Darling v. Kagan

133 So. 2d 599
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedOctober 4, 1961
DocketNo. 2100
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 133 So. 2d 599 (Darling v. Kagan) 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.

Bluebook
Darling v. Kagan, 133 So. 2d 599 (Fla. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

ALLEN, Acting Chief Judge.

The appellant was one of several defendants in a foreclosure suit brought by appellees, Kagan and Lown, against the owners and mortgagors of certain realty in St. Lucie County, and other persons having claims against the land. The appellant held a recorded mechanic’s lien against the realty and was made a party defendant. Final decree of foreclosure was rendered and defendant, Darling, entered this appeal.

In late 1957, the appellant was hired by the owners of the land to prepare a subdivision plat. Appellant, an engineer and and surveyor, went onto the land, checked it for familiarization and then prepared the plat.

On January 10, 1958, the land owners executed an $80,000 note secured by a mortgage on this land. The mortgage was recorded. Appellees, Kagan and Lown, acquired the note and mortgage by purchase on the same day and their attorneys knew that appellant, Darling, had been hired to prepare the plat. In August, 1958, Darling recorded his plat with the County Commissioners and also recorded a lien against the land.

In June, 1959, this foreclosure suit was commenced because of default of the mortgagors. Defendant, Darling, answered, denying the priority of plaintiff’s mortgage, and counterclaimed to foreclose the mechanic’s lien for $2,154.61 against the land.

Testimony was taken by the court below without a jury and the final decree found the lien of the mortgage held by plaintiff-appellees, Kagan and Lown, to be superior to all other liens. The property was ordered sold if the mortgagees were not paid within 27 days. Appellant’s petition for rehearing was denied by order dated subsequent to the date of the sale of the land pursuant to the decree. The clerk below then filed his certificate of sale after which appellant filed notice of appeal and one assignment of error alleging that the lower court erred in holding his lien inferior to the mortgage lien. Subsequently, the clerk filed his certificate of disbursements (for clerk’s fee and stamps) and a certificate of title. Appellant then filed objection to disbursements alleging that he had not been served with a copy of the decree or of the certificates mentioned above. The objection was overruled and appellant then filed' an additional assignment of error alleging-error in the overruling of his objection to the clerk’s certificate of disbursements.

Appellant argues that within the intent of Ch. 84, Florida Statutes, F.S.A., the-Mechanic’s Lien Law, he had begun the-first actual work of improving real property by the preparation of his plat and that,, furthermore, the mortgagees and the owner had actual knowledge that appellant had done this work. Ch. 84.02 states, in part:.

“ * * * Any person who performs services as architect, landscape architect, or engineer shall, subject to said' compliance, limitations and priorities,, have a lien on the real property improved for any money that shall be owing to him for his services in preparing plans, specifications or drawings used! in connection with improving the reall property, or for his services in supervising any portion of the work of improving the real property, rendered in accordance with his contract and with the direct contract. * * * ”

The following definitions are set forth in Ch. 84.01:

“ ‘Improve’ means build, erect, place, make, alter, remove, repair or demolish any improvement upon, connected with, or beneath the surface of any land, or excavate any land, or furnish materials for any of such purposes, or perform any labor or services upon such improvement; or perform any labor or services or furnish any materials in laying in the adjoining street or alley, any pipes, wires, curbs or sidewalks, or in [601]*601grading, seeding, sodding or planting for landscaping purposes, or in equipping any such improvement with fixtures or permanent apparatus.
“ ‘Improvement’ means any building, structure, erection, construction, demolition, excavation, landscaping, or any part thereof existing, built, erected, placed, made or done on land for its permanent benefit.
******
‘Visible commencement of operations’ means the first actual work of improving upon the real property * * ”

'Ch. 84.03(1) provides:

“(1) All liens provided by this chapter shall relate to and take effect from ■the time of the visible commencement •of operations. * * * ”

The appellant, in his brief, states the ■following two points:

1. “Whether or not it was error to overrule appellant’s objection to disbursements when he had not received ■copies of the final decree and the various certificates of the clerk below con•cerning sale of the land.”
2. “Whether or not the lower court ■erred in holding appellant’s lien inferior to that of appellees’ mortgage when ap-pellees actually knew appellant had prepared his subdivision plat.”

The appellant, in his brief, has not ■shown where he was injured in any way by the failure to be served with a copy of the ■final decree entered herein on July 18, 1960, or the failure of the clerk to furnish him with a copy of the certificate of the sale and disbursements.

The appellant filed a petition for rehearing, which was argued before the court ■and denied by the court. Any technical error committed was, as far as the record ■shows, a harmless one so we shall not further allude to this question.

The appellant stated on cross-examination, with reference to the work which he did on the property in question: That he first started work on the property before Christmas, toward the middle of December of 1957; that another surveyor had been hired by Mr. Zukerman (one of the property owners) and he realized that he could not comply with county regulations pertaining to the filing of plats because he was not a registered engineer; that the appellant took the plats that he had prepared (apparently the previous surveyor had made) and revised them to make them comply with county requirements; that he went out to the property and checked it over to get the lay of the land, and in response to the following question he testified:

“Q. All right. You went out and looked at the property? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Now, what else did you do at the property, if anything? A. I strongly suspect I picked a box of oranges.
“Q. Other than that? A. I don’t recall. I do know there were stakes in the ground which I verified by pacing them out to see if the distances were substantially correct.
“Q. Those were put there by someone else, were they not? A. That is right, that was on the previous work done.
“Q. The only thing you did on the property was go out and look at it and determine what you thought would be added to these plats and so forth, on the property? A. I would say that is the only amount that I could have done under the circumstances, there are certain preliminaries that have to be accomplished.
“Q. But that is all you did? A. That is right.
“Q. Prior to January 10, 1958? A. That is right, that is all I could have done.”

[602]

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Bluebook (online)
133 So. 2d 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darling-v-kagan-fladistctapp-1961.