First Marine Corp. v. Harbor Village, No. Cv91-0121173 (Jun. 19, 1992)

1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 5463, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 802
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJune 19, 1992
DocketNo. CV91-0121173
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 5463 (First Marine Corp. v. Harbor Village, No. Cv91-0121173 (Jun. 19, 1992)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Marine Corp. v. Harbor Village, No. Cv91-0121173 (Jun. 19, 1992), 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 5463, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 802 (Colo. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

The First Constitution Bank ("FCB") instituted the present CT Page 5464 action to recover sums due under a commercial revolving loan note ("Note"). To secure the Note, the defendant Harbor Village Limited Partnership ("Harbor Village") and William O. Rockwood, Jr. Trustee, ("Rockwood") mortgaged certain parcels of land located in the Town of Greenwich and the mortgage was filed on the Land Records on May 3, 1989. First Marine Corp. ("FMC") has been substituted as party plaintiff as the assignee of the mortgage.

The mortgaged property consisted of several parcels of land and the proceeds of the loan, in the amount of $21,500,000, was to be utilized to finance the construction by Harbor Village of a marina facility and a docominium complex in Greenwich, Connecticut. The defendant Fairfield Dock Co., Inc. ("Fairfield") rendered services or furnished materials to the project from March 3, 1989 to February 13, 1990. On April 16, 1990, Fairfield lodged its Certificate of Mechanic's Lien with the Greenwich Town Clerk and served a notice of intention to claim a mechanic's lien upon Harbor Village and Rockwood as owners of the properties.

FMC has filed a Motion for Determination of Priority and for a judgment of strict foreclosure asserting that Fairfield's Mechanic's Lien is defective, on grounds hereinafter discussed, and therefore, the interest of Fairfield, if any, is subsequent to that of FMC and may be foreclosed in the present action. Fairfield, on the other hand, claims that its Mechanic's Lien has priority over FMC's mortgage. The parties have entered a partial stipulation of facts and an evidentiary hearing has been held with respect to the matters raised by Fairfield and FMC.

The notice of intention to claim a Mechanic's Lien served by Fairfield upon Harbor Village and Rockwood describes the property to which the Mechanic's Lien applied in "Schedule A" attached to the notice. FMC makes no claim of any deficiency with respect to the form of the notice of intention to claim a mechanic's lien. However, the Certificate of Mechanic's Lien states that Fairfield furnished materials and rendered services on certain lots of land owned by Harbor Village and Rockwood and "situated in the Town of Greenwich, County of Fairfield and State of Connecticut, and a lot of land belonging to said Harbor Village Limited Partnership and William O. Rockwood, Jr., trustee and bounded as follows: See, Exhibit `A' attached." Exhibit A was not recorded and only the first two pages of the Certificate of Mechanic's Lien are on record at the Greenwich Town Clerk's Office. Accordingly, FMC claims that the property CT Page 5465 subject to the Mechanic's Lien is not described as required by statute and therefore the Mechanic's Lien is invalid.

The attorney for Fairfield who prepared the Certificate of Mechanic's Lien also prepared the Exhibit A to be attached to that Certificate for filing in the Town Clerk's Office. He personally delivered the Certificate, with Exhibit A attached, to the sheriff, now deceased. The Town Clerk for the Town of Greenwich testified that the costs for recording documents was $10 for the first page and $5.00 for each subsequent page. At the time the Mechanic's Lien was filed, there is a receipt indicating a charge of $15.00 was made. Accordingly, between the delivery of the Certificate of Mechanic's Lien, with Exhibit A attached, to the sheriff by the attorney for Fairfield and the actual recording of that document, Exhibit A became detached so that the description of the land intended to be covered by the mechanic's lien were not filed on the Land Records. When the Town Clerk's Office completed the recordation of the documents, the documents actually recorded were returned to the attorney for Fairfield.

An expert in the searching of the Land Records testified that the existence of a mechanic's lien was apparent from a review of the land records; that the only property owned by Harbor Village and/or Rockwood in the Town of Greenwich was located on River Road which was the location of the marina and docominium complex; and that a title searcher would be on notice that a mechanic's lien was claimed with respect to said properties. The expert also testified that there were several parcels of property involved and he could not determine from the Land Records whether the claimed mechanic's lien applies to one parcel, more than one parcel, or all parcels. The expert also testified that the mechanic's lien was not outside of the chain of title and his obligation was, therefore, to put the person asking him to do the work on notice that a mechanic's lien might apply to all parcels of land.

General Statutes 49-34 provides, in pertinent part, that a mechanic's lien is not valid unless the person performing the services or furnishing the materials lodges with the Town Clerk a Certificate "(a) describing the premises." FMC therefore asserts that the failure to record Exhibit A constitutes failure to comply with the above-quoted provision of the statute. However, there is no claim by FMC that it was mislead in any way nor is there any claim of prejudice.

The purpose of Mechanic's Liens is to provide security for the payment of claims for one supplying services or materials, and the mechanic's lien is a creature of statute which requires compliance with the statute. H S Torrigaton Associates v. Lutz Engineering Co., Inc., 185 Conn. 459, 553 (1981). Our courts have consistently provided a liberal construction of claimed CT Page 5466 inadequacies in a Certificate of Mechanic's Lien in order to achieve the remedial purposes of the mechanic's lien statutes and therefore, our law requires a reasonable compliance with the statutory provisions. J.C. Penney Properties Inc. v. Santella Co., Inc.,210 Conn. 511, 514 (1989). "In accordance with this policy, our courts have been liberal in validating liens despite claimed errors on the face of the lien certificate where the mistake was made in good faith and no resulting prejudice was claimed." supra at 515.

In the present case, the land records themselves indicated that Fairfield was claiming a mechanic's lien on property of Harbor Village and Rockwood and that the only property owned by those parties was located on River Road. A reasonable party searching the records would therefore conclude that a mechanic's lien may apply to all such properties. The mistake is also obvious. The Certificate of Mechanic's Lien itself states "See Exhibit `A' attached" and there was no such description attached to the Mechanic's Lien.

Our courts have recognized that some errors in recording are so neutralized by other matters which do appear in the records, so that no searcher after the title possibly could be mislead and therefore, such errors should not affect the validity of the record as notification. Connecticut National Bank v. Lorenzato,221 Conn. 77, 83 (1992).

"The Land Records are the starting point for inquiry and not the ending point." Connecticut National Bank v. Esposito,210 Conn. 221, 230 (1989). A review of the land records would place a reasonable party on inquiry as to the extent of the lien claimed by Fairfield. See Burque v. Naugatuck Lumber Co., 113 Conn. 350,353 (1931). Accordingly, a person reviewing the land records would conclude that a mechanic's lien might apply to all, but possibly not all of the properties on River road. A mere mistake in including more land than can be made subject to the lien will not void the lien. Tremonte v. Wilens, 89 Conn.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 5463, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-marine-corp-v-harbor-village-no-cv91-0121173-jun-19-1992-connsuperct-1992.