Babe's Plumbing, Inc. v. Maier
This text of 194 So. 2d 666 (Babe's Plumbing, Inc. v. Maier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
BABE'S PLUMBING, INC., a Florida Corporation, Appellant,
v.
Emil P. MAIER and Hildegarde M. Maier, Husband and Wife, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.
*667 Boone, Hazen & Isphording, Venice, for appellant.
Richard V. Harrison, Sarasota, for appellees.
DRIVER, B.J., Associate Judge.
This appeal involves a construction of Section 84.061(2)[1] Florida Statutes (1963), F.S.A., the Mechanic's Lien Law. Appellant, Babe's Plumbing, Inc., was Plaintiff below; appellees, Emil P. Maier and Hildegarde Maier, were Defendants.
Defendants Maier were the owners of real property in Sarasota County upon which they contracted with a general contractor to construct a residence. Plaintiff was a subcontractor on contract with the general contractor to furnish plumbing supplies and services to the improvement of Defendants' aforementioned property. The general or prime contractor abandoned the contract and Defendants undertook to complete the job of construction.
Plaintiff, averring an unpaid balance of $623.33, sued the Defendants to foreclose a mechanic's lien claimed under Chapter 84, Florida Statutes (1963), F.S.A. The prime contractor was not joined in the suit.
The Defendants responded to Plaintiff's complaint by moving to dismiss for insufficiency of allegations to state a cause of action; by moving to require Plaintiff to attach to its complaint a copy of the contract sued upon, and copy of notice to owner. Defendants further served upon Plaintiff interrogatories and request for admissions.
Plaintiff in sworn answer to the interrogatories and request for admissions, admitted that it had not furnished upon request the sworn statement required by Section 84.061(2), describing the nature of the labor, services and materials furnished to Defendants' property. The Defendants thereupon moved the Court for summary decree in their favor.
The Chancellor ruled that by its failure to furnish the sworn statement to owner in accord with Section 84.061(2), Florida Statutes (1963), F.S.A., Plaintiff lost its right to lien under Chapter 84 Florida Statutes (1963), F.S.A. and there being no material issue of fact on this critical point, granted the summary decree for Defendants. It is this ruling that Plaintiff complains of in this appeal.
Plaintiff with commendable candor concedes in its Brief that there was no material *668 issue of fact as to furnishing the sworn statement and if its failure to furnish the same is fatal then the Chancellor was correct and Plaintiff cannot prevail in its appeal to this Court.
It is Plaintiff's contention, however, that there was present, by inference at least, a showing in the pleadings before the Chancellor that Defendants themselves were in violation of the Mechanic's Lien Law and that Defendants' own non-compliance estops, or prohibits their setting up as a defense to Plaintiff's claim the latter's failure to comply strictly with the statute.
The non-compliance with which Plaintiff charges Defendants is an alleged improper payment purportedly made pursuant to Section 84.061(3)[2], but before recording of the notice of commencement provided for in Section 84.131.
This presents the issue to be decided: Is a subcontractor's failure to comply with the explicit provisions of the Mechanic's Lien Law, Chapter 84, Florida Statutes (1963), F.S.A., excused, and his lien, otherwise lost, preserved, where the owner is likewise guilty of non-compliance with the statute?
Chapter 84.161(2) clearly and unequivocably declares that:
"failure or refusal to furnish such statement within ten days after such demand * * * shall deprive the person so failing or refusing to furnish such statement of his lien".
It has been reiterated constantly by the Appellate Courts of this state that inasmuch as the Mechanic's Lien Law is in derogation of the common law, it is to be strictly construed in every particular.
"The acquisition of a mechanic's lien is purely statutory. The courts have uniformly held that to acquire such a lien, the mechanic's lien law must be strictly complied with". Trushin v. Brown, Fla. App. (3rd Dist.) 132 So.2d 357.
The Supreme Court of Florida in admonishing the trial courts not to extend the Mechanic's Lien Law beyond the legislative boundaries fixed by the wording of the statute stated:
We have repeatedly held that mechanic's liens are pure creatures of statute and that for a subcontractor or a material man to acquire one, the statute must be strictly complied with. Sheffield-Briggs Steel Products v. Ace Concrete Service Co., 63 So.2d 924.
Plaintiff would avoid the lethal effect upon its position of the above cited authorities by seeking refuge in the holding of the District Court of Appeal (1st Dist.) set out in John T. Wood Homes, Inc. v. Air Control Products, Inc., 177 So.2d 709. In this case the Court was confronted with a situation where the homeowner had failed to record the notice of default required by Section 84.061 and thereafter sought to reduce the contract price of construction by the amount the owner was required to spend to complete construction. The District Court, in affirming the Chancellor's ruling that the owner would be denied the affirmative relief available under the statute for failure to strictly comply therewith stated:
"We conclude that the chancellor was correct in holding that plaintiff-owner's failure to comply with the explicit provision of the statute, viz: `Such default shall not be effective as to lienors except the contractor until the owner has recorded notice of default in the clerk's office and posted a certified copy thereof' is mandatory and must be complied with before the benefits of the subject statute are available to plaintiff. Therefore, we affirm the summary final decree".
*669 It is crucial to note here a distinction between the position of the owner in the last cited case and the position of the owner in the case under review. In the former, the owner was seeking affirmative relief, whereas Defendants herein assume a strictly defensive posture. Viewed in this perspective, John T. Wood Homes, Inc. v. Air Control Products, Inc., supra, affords no relief to Plaintiff; indeed it confirms that strict compliance with the statute is an indispensable prerequisite to either an owner, contractor or subcontractor seeking affirmative relief under Chapter 84 Florida Statutes (1963), F.S.A. It may be said to deliver the coupe de grace to Plaintiff's cause and lends substance to the hoary bromide "two wrongs do not make a right".
We summarize by pointing out that one moving for affirmative relief under Chapter 84, supra, must rely on the correctness of his own position, rather than the weakness or flaws in that of his adversary.
We have considered the appeal on its merits, but in so doing have not overlooked Defendants-Appellees' ably-briefed motion to strike Appellant's Brief and Appendix for failure to comply with Florida Appellate Rules 3.7, subd. f(5)[3] and 3.3[4], 31 F.S.A.
Appellant's brief and appendix is afflicted with all of the infirmities charged in Appellees' motion in that it contains only one instrument, and that is the decree appealed. This decree comes to this Court as being presumptively correct, and the burden of showing it otherwise is on the Appellant.
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