Keavey v. De Rago

20 Misc. 105, 45 N.Y.S. 77
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedApril 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 20 Misc. 105 (Keavey v. De Rago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keavey v. De Rago, 20 Misc. 105, 45 N.Y.S. 77 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Bischoff, J.

The plaintiff, a subcontractor, brought this action to foreclose a mechanic’s lien claimed by him for-work, labor and services performed and material furnished in and about the premises of which the defendants were the owners, such services and material having been rendered and supplied at the request of the J. H. Eurber Company, the party with whom the defendants had contracted for the performance of work upon the premises, in the course of which work the plaintiff was employed.

At the trial proof was given of the due filing of the notice of lien by the plaintiff, and his claim against the J. H. Eurber Company was supported by the evidence adduced, but in no way did he attempt to show that any amount was due to the principal contractor from the defendants, and in this condition the case was submitted to the justice for determination, the defendants having offered no evidence and having taken the position, by proper motion, that the proof was insufficient to support a recovery.

The justice found for the plaintiff and the question brought before us upon this appeal is whether a subcontractor’s claim to a lien may be upheld without proof that the owner is indebted to [106]*106the contractor, where the action to foreclose the lien is brought in a court not of record. .

With regard to the general aspect of this question, there can be no room for dispute that the policy of the Mechanics’ Lien Law, as determined by judicial construction, is to enable-a subcontractor to look to the owner or to the property itself for satisfaction o'f his claim only when the owner is actually indebted to the contractor" on account of the work done upon the premises, since the act provides (section 1) that the owner “ shall not be liable to pay by reason of all the liens filed pursuant to this act a greater sum than the price stipulated and agreed to he paid in such contract,” etc., the contract alluded to being the owner’s contract with the principal contractor.

The lien acts prior to that now in "force (chapter 342 of the Laws of 1885, amended by chapter 316 of the Laws of 1888), contained the same provisions, substantially, as that- above cited, (see chapter 513, Laws of 1851, amended by chapter 404 of the Laws of 1855; chapter 379 of the-Laws of 1878), and under these statutes, as well as under the present act, the course of adjudication has been uniformly to the effect that the subcontractor’s lien depends for its validity upon the. owner’s indebtedness to the contractor. Smith v. Coe, 29 N. Y. 666; Crane v. Genin, 60 id. 127; Gibson v. Lenane, 94 id. 183; Post v. Campbell, 83 id, 282; Foley v. Alger, 4 E. D. Smith, 719; Cox v. Broderick, id. 721; Ferguson v. Burk, id. 760; Van Clief v. Van Vechten, 130 N. Y. 571; Lemieux v. English, 19 Misc. Rep. 545.

So, too, since the validity of the lien was made to- depend upon Such state of the owner’s indebtedness, the courts, have consistently held that, it was for the subcontractor, the plaintiff, to prove the fact that -there was an amount due the contractor, at least at the time of the trial. - See Foley v. Alger; Cox v. Broderick; Ferguson v. Burk; Van Clief v. Van Vechten, and Lemieux v. English, supra.

In Van Clief v. Van Vechten, 130 N. Y. 580, it is said The plaintiffs claim through the contractor, and if the payment was not due as to him it was not due as to them. They are under the same obligation to prove performance and to -the same extent that he would he. Their rights as lienors are measured by his rights under, the contract.”

The law as to the nature of the subcontractor’s lien, and as to the proofs required of him when seeking to substantiate it, is thus well [107]*107settled, but it is claimed that the statute of 1885, in so far as it deals with an action brought by the subcontractor in a court not of record, has changed the rule, and that upon the trial of such an action proof of an indebtedness by the owner to the contractor need not be given in support of the plaintiff’s case.

This contention is founded upon sections 9 and 11 of the act of' 1885 (chapter 342), which we proceed to consider.

As material, section 9 is framed 'as follows: “ An action to foreclose a lien, provided for in this act, may be brought in a court not of record, which would have jurisdiction to render a judgment in an action upon a contract for a sum equal to the amount of the lien. * * * The complaint must set forth substantially all the facts contained in the notice of lien filed * * * and the substance of the contract.”

The argument for the plaintiff is that since the statute has thus expressed the requirements of pleading in an action of this character, when brought in a court not of record, no further averments need be contained in the complaint, and that because the notice of lien is not expressly required to set forth the fact of an indebtedness by the owner to the contractor (section 4 of the act), no proof-of such fact is essential to the cause of action which, as required to be alleged, is apparently founded upon the notice of lien.

It may be conceded that a complaint framed in accordance with the statute could be upheld in the court not of record as against a motion by the defendant for its dismissal for insufficiency; the act has set forth what must be alleged to entitle the plaintiff to go to trial and we cannot well infer an intention of the legislature that more should be required than it has expressed. “ Expressio imius est exclusio alterius.”

Granting this, no reasonable construction of the statute in question would operate to give the plaintiff a stronger cause of action in a court not of record than he would have upon the same state of facts in a court of record.

The cause of action, which the act renders enforcible in all courts, is given only by the statute and the elements of the cause are prescribed, at once, by provisions generally applicable to whatever means of enforcement may be permitted.

A subcontractor, or materialman, has the right to bring an action of this character against the owner when he has duly filed the prescribed notice of his- claim.

He thus obtains his standing in court and his right of priority as [108]*108a lienor, being possessed of a “lien,” as the statute expresses it (section 1), but .this filing of the notice.is no more than a formal statement of the claim and, to make the lien effectual as' against the owner, the claim must be substantiated by proof that it is based actually upon a valid demand.

Such the subcontractor’s lien is only when there is an indebted-. ness by the owner to the contractor (cases supra), and the cause of action which the statute gives him is-founded upon that indebtedness.

As plaintiff in a court not of record, the subcontractor is called upon to allege no more than he set forth in his claim of a lien for his labor and “ the substance of the contract ” with his immediate contractor (section 9), but his cause of action is the same, whatever the forum, being founded upon the general provisions of the act, and, but for a valid lien based upon proof of a fund to which it may attach, the eaúse of action is nonexistent.

Mindful of the laxity of pleading which obtains in . courts not of record, we readily find reason for some statutory regulation as to the essential averments, in such courts, where the action depends to a great degree upon the identification of the property to be affected, as in actions like the present.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 Misc. 105, 45 N.Y.S. 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keavey-v-de-rago-nyappterm-1897.