Builders Kitchen & Supply Co. v. Pautvein

601 N.W.2d 72, 1999 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 248, 1999 WL 815415
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 13, 1999
Docket97-1780
StatusPublished

This text of 601 N.W.2d 72 (Builders Kitchen & Supply Co. v. Pautvein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Builders Kitchen & Supply Co. v. Pautvein, 601 N.W.2d 72, 1999 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 248, 1999 WL 815415 (iowa 1999).

Opinion

LAVORATO, Justice.

Iowa Code section 572.3 (1997) denies a mechanic’s lien to anyone “who, at the time of making a contract for furnishing material or performing labor, or during the progress of the work, take[s] any collateral security on such contract.” The issue is whether taking personal guarantees from parties who are not obligated on the contract is taking collateral security within the meaning of the statute. The district court thought so and denied a supplier’s suit to enforce its mechanic’s lien against the defendants’ town home. We agree and affirm.

*73 I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Builders Kitchen & Supply Co. is a Des Moines based business that sells kitchen materials and supplies to contractors and homeowners in Iowa. Carwil, Inc., a corporation, is in the business of constructing homes. Carwil’s sole shareholders are James Carlson and Sidney Wilson.

Carwil planned to build town homes in a Dallas County housing development and planned to use Builders as its kitchen subcontractor. Carlson had previously operated a housing construction company called JLC Construction that often failed to make timely payments to Builders for materials. Builders was willing to contract with Carwil, but had reservations about doing so because of JLC’s prior credit delinquencies. To allay its concern, Builders required Carlson and Wilson in August 1995 to guarantee payment should Carwil default on its payments to Builders. As a further condition of extending credit to Carwil, Builders insisted that it be allowed to send Carwil customers an Iowa Code section 572.14(3) prelien notice.

In September 1995 Richard W. Pautvein and Janice Jean Pautvein contracted with Carwil to build their town home in the housing development. Under the contract, the Pautveins were to make payments to Carwil upon Carwil’s request at various stages of construction. The payments were contingent upon Carwil submitting signed mechanic’s lien waivers for all materials furnished and labor performed. The Pautveins had been making progress payments all along to Carwil without obtaining the mechanic’s lien waivers.

Builders served as the kitchen subcontractor regarding the town home Carwil was building for the Pautveins. The Paut-veins’ only contact at Builders was Douglas Mayo, who served as Builders’ sales manager.

Builders sent a prelien notice to the Pautveins on February 1, 1996. The letter informed the Pautveins that they should not pay Carwil until Carwil provided the Pautveins with a waiver of Builders’ mechanic’s lien.

A few weeks later, the Pautveins received a fourth request from Carwil for a progress payment of about $79,000. Before making the payment, the Pautveins contacted Mayo and asked whether Carwil was in financial trouble or slow on payments. Mayo said “no, nothing’s the matter.” (In fact, during the period that Car-wil was building the town homes, Carwil’s payments were almost always late, and the payments became more noticeably delinquent by November 1995.)

In that conversation, Mayo told the Pautveins that the prelien letter was a standard letter that it sent to all of its customers. This was not true because, of all the contractors with whom Builders did business, the only contractor whose customers received such letters was Carwil. The Pautveins told Mayo that they were about to make a big payment to Carwil that day and asked whether they should make the check payable to Builders for the materials that Builders had supplied. Mayo answered by telling them to make the payment to Carwil like they had done in the past.

Following their conversation with Mayo, the Pautveins made the $79,000 payment to Carwil. They paid Carwil an additional sum of approximately $27,000 on April 1. Following their usual practice, the Paut-veins did not ask Carwil for a lien waiver.

From November 1995 on, Carwil continued to experience financial difficulties. Finally, in May 1996, Carwil went out of business.

On May 17, 1996, Builders filed a mechanic’s lien against the Pautveins’ town home in the amount of $38,660.04, the amount Carwil failed to pay Builders. Before the filing, Carlson offered Builders a lot that Carwil owned free and clear as partial or total satisfaction of the Pautvein account. The property was worth between $30,000 and $50,000. Builders declined the *74 offer, telling Carlson that it was not in the real estate business. Carwil eventually sold the property in November for $35,000.

Later, Builders sued to foreclose the mechanic’s lien. The district court found that Builders had accepted collateral security within the meaning of Iowa Code section 572.3 in the form of personal guarantees from Carlson and Wilson. The court concluded that Builders’ acceptance of the guarantees defeated Builders’ mechanic’s lien. The court rejected the Pautveins’ defenses of equitable estoppel and failure to mitigate damages.

Builders appeals from the district court’s ruling on the collateral security issue, and the Pautveins cross-appeal from the court’s ruling on their defenses of equitable estoppel and failure to mitigate damages. Because we hold in favor of the Pautveins on the collateral-security issue, we do not address their cross-appeal.

II. Scope of Review.

Proceedings to enforce mechanic’s liens are in equity. Our review is, therefore, de novo. See Clemens Graf Droste Zu Vischering v. Kading, 368 N.W.2d 702, 705 (Iowa 1985). We examine the entire record and determine the parties’ rights anew from the evidence presented. See id.

III. The Collateral Security Issue.

Iowa Code section 572.3 provides:

No person shall be entitled to a mechanic’s lien who, at the time of making a contract for furnishing material or performing labor, or during the progress of the work, shall take any collateral security on such contract.

The pivotal issue is whether the personal guarantees that Builder's took from Carlson and Wilson are collateral security within the meaning of this provision. The Pautveins contend, and the district court found, that the guarantees did indeed constitute collateral security within the meaning of section 572.3. For reasons that follow, we agree.

A predecessor statute similarly provided:

No person shall be entitled to a mechanic’s lien, who, at the time of making or executing a contract for furnishing material or performing labor, or during the progress of the work, erection, building or other improvement, shall take any collateral security on such contract....

Iowa Code § 3088 (1897).

This court defined “collateral” within the meaning of this statute to mean

additional security to the principal obligation and subsidiary thereto. The etymology of the word indicates that it is something that runs along with and parallel to something else of a similar character.

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Related

Central Ready Mix Co. v. John G. Ruhlin Construction Co.
139 N.W.2d 444 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1966)
Clemens Graf Droste Zu Vischering v. Kading
368 N.W.2d 702 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1985)
Charles Betcher Co. v. Cleveland
83 N.W. 366 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1900)
Perfection Tire & Rubber Co. v. Kellogg-Mackay Equipment Co.
194 Iowa 523 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
601 N.W.2d 72, 1999 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 248, 1999 WL 815415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/builders-kitchen-supply-co-v-pautvein-iowa-1999.