Arrow Iron Works, Inc. v. Greene

183 N.E. 515, 260 N.Y. 330, 1932 N.Y. LEXIS 697
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 29, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 183 N.E. 515 (Arrow Iron Works, Inc. v. Greene) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arrow Iron Works, Inc. v. Greene, 183 N.E. 515, 260 N.Y. 330, 1932 N.Y. LEXIS 697 (N.Y. 1932).

Opinion

Kellogg, J.

The defendant Harry B.. Greene, on the 12th of April, 1928, entered into a contract with the State of New York, for the erection of certain buildings, at the agreed price of $118,700. On the 14th of May, 1929, Greene, having performed work and supplied material of the agreed value of $107,795.94, abandoned the contract. Greene had then been paid $91,541.55, or approximately eighty-five per cent of the value of the work and materials furnished. This left unpaid, approximately, fifteen per cent of the amount already earned, or $16,254.39, which the State withheld as retained percentages ” to secure the completion of the contract. Greene had also furnished labor and materials, in excess of the contract requirements, of the agreed value of $1,837.04. The contractor, Greene, as principal, and the National Surety Company, as surety, had previously delivered their bond to the State for the faithful performance of the contract. On the default of the contractor the National Surety Company, took over the work and *336 completed the same. At completion, there became payable by the State, for work done prior to abandonment, the sum of $18,091.43, consisting of the item of retained percentages,’ ’ $16,254.39, and the item of extras, $1,837.04. These items, since they were earned by the contractor before abandonment, may be termed “ earned moneys.” There also became due the sum $10,904.06, being the difference between the amount earned by the contractor, prior to abandonment, and the contract price of $118,700. This item may be termed “ unearned moneys,” since it became due, not through the efforts of the contractor, but through those of the surety company, which completed the work. There is thus held for distribution among creditors the sum of $28,995.49.

On the 27th day of April, 1929, the plaintiff filed in the proper offices a notice of lien against the moneys due or to grow due upon the contract, for work and materials furnished. The amount claimed to be due was the sum of $2,285. On May 15, 1929, the contractor applied to the Supreme Court, and procured an order discharging the hen, conditioned upon his depositing with the Comptroller of the State the sum of $2,500. The sum named was deposited and no appeal from the order was taken. The proceeding was had in compliance with section 21 of the Lien Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 33), which provides that a hen against moneys due from a contract made by the State for a pubhc improvement may be discharged by the deposit of money with the State Comptroller. The deposit must be “ such a sum of money as is directed by a justice of the Supreme Court, which shall not be less than the amount claimed by the lienor, with interest thereon for the term of one year from the time of making such deposit, and such additional amount as the justice deems sufficient to cover ah costs and expenses.” The amount so deposited shall remain with the Comptroller “ until the hen is discharged ” as provided in subdivision 3 of the section, or certain other subdivisions named. *337 The subdivision so numbered provides for a discharge by satisfaction of a judgment rendered in an action to enforce the Hen.” Therefore, in order to make the deposit available in satisfaction of its Hen, it was necessary for the plaintiff to institute an action to foreclose the Hen, and for this purpose the present action was instituted. After a trial herein before the Special Term, the court found that the amount then due the plaintiff was $2,195, with interest amounting to $241.45, aggregating $2,436.45, and directed that this amount be paid by the State from the $2,500 deposit. It further adjudged that the plaintiff recover as costs and disbursements the sum of $475.73, together with an extra allowance of $200, or in aU $675.73. The judgment entered provides that after exhausting the balance of the deposit, these costs be satisfied and paid from the “ earned ” and unearned ” moneys due upon the contract. We think that this was error.

Subdivision 4 of section 21 of the Lien Law provides for the discharge of a Hen by the deposit of a sufficient sum of money. In such case the sum deposited is a substitute for the fund to which the Hen attached until the deposit was made. A vaHd Hen on the primary fund must, therefore, be estabhshed to justify payment out of the deposit.” (Milliken Bros., Inc., v. City of New York, 201 N. Y. 65, 74.) In order to effectuate a discharge, the amount ordered deposited must be fixed at a sum, “ which shall not be less than the amount claimed by the Henor,” with interest for one year, and such additional amount as the justice deems sufficient to cover all costs and expenses.” (Lien Law, § 21.) These costs and expenses ” are clearly those of an action to foreclose the Hen, a proceeding through which alone the deposit may become available to the Henor. The purpose of the provision is to free the moneys remaining payable from the claim of the Henor, so that thereafter the State may safely make payments to the contractor or other lienors, as it may *338 be advised. This result would not be achieved if, after the making of the deposit, the lienor might recover from the general fund the costs and disbursements of a foreclosure action which the deposit was not sufficient to satisfy. The reason that the present plaintiff must suffer rests in the fact that the order of discharge provided for an insufficient deposit, and from that order the plaintiff took no appeal. We think that the plaintiff may have no other relief than the payment to it of the sum deposited; that neither the “ earned ” nor “ unearned ” items, due upon the contract, are subject to any claim by the plaintiff.

The National Surety Company, after the abandonment of performance by the contractor, completed the work at a cost to it of $10,617.85. The item of “ unearned moneys,” which became due under the contract through its completion by the surety company, was $10,904.06. Even though interest upon the claim of the surety company may bring that claim to a figure in excess of the item of “ unearned moneys,” the company makes no claim to any portion of the item of “ earned moneys,” including “ retained percentages,” remaining unpaid at the time of the abandonment. Its claim, as stated in its brief, is merely this: “ The unearned moneys ’ in the contract should have been applied first to the payment to the surety of its cost of completion with interest.” It has been held, indeed, that a surety, which completes a contract, is entitled to be reimbursed for the expense thereof, not only from the “ unearned moneys ” of the contract, but from the retained percentages ” as well. (Lacy v. Maryland Casualty Co., 32 Fed. Rep. [2d] 48, 51; Prairie State Bank v. United States, 164 U. S. 227.) In the first of these cases it was said: “ The question arises whether this superior equity of the surety extends to the current estimates payable under the contract or merely to the retained percentage. We think that it extends to both.” Again, it is said: “Upon his performance of *339

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Bluebook (online)
183 N.E. 515, 260 N.Y. 330, 1932 N.Y. LEXIS 697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arrow-iron-works-inc-v-greene-ny-1932.