J. L. Purcell, Inc. v. Libbey

149 A. 225, 111 Conn. 132, 68 A.L.R. 1258, 1930 Conn. LEXIS 99
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 6, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 149 A. 225 (J. L. Purcell, Inc. v. Libbey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. L. Purcell, Inc. v. Libbey, 149 A. 225, 111 Conn. 132, 68 A.L.R. 1258, 1930 Conn. LEXIS 99 (Colo. 1930).

Opinion

Wheeleb, C. J.

The plaintiff brings its action upon a bond given in substitution for a mechanic’s lien. Wheeler and Mahoney, copartners and contractors, entered into a written contract November 20th, 1924, with the defendant Libbey to do the plumbing work, which included the furnishing of material and labor, in a building upon land owned by him. The plaintiff, as subcontractor under an oral agreement with these contractors, furnished them with material as the same was required on this job to the amount of $2127.61, *134 making the first delivery December 22d, 1924, and the last on May 15th, 1925.

The contractors fully performed their contracts with Libbey and furnished extras in addition amounting to $997.60, but he has not paid any money to them under their contract and made no payment under it other than the book credits to which we refer hereafter.

On July 14th, 1925, within sixty days after furnishing such materials, the plaintiff gave the defendant Libbey due notice of its intention to claim a lien and on the same day duly filed a certificate of mechanic’s lien for this material. By order of the Superior Court on September 29th, 1925, the defendants, Libbey as principal and Patience as surety, duly gave to plaintiff their bond for $2500 in substitution for the mechanic’s lien conditioned upon their paying “such amount as a court of competent jurisdiction may adjudge to be secured by said lien with interest and costs.”

Defendants’ reasons of appeal one and two must be denied because they do not conform with § 11 of the Rules. Practice Book p. 309. Repeated decisions of this court should have made the practice as to the form of reasons of appeal which call for corrections of the finding clear to the profession. Had these reasons been in proper form the most casual examination of the excerpts from the evidence would have indicated that the material findings, whose corrections are sought, must have been determined upon a mere conflict of the evidence and that it could not be held that the reasoning mind could not have reasonably made upon this evidence the findings complained of.

The appellants’ main reasons of appeal are: (a) That Wheeler and Mahoney, the contractors, at the time plaintiff gave its notice of intention to file a *135 mechanic’s lien and filed its lien, had been paid all that was due them from Libbey and had waived their right to exact further compensation from him under their contract and divested themselves of any inchoate right of lien or any right to claim a lien, (b) That the mode of payment in the contract was inconsistent with a lien by the contractors, (c) That the plaintiff subcontractor had no independent right of lien, but that his right existed by way of subrogation to Wheeler and Mahoney’s right, and when payment was made under their contract, or they had waived their right to a lien, or been divested of it, their right to a lien was gone and the right of the subcontractor to a lien ended with the ending of the contractor’s right.

The defendant’s answer admitted a part of the complaint but denied that the plaintiff subcontractor furnished materials, beginning December 22d, 1924, and ceasing so to do May 15th, 1925, in the construction of a building on land of the defendant, under an agreement with Wheeler and Mahoney, who were general contractors, upon their agreement to pay for the same, and that on July 14th, 1925, the plaintiff gave notice in -writing to defendants of its intention to claim a mechanic’s lien on this property and on the same day and within sixty days after it ceased to furnish such material duly lodged a certificate in writing in Hartford in which town the property was situated.

The court found the issues for the plaintiff and rendered its judgment in accordance with that finding.

None of the reasons of appeal question the finding of these issues in favor of the plaintiff and none question that the judgment follows this finding with legal accuracy. This finding determines the appeal in favor of the plaintiff; notwithstanding this the case was tried and determined upon the legal issues which we have stated in (a), (b) and (c) above; the finding sets *136 forth the facts upon which these legal claims were made together with the claims of law made in the trial court and these constitute the principal reasons upon which this appeal is based and those which were argued before us and are presented in the briefs of counsel. Since their determination must lead to a like result we shall indicate our views upon these questions which are raised upon the appeal but not found in the pleadings.

“The mechanic’s lien law is a creature of statute, and this statute is to be construed so as to reasonably and fairly carry out its remedial intent.” Parsons v. Keeney, 98 Conn. 745, 748, 120 Atl. 505. We may not ascertain the construction of a single provision of this law nor the legislative intent by its words alone; w'e must take all of its provisions and read them as a whole, that each provision may be in harmony with every other and the remedial purposes of the law preserved. That purpose was to give to whoever furnishes material or services in excess of $10 in the construction, raising, removal or repairs of any building, either by virtue of an agreement with or by consent of the owner of the land in which the building stands, or of some person having authority from or acting for such owner in procuring such labor or materials, the security of the building and land for the payment of his claim by making such claim a lien thereon, which should have precedence of any incumbrance originating after the commencement of such services or the furnishing of such material, provided the claimant shall conform to the requirements of the statutory procedure. General Statutes, § 5217. The sections of the statute applicable to this appeal are quoted in a footnote in 108 Conn. 236 to 238, inclusive, to which reference may be made. The lien before us falls within the second of the classes to which our law gives *137 liens, and, if valid, is a statutory right, derived through the agreement of the subcontractor with the main contractor. New Haven Orphan Asylum v. Haggerty Co., 108 Conn. 232, 240, 142 Atl. 847. The subcontractor’s right to a lien exists primarily through the statutory authority conferred by the owner upon the contractor to act for him. It is created because the subcontractor has furnished material or labor to or for the contractor which has gone into the owner’s building. The subcontractor lienors stand “upon a perfectly equal footing as respects their rights in the unpaid earned contract price.” Stone v. Moomjian, 92 Conn. 476, 484, 103 Atl. 635.

In the recent case, New Haven Orphan Asylum v. Haggerty Co., supra, at page 243, we say: “In § 5220, the opening provision clearly applies to all mechanics’ liens by whomsoever held, and provides that they shall not exceed the total which the owner was to pay under his contract.

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Bluebook (online)
149 A. 225, 111 Conn. 132, 68 A.L.R. 1258, 1930 Conn. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-l-purcell-inc-v-libbey-conn-1930.