Friday Lumber Company v. Johnston

180 So. 2d 259, 278 Ala. 661, 1965 Ala. LEXIS 972
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 18, 1965
Docket2 Div. 478
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 180 So. 2d 259 (Friday Lumber Company v. Johnston) 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
Friday Lumber Company v. Johnston, 180 So. 2d 259, 278 Ala. 661, 1965 Ala. LEXIS 972 (Ala. 1965).

Opinion

MERRILL, Justice.

Appeal from a declaratory judgment action filed by Frank and Eva Johnston against Brady S. Bamberg, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, Peoples Bank of Greensboro and numerous laborers and suppliers of materials, including appellants seeking a determination of the balance due under a building contract between the Johnstons, joint owners, and Bamberg, the contractor, and a construction of the mechanics and materialmen statutes.

The Johnstons, husband and wife, contracted with Bamberg to build a dwelling on their property for $20,000, payable in three installments of $6,666.67 each at various stages of completion. Construction began about March 23, 1964. On April 11, the Johnstons executed a mortgage on the property to Metropolitan Life Insurance Company for $25,000. Appellees received $10,-000 of this loan and the company in retaining the balance pending the outcome of this suit. All the other respondents except Peoples Bank furnished labor and/or material on and for the dwelling.

The first two installments of $6,666.67 were paid by the Johnstons to Bamberg on April 11 and May 6, leaving the last installment of $6,666.66 to be paid, and this suit seeks to determine who should receive this final payment.

On May 23, 1964, Bamberg obtained a loan from Peoples Bank for $4,000 on his note; but the bank required that appellee Frank Johnston be responsible for the indebtedness. Johnston executed the following instrument and it was given as collateral for the loan:

“5-23-64
“To Whom it may concern
“This is to certify that I will pay Brady Bamberg $6666.66 on or about June 20th [665]*6651964 as final payment on my house construction.
“I will make this check payable to Brady Bamberg and The Peoples Bank of Greensboro.
J. F. Johnston.”

The president of the bank handled the loan and knew that Bamberg had contracted to build the house for the Johnstons and that it was under construction. No notices of lien had been filed when this loan was made.

Between June 17 and July 27, four of the respondents filed separate claims of lien amounting in aggregate to more than $4,-000. These liens were perfected and each of the four respondents filed an answer and cross-bill seeking establishment of its liens. When the first notice of claims of lien was received, Mrs. Eva Johnston told the bank that they (the Johnstons) would not be liable for more than the $4,000 already loaned to Bamberg.

Bamberg abandoned work sometime in July and the Johnstons had to spend $975.37 completing the job.

One materialman, Russell S. Lee Floor and Tile Co., is in a different position from the other lien claimants. It notified the Johnstons that it would not put any of its material or labor into the construction unless they (the owners) would promise to pay the price ($1,500) which had been agreed on between the Lee Company and Bamberg. The Johnstons agreed to pay and Bamberg approved.

The trial court, after hearing the testimony, rendered a decree in which Peoples Bank was awarded a personal judgment against Frank Johnston for $4,000, plus interest and attorneys’ fees as requested in the bank’s cross-bill, held this transaction to be a novation, ordered this amount to be credited against the unpaid balance in the hands of Johnston, decreed that Russell S. Lee Floor and Tile Co. were entitled to their full $1,500 out of the balance retained by the Johnstons, decreed that the Johnstons were entitled to the $975.37 that they used in completing the house and, since that accounted for all the money in tiie unpaid balance owed to Bamberg, the other materialmen (including the appellants) were not entitled to recover whether their liens had been perfected or not, and their claims were denied.

Appellants agree that the sum required to complete the dwelling ($975.37) was properly deducted from the balance of $6,-666.66 in the hands of the owners, Standard Sanitary Mfg. Co. v. Aird, 221 Ala. 520, 129 So. 285 [8] Adams Supply Co. v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 269 Ala. 171, 111 So.2d 906; but they contend that the remainder, $5,691.29, is the balance owed to the contractor and is subject to the liens of the appellants.

We consider first the $1,500 allowed Russell S. Lee Floor and Tile Company. The Lee Company did not stand in the position of the other materialmen. It would not install its materials on the credit of the contractor ■ but demanded that the owner assume the responsibility for payment. Both the owner and the contractor agreed, and thus the Lee Company actually became a contractor for that amount and the original contract between the Johnstons and Bamberg was reduced by that amount.

Title 33, § 37, as amended, Code 1940, gave the Lee Company a lien on the property since its contract was with the owner. We paraphrase a statement in Standard Sanitary Mfg. Co. v. Aird, 221 Ala. 520, 129 So. 285 [7] [9]. The agreement in favor of the Lee Company was given before the materials were furnished, and were then furnished upon the strength of the agreement by the owner to pay the amount to this materialman. This was doubtless intended to, and did, accomplish the same result as if the materialman had given notice before furnishing the material, and the owner had failed to notify the materialman that he would not be responsible for the price, all as provided in Tit. 33, § 37. The result of the arrangement was to constitute the Lee Company as original [666]*666contractor. The notice, therefore, required by Tit. 33, .§ 46, to be given by all persons other than original contractors, was not required of Russell S. Lee Floor and Tile Company. * * * The effect of this arrangement between the owner, the Lee Company and Bamberg was to withdraw the $1,500 from the status of unpaid balance due Bamberg by the owner, upon which materialmen and laborers could fasten a lien by the notice provided in Tit. 33, § 46.

The trial court properly charged the $1,500 to the unpaid balance in the hands of the owner. Applying this conclusion, the result is a balance of $4,191.29 ($5,691.29 less $1,500).

We consider next the allowance of the $4,000 to Peoples Bank. Under the pleadings and proof, we think the trial court correctly entered a personal judgment in favor of the bank against appellees for the face of the $4,000 note, plus interest and attorneys’ fees. But we disagree with the holding of that coux-t that “a novation was accomplished and the amount of the indebtedness which the said owner Johnston has become liable for under the decree rendered against him * * * extinguishes pro tanto his contract obligation to that extent to the said Brady S. Bamberg for the labor and xnaterial to construct the improvements on the property of Complainants (the Johnstons) * *

To establish a novation there must be (1) a previous valid obligation; (2) an agreement of all the parties thereto to a new contract or obligation; (3) an agreement that it is an extinguishment of the old contract or obligation, and (4) that the new conti-act or obligation was a valid one between the parties thereto. Hopkins v. Jordan, 201 Ala. 184, 77 So. 710; Butler v. Walton, 36 Ala.App. 319, 56 So.2d 369. The requirement of (3) supra is lacking. There is no evidence of the extinguishment of the old contract. The owner still owed Bamberg the balance of $6,666.66. He agreed to make the check payable to both Bamberg and the bank.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 So. 2d 259, 278 Ala. 661, 1965 Ala. LEXIS 972, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friday-lumber-company-v-johnston-ala-1965.