C.R. Meyer & Sons Co. v. Custom Mechanical CSRA, LLC

773 S.E.2d 361, 412 S.C. 575, 2015 S.C. App. LEXIS 109
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJune 10, 2015
DocketAppellate Case No. 2013-001839; No. 5319
StatusPublished

This text of 773 S.E.2d 361 (C.R. Meyer & Sons Co. v. Custom Mechanical CSRA, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C.R. Meyer & Sons Co. v. Custom Mechanical CSRA, LLC, 773 S.E.2d 361, 412 S.C. 575, 2015 S.C. App. LEXIS 109 (S.C. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

FEW, C.J.

This appeal involves section 29-7-10 of the South Carolina Code (2007), and whether the section created a first lien on money paid to a contractor when (1) the laborers claiming the lien did not work for the contractor, but for its subcontractor, and (2) the funds to which the lien would attach were held in escrow by court order instead of paid directly to the contractor. A special referee granted summary judgment based on a finding that the section did not create a lien under these circumstances. We reverse and remand for trial.

[579]*579I. Facts and Procedural History

C.R. Meyer and Sons Company served as the general contractor for the construction of a toilet paper-making machine at the Kimberly Clark facility in Beech Island, South Carolina. C.R. Meyer subcontracted with Custom Mechanical, CSRA, LLC to install industrial piping. Custom Mechanical borrowed money from Presidential Financial Corporation and Security Federal Bank (“the lenders”) to fund its work, and the lenders perfected security interests in Custom Mechanical’s accounts receivable.

Custom Mechanical obtained labor for its work through its wholly-owned subsidiary, Custom Industrial Services, LLC. Custom Industrial and a labor union established a plan through which employees could elect to have a percentage of their wages withheld by Custom Industrial, which would be set aside in the union’s vacation fund and paid to the employees twice a year.

C.R. Meyer suspended Custom Mechanical’s work at the Kimberly Clark facility after a dispute arose, and Custom Industrial stopped making payments to the vacation fund. C.R. Meyer and Custom Mechanical arbitrated Custom Mechanical’s claim that C.R. Meyer breached contracts between them, and an arbitration panel awarded Custom Mechanical $1,976,548.

C.R. Meyer filed an action against Custom Mechanical in circuit court challenging the arbitration award. Custom Mechanical filed a third-party complaint against its creditors, including the lenders and twenty-nine employees who participated in the vacation fund (“the employees”). After the circuit court confirmed the arbitration award, C.R. Meyer and Custom Mechanical reached a settlement. The settlement provided the circuit court would order C.R. Meyer to pay $1.8 million from the arbitration award into Custom Mechanical’s attorneys’ trust account pending the court’s determination of the creditors’ priorities.

The lenders and the employees answered Custom Mechanical’s third-party complaint and asserted security interests in the arbitration award proceeds. The lenders sought a declaratory judgment that their security interests had “priority over all other alleged liens held by” Custom Mechanical’s creditors. [580]*580The employees asserted a “first lien” priority to the funds under section 29-7-10.

The case was referred to a special referee, who ordered all but $325,000 be disbursed to the lenders from the escrow account. The lenders and the employees filed cross-motions for summary judgment, each claiming priority to the remaining $825,000. The special referee granted the lenders’ motion for summary judgment, finding the employees were not entitled to a first lien under section 29-7-10.

II. Summary Judgment

The employees argue the special referee erred in granting summary judgment to the lenders. We agree. See Rule 56(c), SCRCP (stating the trial court shall grant summary judgment if “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and ... the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law”); Alltel Commc’ns, Inc. v. S.C. Dep’t of Revenue, 399 S.C. 313, 316, 731 S.E.2d 869, 870 (2012) (“The question of statutory interpretation is one of law for the court to decide.”).

A. “Laborers” Under Section 29-7-10

Section 29-7-10 provides (1) “Any contractor ... shall pay all laborers ... for their lawful services ... out of the money received for the erection ... of buildings upon which such laborers ... are employed or interested,” and (2) “such laborers ... shall have a first lien on the money received by such contractor.” § 29-7-10. The special referee correctly determined the employees were “laborers” under the section. However, the special referee found the employees were not entitled to a first lien because they “were employed by Custom Industrial and not by Custom Mechanical.” We disagree that the specific identity of the employer makes any difference.

The statute requires that a contractor “shall pay all laborers ... for their lawful services” when the laborer is “employed or interested” in the project. Id. These employees were “employed” and “interested” in the work at the Kimberly Clark facility as “laborers” providing “lawful services.” When such a laborer has a claim for the contractor’s failure to pay, the lien attaches, pending resolution of the claim. Id. We find [581]*581section 29-7-10 does not require “laborers” to be directly employed by the contractor who receives the money in order for them to be entitled to a first lien. We interpret section 29-7-10 as establishing a first lien in favor of “laborers” who worked on “the erection ... of buildings” regardless of their specific employer.

B. “Money Received by” Custom Mechanical

The special referee also determined the employees were not entitled to a first lien because “[n]o money has come into the hands of Custom Mechanical.” In reaching this determination, the special referee interpreted section 29-7-10 to require the contractor to actually receive the funds before a lien could attach under the section.

We find the employees are not prohibited from establishing a first lien on Custom Mechanical’s arbitration award merely because the $325,000 balance remains in Custom Mechanical’s attorneys’ trust account pursuant to a court order. The circuit court ordered “C.R. Meyer will pay the sum of [$1.8 million] to Custom [Mechanical]” and the funds must be held in the lawyers’ trust account. The court also gave Custom Mechanical the right “to assert any priority to the funds.” The court’s order demonstrates Custom Mechanical retained ownership of the funds even though the funds were held “pending resolution of any claims asserted by [Custom Mechanical’s creditors]” because they could only “be disbursed pursuant to further Order of the Court.” Thus, the funds in the escrow account were owned by Custom Mechanical and were held for its benefit — to pay its creditors — upon court order.

The special referee relied on Morgan & Austin v. D.W. Alderman & Sons’ Co., 70 S.C. 462, 50 S.E. 26 (1905), in which our supreme court first interpreted the predecessor to section 29-7-10.1 We find the special referee’s reliance on Morgan & [582]*582Austin to be misplaced. In that case, Morgan & Austin supplied materials for a builder, and when the builder did not pay, Morgan & Austin filed suit to enforce a lien under the section. 70 S.C. at 462-64, 50 S.E. at 26. This lien was enforced against funds attached by the sheriff from a debt owed to an individual partner of the builder’s company. 70 S.C. at 462-63, 50 S.E. at 26.

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Related

Morgan v. D. W. Alderman & Sons' Co.
50 S.E. 26 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1905)
Poinsett Construction Co. v. Fischer
391 S.E.2d 875 (Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 1990)
Alltel Communications, Inc. v. South Carolina Department of Revenue
731 S.E.2d 869 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
773 S.E.2d 361, 412 S.C. 575, 2015 S.C. App. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cr-meyer-sons-co-v-custom-mechanical-csra-llc-scctapp-2015.