Kenney v. . Apgar

93 N.Y. 539, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 316
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 23, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 93 N.Y. 539 (Kenney v. . Apgar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenney v. . Apgar, 93 N.Y. 539, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 316 (N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

This is a proceeding to foreclose a mechanic's lien, under chapter 478, of the Laws of 1862. The case shows that in November, 1878, the defendant Pedersen, then owner of certain lots in the city of Brooklyn, entered into a contract with the defendants Leonard and Ebury to complete certain buildings thereon and to make certain improvements, including the flagging of a sidewalk in front of the premises, for which she agreed to pay the contractors the sum of $5,100, the payments to be made as the work progressed. The plaintiff" under a contract with Leonard and Ebury furnished the flagging for the sidewalk, laid the same, and performed some other work upon the premises, and filed a lien therefor April 27, 1879. .

The defendants, other than the owners of the premises and the contractors, are lienors upon the same premises for work and materials done and furnished to the contractors upon the same contract. Some of the liens are prior to that of the plaintiffs and others are subsequent thereto.

The complaint in the action after averring the facts relating to the plaintiff’s lien, alleges the existence of the liens of the other defendants spoken of, and demands judgment for an accounting and sale of the premises in satisfaction of the plaintiff’s lien, and also a personal judgment against the contractors for the amount of the debt owing to the plaintiff. The other lienors appeared and answered in the action setting forth the particulars of their respective liens, and they likewise demanded judgment for an accounting and sale of the premises and to have the proceeds applied in satisfaction of their respective liens. The several lienors also alleged an indebtedness from the owner to the contractors on account of the contract, beyond the amount of their respective liens. The defendant Pedersen answered in the action as did also the defendant Apgar, a subsequent grantee of the premises. ' The coui’t on the trial found the existence of the several liens *545 set forth in the pleadings and also that there was a balance unpaid on the contract with Leonard and Ebury, • and directed a sale of the premises to satisfy the several liens and the costs adjudged in the proceedings and directed them to be paid out of the proceeds of the sale in the order of their priority as determined by the court.

The appeal here is on the part of the owners alone, there being no appeal on behalf of the contractors or the other defendants. It is claimed on the part of the appellants that there was no power in the court under the act of 1862, or according to the general principles of equity, to grant affirmative relief to the lienors who were defendants, for the sale of the premises and the payment of their respective liens from the proceeds. The contention is that the only relief which can be granted in a proceeding of this character is to direct a sale and foreclosure of the plaintiffs lien, leaving the question in respect to the rights of the several co-defendants to be determined on an application for the distribution of the surplus moneys arising upon the sale. It is very clear that under the act of 1862, lienors prior to the plaintiff were properly made defendants in the action. The twelfth section provides that in all sales under judgments in the proceedings, the interest of the owner should be sold subject to all prior liens existing thereon, unless the claimants under such liens shall be made parties to the proceedings, clearly implying that prior lienors may be made defendants in the action.

We are of opinion also that according to the general practice in equity, subsequent lienors if not necessary, are proper defendants for the purpose of having the amount and priorities of their respective liens established, and that a judgment may properly provide for a sale of premises in behalf of all lienors, when made parties to the proceedings and for the payment to them of their liens according to their respective rights. A proceeding for the foreclosure of a mechanic’s lien is analogous to the proceedings for the foreclosure of a mortgage, and in respect to the latter it is well settled that all subsequent mortgagees are proper parties to the foreclosure of a prior mortgage *546 (Story’s Equity Pleadings, § 193), and the former practice in chancery permitted defendants in an action of foreclosure holding junior mortgages to litigate as between themselves, all questions arising in respect to the existence and priority of their several mortgages. In Beekman v. Gibbs (8 Paige, 511), the chancellor granted the application of a subsequent mortgagee, who was a party to the foreclosure of a prior mortgage, to have inserted in the decree a direction to the master to sell sufficient of the mortgaged premises to satisfy the junior mortgage in addition to the complainant’s mortgage, but held that since the act of 1840, to reduce the expenses of the foreclosure of mortgages in chancery, distribution of the proceeds of sale could not be made to subsequent incumbrancers until after the master’s report of the sale had been filed and the surplus money brought into court, for the reason that as by that act judgment creditors were not necessary parties to the foreclosure, and were cut off by the sale, they should have an opportunity to be heard in respect to the distribution. In the subsequent case of Tower v. White (10 Paige, 395), which was an action of foreclosure, the chancellor said, Previous to the adoption of the 123d and the 136th rules of this court, junior incumbrancers, who were made defendants, not only were authorized to litigate their claims with the complainant, but also with their several co-defendants, previous to the decree of sale. And as a general rule they were required to do so. (Renwick v. Macomb, Hopk. Ch. 277.)” “ The object of these two rules,” the chancellor further said, was to relieve the complainant from the expense and delay of the litigation between co-defendants, or of attempting to set up their respective rights in his bill.” There was undoubtedly great inconvenience in permitting co-defendants in a foreclosure action to litigate between themselves in that action, questions in which the complainant had no interest, and while the power of the court to permit such a litigation cannot well be denied,it has been the recent practice for the court to decline to delay the plaintiff in his proceedings, to await the determination of a controversy between co-defendants. It cannot, however, we think be doubted that *547 in proceedings under the Mechanic’s Lien Laws, it is the most convenient and expedient practice to permit the adjustment and settlement in a single action, of all liens upon the premises arising under the same contract, and we think this practice is justified not oiily by the inherent power of a court of equity in the absence of statutory regulation to control and manage its procedure, but by the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure. Section 1204, which is a substantial re-enactment of section 274 of the prior Code, provides that judgment may be given for or against one or more plaintiffs, and for or against one or more defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
93 N.Y. 539, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenney-v-apgar-ny-1883.