Empire Home Loans, Inc. v. WC BRADLEY COMPANY

241 So. 2d 317, 286 Ala. 449, 1970 Ala. LEXIS 937
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedAugust 13, 1970
Docket4 Div. 385
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 241 So. 2d 317 (Empire Home Loans, Inc. v. WC BRADLEY COMPANY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Empire Home Loans, Inc. v. WC BRADLEY COMPANY, 241 So. 2d 317, 286 Ala. 449, 1970 Ala. LEXIS 937 (Ala. 1970).

Opinions

HARWOOD, Justice.

This is an appeal from a decree fixing the priorities between construction loan mortgagees and holders of materialmen’s and mechanics’ liens.

A. E. McCardle was a home builder in Russell County, Alabama. In 1967, he was the owner of several unimproved lots in three subdivisions which appear to be located in or near Phenix City.

McCardle set about to build houses on these vacant lots. To finance this operation, he executed separate first mortgages on six of the lots. These mortgages were to secure construction loans made by two lending agencies, Empire Home Loans, Inc., a Corporation, and the Phenix-Girard Bank.

Four of these mortgages were executed and recorded prior to the commencement of any work or improvements on the lots covered in the respective mortgages.

As to Lot 26, and Lot 24, both located in Block A, Section Two, of the Asbury Park subdivision, materials were delivered or construction work was begun prior to the recordation of the mortgages. The appellee W. C. Bradley Company had delivered materials of the value of $360.16 to Lot 26, and materials of the value of $879.38 to Lot 24, such materials being used in construction of a house on each lot.

All work done and materials furnished by the appellee Sunbeam Heating and Insulating Company in the construction of houses on all the lots, including Lots 26 and [451]*45124, was subsequent to the recordation of the mortgages.

The mortgages held by the two lending agencies were all foreclosed on 5 July 1968, and Empire Home Loans became the purchaser at the foreclosure sale.

After the foreclosure sale, Bradley filed a bill in equity and after setting forth the factual background of the transactions, prayed that all of the respective lots with the completed houses thereon be sold, and that from the proceeds of such sales its materialmen’s lien be paid first to satisfy its liens with the balance of the proceeds of the sale to be paid out as directed by the court.

Sunbeam was granted permission to intervene in the proceedings. Its bill of intervention is similar to Bradley’s and the nature of the relief sought was directed toward the same end.

The sufficiency of the bill, and the intervention bill is not questioned.

In short, both Bradley and Sunbeam asserted that their liens for labor and materials were superior to, and were to be accorded priority over, the mortgages on all the lots, whether such materials or work was furnished before or after the recordation of the mortgages.

Empire answered that all sums furnished under the construction mortgages were entitled to priority over the respective liens.

In the proceedings below, it was stipulated between the parties that both Bradley and Sunbeam had furnished materials or done work as to each lot, entitling each to a materialmen’s or mechanics’ lien and that such liens had been duly perfected in accordance with statutory requirements.

It was also stipulated that a sale and removal of the houses on each lot, should the court find that the liens of Bradley and Sunbeam attached to such improvements, would be a detriment to all the parties.

The value of each of the lots prior to the improvements, the amount owed on each mortgage on the date of foreclosure, and the amounts due Bradley and Sunbeam, were all stipulated. The value of the lots with the improvements thereon is not shown by the record. However, it is to be noted that the sums advanced under the construction mortgages are on an average in excess of five times the value of the lots in their unimproved state.

The decree entered by the trial court ordered an individual public sale of the lots in their improved state and fixed the following priorities as to the net proceeds of the sales:

As to Lot 26, Bradley’s lien of $546.54 plus interest from 24 April 1968, was established against the improvements on the lot, and was given first priority in the proceeds of the sale.

A lien in the amount of $2,500 (the value of the lot prior to construction of the house on the lot), with interest from 7 September 1967, was established in favor of Empire Home Loans, Inc.

Thirdly, Sunbeams’ lien was fixed on the improvements on the lot.

As to the five remaining lots, including Lot 24, a lien was first given to Empire Home Loans on each lot respectively in the amount of the value of each lot in its unimproved state.

Liens were then established in favor of Bradley and Sunbeam on the improvements on the respective lots in the amounts of the value of materials or work furnished by the lienors.

A general provision was made that any proceeds remaining from the sales of the lots after payment of the liens as prescribed, were to be paid to Empire Home Loans toward satisfying any balance owed on advances made under the construction mortgages.

Except as to Lot 26, the effect of the decree was to give to Empire Home Loans [452]*452a first lien on the proceeds from the sale of the respective lots only to the extent of the value of the lots in their unimproved state, even though the amounts advanced under the mortgage exceeded substantially such unimproved values, and went into the construction of the houses. Of course, the value of the labor and materials furnished by the lien claimants likewise went into the construction of the houses.

If it was reasonably certain that the sale of the properties would produce sufficient sums to pay all of these creditors, this litigation would probably not have arisen. Therefore it seems likely that after a sale of the properties the question that will be presented is how the loss is to be cast in the event the sales do not provide funds sufficient to satisfy the claims of the mortgagee and the lienees.

The priorities of the liens of mechanics and materialmen is governed by the provisions of Section 38, Title 33, Code of Alabama 1940. Before adverting to the provisions of Section 38 as it reads today, and has so read since its predecessor was amended radically in 1933, it will be helpful to refer to this predecessor statute since practically all of the decisional law on the question now presented results from cases decided prior to the 1933 amendment of Section 38.

By Section 8833, Code of Alabama 1923, the liens of mechanics and materialmen were given priority over all other liens, mortgages, or encumbrances created subsequently to the commencement of the work on the building or improvement.

As to the building, such liens were given priority over all other liens, mortgages or encumbrances, whether existing at the time of the commencement of the work, or subsequently created. The person entitled to such lien could have it enforced by a sale of the building, and the purchaser of the building or improvement might have it removed within a reasonable time.

Under Section 8833, and its predecessors, it was firmly established that even though mechanics’ and materialmen’s liens were given priority only as to the building, a court of equity had plenary power to mold its decrees in such form as to conserve the equities of all the parties; and might, when a removal of the building would in large measure operate as a destruction of the security, order a sale of the property as a whole, adjusting the priorities in the proceeds of the sale on equitable principles. See Baker Sand and Gravel Co. v. Rogers Plumbing Co., 228 Ala.

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Empire Home Loans, Inc. v. WC BRADLEY COMPANY
241 So. 2d 317 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1970)

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Bluebook (online)
241 So. 2d 317, 286 Ala. 449, 1970 Ala. LEXIS 937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/empire-home-loans-inc-v-wc-bradley-company-ala-1970.