Harper Lumber & Manufacturing Co. v. C. O. Teate

125 So. 21, 98 Fla. 1055
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 7, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 125 So. 21 (Harper Lumber & Manufacturing Co. v. C. O. Teate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harper Lumber & Manufacturing Co. v. C. O. Teate, 125 So. 21, 98 Fla. 1055 (Fla. 1929).

Opinion

Strum, J.

This is a suit in equity to enforce a material-man’s lien against real property. The appeal is from an order sustaining a general demurrer, interposed by the owner, to the fifth amended bill of complaint.

The amended bill alleges in substance that the defendant C. 0. Teate is the owner of the real property in question; that Teate employed Carman Company as general contractor to construct a building on said land; that Carman Company agreed with Teate to furnish materials to be used in the construction of said building, for which Teate agreed to pay Carman Company; that after the agreement was entered into between Teate as owner and Carman Company as contractor, the said Carman Company, on or about July 30, 1924, entered into an agreement with complainant, the latter a dealer in building materials, whereby complainant agreed to furnish Carman Company the materials 'with which to construct said building, Carman Company agreeing to pay complainant the reasonable value thereof; that said materials were furnished by complainant and used in the construction of said building; that there is due to complainant and unpaid the sum of $19,485.57, on account of materials so furnished; that G. L. Miller & Company, one of the defendants, holds a mortgage on said premises, executed by Teate, the owner, while said building was under construction, to secure the principal sum of $150,000.00, the proceeds of which mortgage, by agreement with Teate, the mortgagor, were being disbursed by Miller & Company directly to the contractor, Carman Company, as the work progressed.

*1059 The amended bill further alleges: “Your orator further represents that the defendant, C. 0. Teate, had notice that your orator was furnishing the said Carman Company with the materials used in the construction of the said building, and that on or about the 26th day of November, A. D. 1924, after the said building was almost completed and while more than $19,485.57 was yet due and payable from the said defendant, C. 0. Teate, through the G. L. Miller Bond & Mortgage Company, to the Carman Company, for the construction of the said building, your orator gave written notice to the said C. 0. Teate that the said Carman Company was indebted to your orator for the materials used in the sum of $19,485.57, by writing a letter said C. 0. Teate, as follows:

November 26, 1924.

C. 0. Teate,

G. L. Miller & Co.,

Atlanta, Georgia.

Gentlemen:

Please take notice that the Harper Lumber & Mfg. Company, a corporation of Plant City, Florida, claim a lien over Lots 1, 2 and 6 of the subdivision of Lot 36 and a fraction of Lots 38 and 40 of Block “B” of the plat of Sarasota County, Florida, for $19,485.57 for materials furnished in the building of the Frances Carlton apartment house on the above said property, which materials were furnished the the request of the Carman Company, contractors for said building, of Tampa, Florida.

Attorney for Harper Lumber & Mfg. Company, and by delivery on or about November 26, 1924, to the said C. 0. Teate of a copy of the notice of lien, which is attached to the original bill of complaint and marked Exhibit “B,” and requested the defendant, C. 0. Teate, to withhold from the amount, he, through the G. L. Miller Bond & Mortgage *1060 Company, then owed the said Carman Company, an amount sufficient to cover the indebtedness from the said Carman Company to your orator, and to pay the same; that the said C. 0. Teate agreed to and assented to your orator’s request and promised to withhold and pay the same to your orator upon the conditions above set forth.”

Exhibit B to the original bill of complaint, referred to in the last quoted allegation of the amended bill, is as follows :

“NOTICE

NOTICE is hereby given that Harper Lumber & Manufacturing Company, a corporation, has furnished'the material used in the construction of a building situated on the following real estate owned by C. 0. Teate for Frances Carlton apartment house in the city of Sarasota, Sarasota County, Florida, to-wit:

Lots 1, 2 and 6 of the subdivision of Lot 36 and fractional part of Lots 38 and 40 of Block “B,” plat of Sarasota, Florida, as per plat thereof recorded in Plat book 1, page 4,

for which a balance amounting to nineteen thousand four hundred eighty-five and 57/100 ($19,485.57) dollars is hereby claimed and is now due and actually remains unpaid together with interest at eight per cent per annum from date hereof, and the said Harper Lumber & Manufacturing Company, a corporation, claims a lien for said sum on the property above described with the building situated thereon and intends to hold said lien for said amount.

HARPER LUMBER & MFG. COMPANY,

By: J. E. Cassels, Its Attorney.”

To the notice just quoted is appended the customary-oath of the subscriber to entitle the same to record.

*1061 Complainant contends that while it has duly perfected its lien as a creditor not in privity with the owner, it is also entitled to a lien as a creditor in privity with the owner by reason of the fact, as alleged in the amended bill, that when on or about November 26, 1924, it served on the owner, Teate, a copy of the notice Exhibit B, it requested the defendant, C. 0. Teate, “to withhold from the amount he then owed the said Carman Company, an amount sufficient to cover the indebtedness from the' said Carman Company to your orator and to pay the same; that the said C. 0. Teate agreed to and assented to your orator’s request and promised to withhold and pay the same to your orator * * Complainant contends that by the promise of Teate, so alleged, Teate became a primary debtor in privity with complainant and liable directly to complainant, so that complainant is entitled to a lien as a creditor in privity with the owner.

“Privity,” as used in Sec. 5380, Comp. Gen. Laws 1927, contemplates that there shall be a direct relationship her tween the owner and the lien claimant with respect to the furnishing of the materials or performance of the labor involved, so that upon the furnishing of such materials or the performance of the labor a primary and direct liability on the part of the owner to pay for the same will arise by reason of the contract, express or implied, upon which the materials were furnished or the labor performed. As was said of the same statute in Waring v. Bass, 76 Fla. 583, 80 So. R. 514; “Privity * * * implies special or particular knowledge, showing active consent or concurrence. ’ ’

If a materialman, upon the request or by the authority of the owner, furnishes material to a contractor in reliance upon the promise of the owner, express or implied, to pay for it, credit being extended to the owner, so that the owner becomes a primary debtor and not a mere surety, *1062 the materialman is in privity with the owner within the purview of the lien statutes, and is entitled to a lien for the full amount of the debt notwithstanding he gave no notice to the owner as required by Sec. 5381, Comp. Gen.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 So. 21, 98 Fla. 1055, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harper-lumber-manufacturing-co-v-c-o-teate-fla-1929.