Buchanan & Smock Lumber Co. v. Einstein

93 A. 716, 87 N.J.L. 307, 1915 N.J. LEXIS 213
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 9, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 93 A. 716 (Buchanan & Smock Lumber Co. v. Einstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buchanan & Smock Lumber Co. v. Einstein, 93 A. 716, 87 N.J.L. 307, 1915 N.J. LEXIS 213 (N.J. 1915).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

White, J.

By virtue of the Mechanics’ Lien laws of this state a materialman, who, upon proper order, furnishes material to and for the construction of a building which is being erected by, or under a contract with, the owner, is entitled, upon complying with the provisions of these laws, to look to such building for payment. In order that there may be no resultant unfairness-to the owner, a method is also provided which, if pursued, enables the owner to require that the fund in his hands due and becoming due the contractor under the contract, be substituted for the building in answering such claims. These laws, being the law of the land, and constituting, as was said by Chief Justice Depue, in Johnson v. Algor, 65 N. J. L. 363, 366, a policy “to make every building and lot on which it is erected liable to a lien for work done upon it, and for materials furnished for the erection and construction of the building,” are in effect written into and become a part of all contracts for building to which they may apply, with the same effect as if actually incorporated in express terms.

[309]*309It is claim fid here that the plaintiff, a materialman, has forfeited his right to be paid for materials furnished to defendant’s building under these laws, because it is alleged he lias been guilty of an attempted fraud in “willfully or fraudulently” presenting a claim for more than was due him. I take it that the only justification for such a forfeiture must be found in the provisions of the statute itself, and that apart from these provisions, the effect of claiming more than due, whether done willfully or otherwise, would, as in claims for other debts, be limited to defeating the excess claimed, and would not work a forfeiture of the honest debt.

The Mechanics’ Lien act, however, having in view the difficulties of the owner in adequately auditing accounts as to which he presumably has no personal knowledge, has seen fit to provide for just such a forfeiture where a claimant shall in his claim “willfully or fraudulently” misstate matters required by the act to he stated therein. I take it that this provision, like others involving a forfeiture, should be strictly construed, and that the element of intended fraud, which alone forms the justifiable basis for the forfeiture provision, must clearly appear before the punishment can properly be inflicted.

In the present case the circumstance relied upon to deprive the materialman of his right to payment of the amount actually due him, is his failure, in the bill of particulars forming part of Ms claim as filed, to give credit for an alleged payment of $250 received by Mm from the contractor.

The facts were as follows: The contractor gave a note to the materialman, the plaintiff, for $1,000, which the latter credited, $500 on the account against defendant’s building, and $500 on the account against another building (Stahle’s) for which the same contractor had also purchased material from the plaintiff. Subsequently, the contractor paid $500 on account of this $1,000 note, and the plaintiff applied all of this payment to the portion of the note which he had credited on the Stahle contract, and none of it to the portion which he had credited to defendant’s building. The remaining $500 of the note was never paid, and when, after the [310]*310contractor’s failure, plaintiff filed his lien against the Stahle building, he credited the entire $500 payment on his claim against that building. The learned trial judge held that defendant was entitled to have this $500 payment applied one-half 'to each building, instead of being credited entirely on one, and he, therefore, reduced the plaintiff’s claim by this item of $250 in giving judgment in his favor, but he in effect found as a fact (the case was tried without a jury) that, the plaintiff had not “willfully or fraudulently” misstated the proper amount of credit within the meaning of the act. This finding we think was amply justified by the evidence. There is no intimation that in crediting the entire $500 payment to the portion of the $1,000 note which had been credited to the Stahle building, the plaintiff was actuated by any ulterior motive. Nothing appears to indicate that he did not think he was entirely within liis rights in so doing, as, of course, ' ordinarily and in the absence of subsequent complications caused by the contractor’s failure, he was. When he filed his mechanics’ lien against the Stahle building, he credited the entire $500 payment on that account and as a result must doubtless lose the $250 now deducted from his claim in this case. The defendant’s right to have this $250 credit is, at most, in the nature of an equitable one, and it would be a strange equity which would enable her, under the circumstances, not only to cause the plaintiff a loss of his $250 because of his honest mistake, but also to forfeit his entire legal and honest claim against which she has no equity whatsoever.

A similar claim is made with reference to. freight payments amounting to $30, made by the contractor or the owner, whereas the contract required the delivery of the material to the building by the plaintiff. The custom, however, appears to have been the usual one, for the contractor to pay the freight bills upon the cars of material as received, and then to set up such payments as claims for allowance against the materialman’s bills when rendered; and it did not appear that the plaintiff had received anjr notice or claim that these freight claims were outstanding when he filed his lien. He conceded the claims a.t once when they were called to his [311]*311attention at the trial, and the trial judge was, in our opinion, quite right in holding, as he did, that there was no “willful or fraudulent” misstatement with regard to these.

It is urged that the decisions in stop notice cases conflict with this view. This is not so, because those decisions do not refer to the “willful or fraudulent” misstatement provision of the act, but, as was pointed out in Kirkland v. Moore, 40 N. J. Eq. 106, depend upon, the statutory prerequisite to the filing of a stop notice, that the contractor must have "wrongfully refused to honor the materialman’s demand of payment, which refusal would not ho wrongful if the demand were excessive.

The defendant’s principal contention, however, is that the plaintiff has lost his lien by failure to prosecute it diligently within the, year, as required by the statute. As was said in Ennis v. Eden Mills Paper Co., 65 N. J. L. 577, “Diligence and negligence are relative terms, and depend upon varying circumstances,” and in that ease, although the claimant, after filing his claim, issuing and serving his summons (having the time of its issuance duly endorsed on the lien claim), and filing his declaration, all within the four months, had done nothing further in the prosecution of the claim for more than a year after the summons was issued, he wTas nevertheless field to have prosecuted diligently, because a receiver having been’ appointed for the owner on the day Ute summons issued, the entry of judgment in claimant’s suit, while it might have been done, w'ould not properly have seemed necessary to an ordinarily prudent man, as the Court of Chancery, through its officer, the receiver, was in charge of the assets and might he expected to marshal them according to the priority of the edaims against them.

We think that in the present case there was.

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Related

Buchanon & Smock Lumber Co. v. Dougherty
96 A. 663 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 A. 716, 87 N.J.L. 307, 1915 N.J. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buchanan-smock-lumber-co-v-einstein-nj-1915.