Kurz v. Pappas Et Ux.

146 So. 100, 107 Fla. 861
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 28, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 146 So. 100 (Kurz v. Pappas Et Ux.) 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
Kurz v. Pappas Et Ux., 146 So. 100, 107 Fla. 861 (Fla. 1932).

Opinions

This was a suit to foreclose a mortgage against a large number of defendants. All of them either appeared, answered, or allowed decrees pro confesso to be entered against them. The complainant, A. W. Kurz, in the court below, was the assignee under a mortgage made by the defendants, D. Pappas, and Anna Pappas, his wife, to D. J. Diamond, dated Feb. 16, 1926. George W. Patchen, *Page 863 one of the appellees, was the record owner of the fee simple title of the property sought to be foreclosed upon. The sole controversy on this appeal is between the assignee of the mortgage, A. W. Kurz, and one George W. Patchen, who was successor in title to the property under the title conveyed by the foreclosure of a mechanic's lien against the property concerned.

From the final decree holding that appellant, Kurz's mortgage lien was inferior to Patchen's fee simple title, and that therefore Kurz could not foreclose his mortgage as against the interest of Patchen, this appeal was taken.

The record shows that in the first instance one Edgar L. Nash claimed a mechanic's lien on the property involved in this suit. Nash's claim to such lien was by virtue of having furnished materials and labor for the plumbing on the property from February, 1926, to August, 1926. The work was not paid for by the property owner who had caused it to be done. By reason of non-payment for the work Nash foreclosed his mechanic's lien on the property after the work was completed, and within the twelve months' statutory limitation allowed for beginning foreclosures of mechanic's liens.

The suit to foreclose the alleged mechanic's lien of Nash was instituted against Pappas, the then title holder, and his wife. In that suit the bill was filed, and the final decree was rendered, solely against Pappas as the then owner of the property. No other lien holders, although there appeared to be some in existence who had claims of record, were joined or attempted to be joined as parties defendant in the suit brought for foreclosure of the mechanic's lien. Nash, the complainant in the mechanic's lien case, secured a decree of foreclosure, and bid the property in at the sale. The title of Patchen to the property here concerned was based upon the transfer of the original owner's interest through the master's deed of *Page 864 same to Nash, who conveyed to one Dixon, who later conveyed to Patchen.

The principal contention of the appellant, Kurz, is that a mechanic's lien under the statute expires, or becomes extinguished as against a subsequent mortgagee, whose claim was of record when the lien foreclosure suit was instituted, provided the suit to foreclose the mechanic's lien was completed without making such subsequent mortgagee, or his assignee, a party defendant, and without the mechanic's lien claimant having asserted or attempted to assert his lien as against the subsequent mortgagee, within the one year limitation period provided by statute within which suits to foreclose mechanic's liens must be instituted against the owner.

But the law in this state is now settled to the contrary. And for us to uphold the contentions of appellant on this proposition we must of necessity overrule our previous recently decided case of Sandquist Snow, Inc. v. Kellogg,101 Fla. 568, 133 Sou. Rep. 65, 101 Fla. 579, 136 Sou. Rep. 235. This we are not disposed to do, since the decision in that case was deliberately arrived at by this Court in the light of all of the arguments now pressed upon us, and was later adhered to and reaffirmed by us on rehearing.

The holding in Sandquist Snow, Inc. v. Kellogg,supra, is to the effect that the holder of a mechanic's lien may, within the statutory period of twelve months from the date of the accrual of his lien, or of the filing and recording of the notice thereof, institute suit to enforce his lien, and that the only necessary party defendant to enable the lien holder to initially enforce it, is the owner of the fee of the property foreclosed against.

Or to express the idea in other words, it was held there, that in foreclosing a mechanic's lien against property, that it is not necessary for the mechanic's lien holder to join as defendants all parties having claims of record *Page 865 against the same property, in order that the priorities between the mechanic's lien holder and such outstanding claimants of record might be brought in issue within the twelve months' limitation, and adjudicated in the mechanic's lien suit.

Or to put it still another way, the holding of the case just cited is that where a suit to enforce a mechanic's lien is brought against the owner of the property within the statutory period, the failure to proceed against a subordinate lien holder of record by making him a party defendant to such suit within the statutory limitation of time for enforcing the lien, does not preclude the lien claimant from having the priority of the mechanic's lien over the mortgage determined in a subsequent suit brought to foreclose the mortgage, though the latter suit is filed more than twelve months after notice of lien was filed.

Mechanic's lien laws were enacted by the Legislature in obedience to the constitutional mandate contained in Section 22 of Article XVI of the State Constitution.* It was no doubt intended that the enforcement of the lien provided for in the statutes should be primarily in favor of mechanics "on the subject matter of their labor," and that such enforcement by foreclosure in equity should be both expeditious and direct in form, to accomplish its purpose.

The Legislature in enacting our mechanic's lien law was undoubtedly aware that to require second lien holders, in addition to the owner of the property or "subject matter" of the lien, to be made necessary parties defendant to the statutory mechanic's lien foreclosure suit, would not only add to the initial cost of the proceeding, but would greatly add to the delay in making the enforcement of the *Page 866 lien effective for realization by the very one whom it was intended specially to benefit. Therefore procedural requirements tending to delay were omitted from the statute, and none that were omitted can be implied by the courts to supply what the Legislature failed to express.

It was probably the opinion of the Legislature, in authorizing foreclosure proceedings in the first instance, to be maintained against the owner alone, that the owner, in many cases would promptly upon the filing of the suit against him, discharge the lien by paying the amount due against his property, and thereby enable the mechanic to immediately obtain the fruits of his labor, without having to await adjudication of possibly unnecessary controversies with other mere lien holders, whose claims would not be affected should the owner pay off the mechanic's claim in order to avoid forced collection with additional court costs.

We therefore conclude that our previous holdings on this subject heretofore deliberately arrived at, and expressed, in the case of Sandquist Snow, Inc. v. Kellogg, 101 Fla. 568, 133 Sou. Rep. 65, 101 Fla. 579, 136 Sou. Rep. 235, are sound in principle, and that the rule there declared should be followed in this case. The effect of the rule we now reaffirm is to permit at the option of the mechanic's lien holder, the priorities to be adjudicated either in the mechanic's lien foreclosure suit instituted by him, or in a subsequent suit in which such subordinate lien holders are made parties, in cases where they were not made parties in the mechanic's lien foreclosure suit.

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Bluebook (online)
146 So. 100, 107 Fla. 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kurz-v-pappas-et-ux-fla-1932.