173 Ga. 35 | Ga. | 1931
J. E. Young and others, executors, brought their petition against Harley-Mitchell Hardware Co. and others, materialmen and laborers, seeking an injunction to restrain the defendants from filing suit or otherwise undertaking to enforce their claims for labor and material furnished in erecting a certain building described in the petition, and to require the defendants to inter-plead and establish the amount and priority of their claims; for accounting, and for other equitable relief. At the trial the case by consent of both parties was submitted to the court on an agreed statement of facts, without the intervention of a jury. Judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants against the plaintiffs for $1,016.29, with interest; and the plaintiffs excepted.
Prom the agreed statement of facts it appears that the executors
It is the contention of the lien claimants in this case that the owner is liable to them, if not for the whole amount of their liens, at least for the sum of $1,016.29, with interest; that is, the amount paid by the owner to the contractor prior to March 18, 1929, and not applied by the contractor in payment of claims for labor and material. The final judgment of the court was in accordance with' the contentions of the lien claimants. This contention might be sound if the owner of the property had not been compelled, in order to complete the building contemplated by the contract, to make additional expenditures for labor and material. But the owner did proceed to the completion of the building and was compelled to expend for labor and material the additional sum of $1,411.54. The right of the lien claimants to the enforcement of their liens does not depend solely iipon the relative status of their liens and the amounts which had been paid by the owner to the contractor on March 18, 1929, but the additional expenditures for labor and material made by the owner must be taken into account. These additional expenditures for labor and material are to be treated as payments made upon the contract price under the original contract; or they are to be deducted from the original contract price, to follow language used in one or more of our decisions. This ruling is made, of course, upon the assumption that the owner had the right to complete the building; and as to this we do not think any question can be raised. In Hunnicutt & Bellingrath Co. v. Van Hoose, 111 Ga. 518 (36 S. E. 669), it was said: “Mr. Boisot, however, further says (§ 85) that in such case the cost of completing the work is to be deducted from the contract price in order to ascertain the amount up to which the subcontractors may claim liens; and if such deductions, together with payments previously made to the contractor, equal or exceed the entire contract, price, then of course the subcontractors and materialmen have no lien, since there is nothing due under the contract; citing 4 E. D. Smith, 760; 94 Mich. 83; 77 Tex. 69.” This rule laid down by Boisot in his work on Mechanics’ Liens was recognized and applied in that case. In Prince v. Neal-Millard Co., 124 Ga. 884 (53 S. E. 761, 4 Ann. Cas. 615), it was said: “If the contractor abandons his contract, the owner may have it completed and charge the
Applying the rules stated above to the facts in this case, the extra amount paid by the owner of the property improved for labor and material furnished necessary to complete the building should have been deducted from the contract price as contained in the contract between the owner and contractor. And a calculation based upon the facts in the record will show that the court did not do this in rendering the judgment for $1,016.29 in favor of the defendants. Had the proper deduction from the contract price, according to what we have said above, been made, a much smaller sum would have been allowed to the defendants under the judgment of the court. Judgment reversed.