded mortgage has priority over a subsequent mechanic’s lien (Lien Law, § 13, subd [1]; Ausable Chasm Co. v Hotel Ausable Chasm & Country Club, 263 App Div 486). Since the mortgage complies with these requirements, it has priority.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, and the judgment of Supreme Court reinstated.
Chief Judge Breitel and Judges Jasen, Jones, Wachtler, Fuchsberg and Cooke concur.
Order reversed, etc.
We note, further, in the case before us that even if the contract and mortgage were cognizable as a building loan contract (Lien Law, § 22) there would be no doubt as to priority (Lien Law, § 13, subds [2], [3]) since the mortgage complied with the statutory requirements, including the requisite lien covenant.