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Somers Brick Co. v. Souder

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Sep 13, 1905
70 N.J. Eq. 388 (Ch. Div. 1905)

Opinion

09-13-1905

SOMERS BRICK CO. et al. v. SOUDER et al.

H. R. Coulcomb, for Excelsior Terra Cotta Company. A. H. Darnell, for John M. Frere. B. C. Godfrey, for Michael J. Horan and Lucy E. Freeman. C. L. Cole, for Somers Brick Company, James Conover, and Atlantic City Lumber Co. Harry Wootton, for Atlantic City.


Consolidated actions by the Somers Brick Company and others against Frank A. Souder and others to enforce alleged mechanics' liens against the unpaid portion of the price of a certain public building. Judgment in favor of complainants Michael J. Horan, Lucy E. Freeman, and Atlantic City Lumber Company, and decree dismissing the bills as to the other complainants.

In 1902, the defendant Frank A. Souder made a written contract with Atlantic City to build and complete for that municipality a fire house on Tennessee avenue, to be known as the "United States Fire House." The total contract price for all the work and materials was $25,587. The building was to be erected under the direction and supervision of Mr. Vaughan as architect. The contractor, Souder, agreed to have the building completely finished within a period of six months from the date when possession of the building site was given to him, which date should be determined by the architect's certificate, and that $20 liquidated damages for each day's delay in finishing the building should be deducted from the contract price. Atlantic City by the contract agreed to pay $25,587 upon the certificate of the architect that the same is due under the contract, as follows: When all the second-floor joists were laid, $7,000; when the entire roof was completely finished, $8,000; the balance upon the completion of all the work under the contract and the acceptance of the building. It was expressly agreed that the final installment of the contract price should not be paid until the architect should certify that the contract had been fully complied with, and the work completely finished in every respect, and, further, that the final installment should not be payable until all the mechanics and materialmen who did work and furnished material for the building should in writing acknowledge that they had therefor been fully paid. The contract was filed on August 20, 1902, with A. M. Heston, comptroller of Atlantic City. The contractor proceeded with the construction of the building, and the city made the following payments on account of the contract price:

On May 15, 1902....................

$ 3,000 00

On August 20, 1902................

7,000 00

On November 13, 1902...................

8,000 00

On November 30, 1903............

129 60

$ 18,129 60

The first payment of $3,000 appears to have been made under a resolution of the city council and without any certificate of the architect. The second, of $7,000, and the third, of $S.000, were made under the certificate of the architect. The fourth, of $129.60, was made to one Turner, to pay him for finishing part of the contract work left undone by contractor, Souder. The contractor did not complete the work required by the contract to be done. He did not pay debts incurred for considerablequantities of material furnished to him and used in the construction of the building. In consequence of his failure to pay these bills, claims were filed by various materialmen under the provisions of the act of March 30, 1892 (P. L. 1892, p. 369), to secure the payment of claims for materials furnished or work done on public improvements in a municipality of this state. Eight suits have been brought by the claimants in this court to enforce the claims against that portion of the contract price for which it is contended Atlantic City is liable under the provisions of the statute of 1892, above cited. By an order made on the 3d day of May, 1904, all these causes have been consolidated, under the provisions of section 10 of the act of 1892, on the application of Atlantic City. The names of the complainants in the several suits which have been consolidated, the time when their several claims were filed and their several suits brought, and the amounts of their claims are as follows:

Names of Claimanta

Time When Claim Filed.

When Suit Brought.

Amount.

Michael J. Horan

May 15, 1903

Aug. 11, 1903

$1,074 35

Somers Brick Co.

May 20, 1903

Aug. 24, 1903

636 25

Lucy E. Freeman

June 27, 1903

Sept. 8, 1903

1,075 00

Atlantic City Lumber Co,

July 2, 1903

Sept. 8, 1903

4,635 35

Italian Marble Mosaic Co.

July 11, 1903

No suit brought

573 00

James Conover

Aug. 20, 1903

Aug. 24, 1903

395 00

John M. Frere

Sept. 8, 1903

Oct. 3, 1903

302 52

Excelsior Terra Cotta Co.

Sept. 26, 1903

Nov. 30, 1903

8,314 32

The several complainants in the consolidated causes insist on their right, under section 5 of the act of 1892, to have such portion of the contract price as at the time of filing their several claims may have been due or about to grow due to the contracts from Atlantic City, under the contract, appropriated to the payment of their several claims in the order that they were filed. Answers have been filed by Atlantic City and by the several claimants on the fund, and the consolidated causes have come to a hearing.

H. R. Coulcomb, for Excelsior Terra Cotta Company. A. H. Darnell, for John M. Frere. B. C. Godfrey, for Michael J. Horan and Lucy E. Freeman. C. L. Cole, for Somers Brick Company, James Conover, and Atlantic City Lumber Co. Harry Wootton, for Atlantic City.

GREY, V. C. (after stating the facts). There is an undisputable principle at the base of all these suits, which must control them. The several complainants have not recovered judgments at law against their alleged debtor, Prank A. Souder, nor have they any grounds for relief against him or against the city of Atlantic City, or any equitable principle. Yet they all seek to obtain decrees in this court, which will take from Atlantic City the contract price which it has agreed to pay to Souder, and give it to them to satisfy the debts which they say Souder owes to them. It is obvious that such procedures must be based upon some right or equity created by statute, The complainants all insist that their right to the contract price arises by operation of the above-cited statute of 1892 (P. L. 1892, p. 369) and their conformity to the requirements of its provisions. As the right of the claimants is wholly dependent upon the force of that statute, the omission of any claimant to comply with its requirements must operate to defeat his claim. The statute in section 2 provides that any claimant, at any time before and within 15 days after the whole work to be performed by the contractor is completed or accepted by the city, may file notice of his claim with the chairman or the head man in charge of the work, or with the financial officer of the city, etc. The financial officer shall enter in a book the name, etc., of the claimant, and the date of filing, etc. Section 4 of the act of 1892 (page 370), declares that no lien provided for in the act

shall be binding, etc., unless an action be commenced within 90 days from filing the same, and notice of pendency thereof be served on the financial officer of the municipality. The statute creates a right of action which theretofore had no existence. It prescribes certain conditions and limitations, and declares that, if they be not observed, the right, given only by the statute, shall not arise or shall be defeated. In such cases the observance of the prescribed statutory conditions is necessary to the acquirement or maintenance of the right. It is for the Legislature only, and not for the courts, to change the requirements of those statutory conditions. The courts do not make, they only administer, the law.

There are eight complainants named in the consolidating order. The Italian Marble Mosaic Company is named as a complainant, probably in mistake. No suit by such a complainant appears. No proofs have been submitted for that company. Of the other seven complainants named in the consolidating order, the Somers Brick Company's suit was commenced 96 days after its claim was filed, and no notice of its pendency appears to have been given. The Excelsior Terra Cotta Company and James Conover do not appear to have given any notice of pendency of their suits. The statute disposes of these claims by declaring in section 4 that no lien shall be binding unless suit be commenced within 90 days of filing the same and a notice ofpendency be filed with the financial officer of the municipality. Only four complainants brought their suits within 90 days after filing their claims and gave to the financial officer of Atlantic City the notice of pendency of such suits, as required by section 4 of the statute of 1892. These four are Michael J. Horan, Lucy E. Freeman, Atlantic City Lumber Company, and John M. Frere.

The claims of Horan, of Freeman, and of Atlantic City Lumber Company were not challenged on the argument of the consolidated causes. That of John M. Frere is opposed by Atlantic City, on the ground that section 2 of the statute requires the notice of claim to be filed before the whole work is completed, or within 15 days after it is so completed or accepted. It is admitted that by resolution of the property committee of Atlantic City's council the work was accepted on August 1, 1903, and that actual possession on behalf of the city was then taken of the premises, and that Frere's lien claim notice was not filed until September 8, 1903, which was more than 15 days after the city had accepted the work.

The complainant Frere insists that the statute (section 2) must be construed to give to him the choice of three periods within which to file his lien claim notice—either before the work was completed, or within 15 days after it was accepted, or within 15 days after it shall at any time be completed, whether accepted or not. In my view but two periods are offered by the statute during which the lien claim notices may be filed: First, before the whole work is completed; second, within 15 days after it is either completed or is accepted, whichever date may come first. The arrival of the one is intended to exclude the other. It is not to be Supposed that, after the city has finally accepted the work, a period for the filing of liens against the contract price may continue to run until 15 days after the work shall, at a date no matter how remote, finally be completed, or that, after all the work has been completed, a lien period may continue until the city shall have formally accepted it. Mr. Frere's lien claim notice, having been filed more than 15 days after the city had accepted the work, does not comply with the requirements of the statute. This is also an additional and successful objection made by Atlantic City to the lien claim notices filed by James Conover on August 20, 1903, and by Excelsior Terra Cotta Company on September 26, 1903.

On the argument of these consolidated causes some reference was made to an order given on January 23, 1903, to the Excelsior Terra Cotta Company by Souder, upon the contract price, directing Atlantic City to pay the terra cotta company $3,359.32. The counsel for that company contended that under the pleadings his client should have the benefit of this order as an equitable assignment, etc. An inspection of the terra cotta company's bill of complaint will show that there is in it no presentation of any right under the above-named order. The bill of complaint is limited strictly to the assertion of the lien claim filed on September 26, 1903. There is no pleading to which any proofs touching the order of January 23, 1903, can relate, and no prayer for relief thereon.

The claimants insist that the portion of the contract price for which Atlantic City must respond in these suits must include the first payment of $3,000, made May 15, 1902, without any certificate of the architect and before the second-floor joists were laid, as provided in the contract This payment was made under the authority of a resolution of Atlantic City council passed on May 12, 1902. It is contended that by the statute (section 5) the lien extends to any funds which may be due or to grow due to the contractor under the contract when the lien claim is filed; that the city had no power to make payments in advance of the period named in the contract, etc. This argument assumes that the furnishers of work or material have under the statute some lien or charge on the contract price before the filing of the lien claim, or possess antecedently to the time of filing the lien claims some right to require the city to pay only according to the terms of the contract. The claimant under the act of 1892 secures his lien for the first time when he files his notice of claim. This is the effect of the statute. Vice Chancellor Reed so held in Harris v. Garretson (N. J. Ch.) 57 Atl. 414. Preceding the filing of the notice of lien claims, the contractor might transfer his interest in the contract price. So, also, the contractor and the city, before any claims are filed, being the sole parties to the contract, may postpone or anticipate payments thereunder. This was the case under notices by virtue of the third section of the mechanic's lien act (Craig v. Smith, 37 N. J. Law, 549), before the supplement of March, 1895, changed its operation and gave an inchoate lien to the workmen and materialmen before notice served (Slingerland v. Binns, 56 N. J. Eq. 415, 39 Atl. 712). In the act of 1892, now under consideration, there is no prohibition against anticipated payments, no inchoate lien on the fund, and no provision making the owner who prepays liable to a subsequent lien claimant

The words fixing the lien upon any funds which may "be due or to grow due under the contract" clearly refer to the portion of the contract price which remains unpaid when the lien claim is filed. The city passed its resolution allowing the contractor this $3,000 on his contract on May 12, 1902, and notified the comptroller on May 13, 1902, and the $3,000 was actually paid on May 15, 1902. This was a year before any lien claim notice was filed. The city cannot be held to respond to the lien claimants for the advance payment of $3,000 made May 15, 1902. The result is that the only lien claims which are shown to have complied with the requirementsof the statute of 1892 are those of Michael J. Horan, which became a lien on May 15, 1903, Lucy E. Freeman, which became a lien on June 27, 1903, and Atlantic City Lumber Company, which became a lien on July 2, 1903. These lien claims became a charge at the above dates on the portion of the contract price due or to grow due from the city at or after the filing of the lien claim notices, less, of course, the amount necessarily expended by the city in completing the contract The account of Atlantic City's liability stands as follows:

Whole contract price .......................

$25,587 00

Paid out before May 15th, the date of filing of first lien..........................

18,000 00

Expended for completing contract

129 60

18,129 60

Amount of contract price liable to liens

$7,457 40

On this sum the above liens are successive charges in the order of their filing: First, Michael J. Horan, for $1,074.35; second, Lucy E. Freeman, for $1,075; and third, Atlantic City Lumber Company, for $4,635.54.

A decree will be advised in accordance with the views above expressed.


Summaries of

Somers Brick Co. v. Souder

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Sep 13, 1905
70 N.J. Eq. 388 (Ch. Div. 1905)
Case details for

Somers Brick Co. v. Souder

Case Details

Full title:SOMERS BRICK CO. et al. v. SOUDER et al.

Court:COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY

Date published: Sep 13, 1905

Citations

70 N.J. Eq. 388 (Ch. Div. 1905)
70 N.J. Eq. 388

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