Great Am. Constr. Corp. v. Nobre, Inc.
This text of 2004 NY Slip Op 50564(U) (Great Am. Constr. Corp. v. Nobre, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Kings County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
| Great Am. Constr. Corp. v Nobre, Inc. |
| 2004 NY Slip Op 50564(U) |
| Decided on June 17, 2004 |
| Supreme Court, Kings County |
| Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. |
| This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports. |
Great American Construction Corp., Petitioner,
against Nobre, Inc., Respondents. |
135/04
Yvonne Lewis, J.
Great American Construction Corp., the petitioner, has requested of this court an order, pursuant to Lien Law §19(6), to summarily discharge of record four mechanic's liens, totaling $214,805.00, filed by respondent Nobre, Inc. with the Kings County Clerk against four developed parcels of real property; to wit, 89 & 115 Pulaski Street [$79, 625.00 and $78,250.00, respectively, both filed 12/15/03], 89 Vernon Avenue [$45,630.00, filed 12/15/03], and 548-686 Willoughby Avenue [$13,180.00, filed 12/11/03], all located in Kings County, on the ground that it appears on the face of the notices of lien and documentary evidence that there exists no valid lien due to the character of the labor and materials furnished. The four parcels herein concerned are owned by NYC Partnership Housing Development Fund Company, Inc. which had entered into a development agreement to build and sell thirty-one three-family homes on those parcels with Marcy New Homes, LLC, which engaged the petitioner as general contractor of the project. Blanford Construction Corp. was, in turn, hired by the petitioner as a subcontractor to perform certain specified services, including debris removal, excavation, removal of a buried oil tank, concrete work, winterizing, and disposal of fill. The respondent was retained by said subcontractor to perform some of its contractual responsibilities. The petitioner thereafter removed Blanford from the project after numerous written complaints and warnings. At the point of its removal, Blanford, according to the petitioner, had "earned for its aforesaid services (after deducting appropriate back charges) a total of $421,672," although it had been paid $432,379.0, resulting in an overpayment of $10,707.00. Following Blanford's removal from the project, respondent Nobel, Inc. filed the subject liens against Blanford for having failed to make required payments under their subcontract. In addition, the petitioner notes that Nobel, Inc.'s allegations of having been employed by it and/or an entity called The Renovation Generation Community Development Corp. are patently false since it did not in fact employ the respondent and the latter company was never involved in the construction project. A fortiori, the petitioner has attached as an exhibit a "partial waiver of lien" form, dated July 28, 2003, executed by the owner/president of Nobre, Inc. wherein he asserts that he was hired to "furnish labor and/or materials for the new building at New Marcy Homes Project Brooklyn NY for Blanford Construction Corp." In short, the petitioner submits that "[a]t the time respondent filed the. . .notices and thereafter, petitioner did not owe any money to its subcontractor Blanford. Any entitlement to a mechanic's lien against the Properties by respondent as Blanford's subcontractor [*2]and as petitioner's sub-subcontractor was by subrogation to Blanford's right to payment. Since petitioner owed nothing to Blanford when or after the notices of lien were filed, the liens are invalid and without legal effect; and said liens are therefore defective in the face of the notices of lien regarding the character of the labor and/or materials furnished. Petitioner is entitled to summary discharge of the. . . liens or, if the Court determines that some amount was owed by petitioner to Blanford at the time of filing, to an order limiting the effect of the liens to said amount." In support of the foregoing, counsel for the petitioner asserts that §19(6) of the New York Lien Law authorizes a party in interest (eg. a general contractor) to file a petition for an order summarily discharging of record a mechanic's lien that is invalid on its face. Citing J. Bunce Ltd. v. Fahey, 73 AD2d 632, 423 NYS2d 59, counsel noted that the Appellate Division, 2d Dept. has ruled that "Pursuant to statute, a mechanic's lien is valid to the extent of the 'sum earned and unpaid on the contract at the time of filing the notice of lien, and any sum subsequently earned thereon' (Lien Law §4). In the case of a subcontractor, the lien will only attach to those funds due and owing to the general contractor at the time of its filing, or which may thereafter become due and owing. . . ." In addition, counsel made note of two Supreme Court cases. A New York County decision, Ace Contracting Co. v. Garfield & Arma Assocs., 148 Misc. 2d 475, 560 NYS2d 382, which held that "A mechanic's lien is a means of obtaining satisfaction for unpaid services; however, where a subcontractor is the lienor it is based upon the subrogation theory and is only valid up to the amount, if any, still due and unpaid to the contractor. . . .If there are no monies due then there is no fund to which the subcontractor's lien can attach[; and, a Suffolk County case, Mid-Island Lumber & Supply Co., 78 Misc.2d 27, 356 NYS2d 190, which held that a "subcontractor's lien is limited to the amount due and unpaid to its general contractor and '. . .the burden is on the subcontractor to establish. . .money. . .owing to the contractor'."
In opposition, the respondent maintains that he was engaged by Blanford Construction Corp. to do the foundation work with regards to the jobs located at 686 Willoughby Ave. and 89 Vernon Avenue; that when payment was not received for work completed, he suspended work at both sites until he renegotiated with a Mr. Will Clark, who represented to him that he was a principal of Great American Construction Corporation, that he would complete the work on the Pulaski Avenue sites and that payment would be made directly to Nobre Inc. by the petitioner. It is the respondent's position that though initially hired by Blanford, an employer/employee relationship with Great American was created by this renegotiation. This assertion by Nobre's president that an oral agreement was reached between him and the petitioner [following Blandford's failure to make payment to him] is suspect, especially in light of the fact that no invoices were ever directed at the petitioner either prior to or subsequent to Blandford's severance from the project. The respondent adds that he executed a partial waiver of lien upon receipt of $118,395.00 for work that had been completed; however, the balance of the subject liens; to wit, $96,410.00, remains unpaid by both Blanford and Great American. The respondent also notes that Lien Law §9(7)
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2004 NY Slip Op 50564(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-am-constr-corp-v-nobre-inc-nysupctkings-2004.