American Seating Co. v. Philadelphia

256 A.2d 599, 434 Pa. 370, 1969 Pa. LEXIS 462
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 9, 1969
DocketAppeal, No. 412
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 256 A.2d 599 (American Seating Co. v. Philadelphia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Seating Co. v. Philadelphia, 256 A.2d 599, 434 Pa. 370, 1969 Pa. LEXIS 462 (Pa. 1969).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Eagen,

The American Seating Company (hereinafter American) filed a mechanics’ lien claim against the landlord interest of the City of Philadelphia in the Spectrum Sports Arena located in Philadelphia. The Common Pleas Court of Philadelphia sustained the City’s preliminary objections to the lien claim and entered an order dismissing the lien. From that order, this appeal was taken.

On May 26, 1966, one Jerry Wolman (hereinafter Wolman) and the City of Philadelphia (hereinafter City) entered into a Construction and Lease Agreement which provided that Wolman as the tenant was to construct an arena for ice hockey and other events, Wolman paying the entire cost of construction. The agreement provided that Wolman would remain in possession as tenant for a term of 50 years with an option to renew the lease for an additional term of 50 years. Title to the land on which the arena was to be built and the building itself was to remain with the City.

Wolman entered into an agreement with American under which American undertook to install substantially all of the seating in the arena. After American performed its obligations under the agreement, Wolman and Spectrum Arena, Inc.1 (hereinafter Spectrum) defaulted under their agreement by failing to pay American $170,756.17, the balance owed to American under the contract. American then filed the mechanics’ lien claim in that amount against the lease[373]*373hold interest of Spectrum and/or Wolman and the landlord interest of the City. The validity of the latter claim is the subject of this appeal.

American argues that its lien claim is valid because the materials and labor it supplied were not provided for a “purely public purpose.” This argument responds to §303(b) of the Act of August 24, 1963, P. L. 1175, 49 P.S. §1303(b), which provides as follows : “(b) Public Purpose. No lien shall be allowed for labor or materials furnished for a purely public purpose.”

According to American, Wolman’s (and Spectrum’s) right under the agreement with the City to control and exclusively to manage the Spectrum; their right to be selective in scheduling events, to the extent that the public has no choice in the matter; and their involvement in the Spectrum for profit, — all indicate a vital and vibrant private interest in the Spectrum, and preclude any work in the Spectrum’s construction from being purely public in purpose.

In support of their claim, American relies upon Henry Taylor Lumber Company v. Carnegie Institute, 225 Pa. 486, 74 A. 357 (1909). In that case, the City of Pittsburgh owned land which it set apart for the erection of a technological school. The school was to be constructed by a private board of trustees, which was to hold title to the building, but not to the land upon which it was built. Title to the land was to remain with the City of Pittsburgh pursuant to the authorizing statute. The Board entered into an agreement with a contractor for the construction of the building. Upon the contractor’s default in its obligations to a subcontractor, the subcontractor filed a lien claim against the board of trustees and the City of Pittsburgh. The lower court rejected the Board’s argument that the subcontractor’s work was done for [374]*374a purely public purpose” and was therefore exempt from a mechanics’ lien claim under the second section of the Act of June 4, 1901, P. L. 431. We accepted the lower court’s judgment on that matter, and said in dictum at page 489: “While the Margaret Morrison Carnegie Technical School is, to some extent, a public institution, in that students are educated upon payment of a nominal tuition fee, yet, in our opinion, its purposes cannot be said to be ‘purely public’. The funds for its erection and maintenance were contributed by a private citizen, neither the Commonwealth, the City, nor any public agency thereunder furnishing any of the funds necessary therefor, and instead of the school being managed or directed by the public through public officials, it is under the charge of a board of trustees, specially created, with exclusive authority to prescribe the qualifications for admission of pupils, the course and terms of study, and make and enforce such rules and regulations for the management of the school as they may deem proper. Under these circumstances, it seems to us, the public enjoys the benefits of the school, not by right, as it should if the purpose was public, but by permission only.”

Thus it appears that §303(b) of the Act of 1963 (supra) does not preclude a viable mechanics’ lien here. But even though the Act permits the lien, still we must inquire and decide whether, apart from the Act, the case law of Pennsylvania precludes mechanics’ lien claims against municipalities. For as the lower court indicated, “the Act contains no provision allowing or disallowing mechanics’ liens against land or buildings owned by municipalities, counties or cities.” The lower court dismissed American’s lien because it found that it was the law of Pennsylvania that there can be no liens against municipal property. For that proposition, the lower court relied principally upon [375]*375Sundheim v. Phila. School District, 311 Pa. 90, 166 A. 365 (1933), where, in dictum, that rule was enunciated.

Although our research has disclosed no case explicitly holding that in every instance liens against municipal properties are void, still the statement seems correct as a general proposition of Pennsylvania law. However, it seems to us that a meaningful ground for distinction rests in the use to which the municipality puts the property. Where, as here, the municipality acts as an absent landlord, entrusting the management and control of its premises to its tenant; and where the building was constructed and paid for by the tenant; and further, where the municipality in owning the building, discharges a function not governmental in nature, but rather proprietary and quasi-private;— then an exception to the general rule that municipal property is exempt from mechanics’ liens seems proper. Since an execution upon the lien would not disrupt an essential public service or function, no reason appears for striking the lien down.2

The hardship which our modification of the general rule works upon municipalities is illusory. In all cases, the municipality can immunize itself from mechanics’ lien liability by simply providing in its contract with the other party that all mechanics’ liens are waived. That such a provision would bind all subsequent parties who contributed material and labor to the premises is indicated by the Mechanics’ Lien Law of 1963, supra, Article IV, §402, 49 P.S. §1402, which provides: “A written contract between the owner and contractor or a separate written instrument signed by the contractor, which provides that no claim shall be [376]*376filed by anyone, shall be binding; bnt the only admissible evidence thereof, as against a subcontractor, shall be proof of actual notice thereof to him before any labor or materials were furnished by him; or proof that such contract or separate written instrument was filed in the office of the prothonotary prior to the commencement of the work upon the ground or within ten (10) days after the execution of the principal contract or not less than ten (10) days prior to the contract with the claimant subcontractor, indexed in the name of the contractor as defendant and the owner as plaintiff, and also in the name of the contractor as plaintiff and the owner as defendant.”3

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
256 A.2d 599, 434 Pa. 370, 1969 Pa. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-seating-co-v-philadelphia-pa-1969.