L. A. Storch & Co. v. Marginal Realty Corp.

109 Misc. 669
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 109 Misc. 669 (L. A. Storch & Co. v. Marginal Realty Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
L. A. Storch & Co. v. Marginal Realty Corp., 109 Misc. 669 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1919).

Opinion

Lehman, J.

The plaintiff herein is a subcontractor

who performed work and provided material for the defendant Wells Brothers Company in the improvement of certain premises in the city of New York known by the street numbers 513, 515, 517 and 519 West Twenty-fifth street. The Marginal Realty Corporation was, and still is, the owner in fee of these premises, and on or about the 12th day of January, 1916, entered into an agreement with the defendant Wells Brothers Company whereby it agreed to pay to the Wells Brothers Company the cost and an agreed percentage upon said cost, not, however, to exceed the sum of $190,000, for the erection of an eight-story building on this property. Wells Brothers Company carried out the work until it was almost completed, and then, owing to a dispute as to payments due, it abandoned the work. Under the terms of the contract the Marginal Realty Company had the right if the contract was abandoned to complete the work for itself and to charge the expense of the labor, tools and materials to the contractor. Acting under this provision the Marginal Realty Company proceeded to complete the building. Thereafter the plaintiff and the defendants filed mechanics’ liens for the amount due and unpaid to them by Wells Brothers Company. It is undisputed that the cost of the work performed by the Wells Brothers Company prior to its abandonment of the contract exceeded the sum of $190,000. ' It is also undisputed that it performed extra work upon the order of the Marginal Realty Company in the sum of $23,963.94, so that the total amount payable by the owner under the contract and for the extra work is the sum of $213,963.94. The owner has [671]*671paid to Wells Brothers Company on account the sum of $199,531.81, leaving a balance due of $14,432.13. The owner has also expended in the completion of the contract at least the sum of $3,817.62 and has paid on account of the contractor to subcontractors the sum of $2,204.51. The subcontractors claim that the balance of $8,410 is the amount still due to the contractor which can be applied upon their liens filed against the property. The owner, on the other hand, claims that in addition to these undisputed amounts it has paid out or made itself liable for the sum of $2,462.35 spent in repairing defective waterproofing work, and that in addition it will cost approximately $6,000 to make the work entirely waterproof, and that under a contract with the waterproofing company it will be obliged to pay at least one-half of the entire cost of repairing the waterproofing, and that therefore the amount in its hands applicable to the liens of the subcontractors must be correspondingly reduced. It further claims that it has been obliged to pay a small item of $209 to another subcontractor to complete his work. The evidence produced by the defendant in regard to these items is extremely unsatisfactory. It appears sufficiently that the waterproofing was rendered defective by carelessness of the masons who pierced at some places the waterproof membrane. On the other hand, it appears that a considerable part of the holes in the membrane were caused not by the masons employed by Wells Brothers Company, but by masons employed by the owner, for whose negligence the owner is responsible. After carefully considering the evidence produced on this point I have come to the conclusion that the defendant’s proof of the cost and necessity of doing this work in order to complete Wells Brothers Company’s contract is so unsatisfactory that the court should disregard it. Since it appears, however, that he was obliged to incur at least some expense to repair the [672]*672defects in the waterproofing work, the owner claims that he is entitled to charge such expense to the fund in his hands before the liens can attach thereto, and that since the burden is on the lienor to show the sum due after the completion of the work, the court cannot disregard the evidence produced by the owner, however unsatisfactory that evidence may be, for then there would be no evidence of the actual cost of completion, and consequently the lienors would not have sustained their burden of proving the amount due by the owner upon the contract. Brainard v. County of Kings, 155 N. Y. 538. To some extent this contention of the owner seems to me to be sound. There is, however, some basis for a finding as to the amount expended by the owner aside from the evidence set forth above. The owner in its answer alleges “ that the reasonable cost and value of the work that remained to be done by it for and on account of said Wells Brothers Company was approximately the sum of $5,071.19, * * * but said work not having as yet been entirely completed, the defendant states that said figure is only an estimate.” It also alleges in the answer that “ since this defendant, including expenditures already made and those that it will be obliged to make in order to complete the work of the said contract, will have expended not less than the sum of $206,807.51, there will remain in the hands of this defendant not exceeding the sum of $7,156.43 due and payable to the said Wells Brothers Company on account of the work of said contract or to those claiming under said Wells Brothers Company as lienors or otherwise.” These figures in the answer are, of course, not entirely binding upon the defendant, for the answer expressly states that the figures are only an estimate. Yet they constitute an admission on the part of the defendant, and in the absence of more satisfactory evidence I feel that the court is justified in basing its finding of the actual cost of completion [673]*673upon these figures, even though they be expressly stated to be only approximate and subject to correction. In adopting these figures I am allowing to the owner the full cost of the undisputed items and a considerable sum in addition upon the disputed items, even though the evidence produced by the owner in regard to them is unsatisfactory. There is practically no dispute as to the amount of work performed by each of the subcontractors or as to the amount due to each of them from the Wells Brothers Company. Since, however, the fund in the hands of the owner is insufficient to pay in full all the claims of the subcontractors, the liens filed have become the subject of attack and counterattack in an endeavor by each lienor to obtain priority of payment for his own claim. The objection to the plaintiff’s lien is that the notice of lien filed does not comply with subdivision 4 of section 9 of the Lien Law, and the lien of the John P. Kane Company, which is next in order of priority of filing to that of the plaintiff, is attacked on the ground that the notice of lien does not comply with subdivision 7 of the same section. The determination of the question of whether the notice of the plaintiff and the notice of the John P. Kane Company sufficiently complied with the statute will necessarily also determine the validity of the other liens attacked on similar grounds, and for that reason it is necessary to give serious consideration only to these two notices. The plaintiff’s notice of lien states: “ 4a. The labor performed was installation of roofing work, skylights, gutters, leaders and flashings, b. The labor to be performed is installation of wire screens for skylights and door hoods, c. The material furnished was copper for skylights, gutters, flashings and leaders, and felt, pitch and slag for roofing, d. The material to be furnished is galvanized wire screens for skylights and copper for hoods over doors, e. The agreed price and value of said labor is $900. f. The agreed price and value of

43 [674]*674said material is $4,511.52.” Prior to 1916 the Lien Law provided: “ Section 9.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Westinghouse Electric Supply Co. v. Western Seed Production Corp.
580 P.2d 1231 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1978)
Blackman-Shapiro Co. v. Salzberg
8 Misc. 2d 972 (City of New York Municipal Court, 1957)
Genesee Lumber & Coal Co. v. Bonarrigo
233 A.D. 455 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1931)
John Roshirt, Inc. v. Rosenstock
138 Misc. 515 (New York Supreme Court, 1930)
Pascual v. Greenleaf Park Land Co.
218 A.D. 548 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 Misc. 669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-a-storch-co-v-marginal-realty-corp-nysupct-1919.