Lycee Francais v. Calagna

26 Misc. 2d 374, 204 N.Y.S.2d 490, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2889
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 26 Misc. 2d 374 (Lycee Francais v. Calagna) 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
Lycee Francais v. Calagna, 26 Misc. 2d 374, 204 N.Y.S.2d 490, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2889 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1960).

Opinion

Matthew M. Levy, J.

This is an application by the petitioner Lycee Francais de New York, a domestic corporation and the owner of certain real property against which a mechanic’s lien was filed by each of the respondents Calagna and Siegel, to cancel of record the notices of those liens and the under[375]*375takings given by the Travelers Indemnity Company to discharge them. The ground of the application is that the time, pursuant to section 19 of the Lien Law, within which to bring an action to foreclose the liens or to obtain an order of extension has expired.

The facts presented are as follows: The petitioner, Lycee Francais de New York, is an educational corporation chartered by the New York Board of Regents. In September, 1957 it entered into a contract with Elco Construction Corporation for the building of an addition to its school on certain premises owned by it at No. 5 East 95th Street, New York City. On July 11, 1958 the respondent Calagna, asserting that he had a claim against Elco in the sum of $32,994.59 for work, labor and services rendered in that project, filed a notice of mechanic’s lien, naming Lycee Francais de New York as the owner of the property affected, giving 22 East 60th Street, New York City, as the owner’s address, and describing the location of the subject property as 5 East 95th Street, New York City. The petitioner’s address was not at the place specified (its correct address is 5 East 95th Street, New York City), but the notice of lien gave the correct address for the property on which the work was done. On September 12, 1958 the respondent Siegel filed a mechanic’s lien in the very same manner for the sum of $2,000.

On October 9, 1958 the respondent Calagna instituted an action in this court to foreclose his lien. In the summons and complaint in that action, he named as defendants, in addition to others, Charles de Ferry de Fontnouvelle, Jean de Sieyes and Pierre A. Bedard, whom he sued therein as doing business under the firm name and style of Lycee Francais de New York, and alleged that they were owners of premises 5 East 95th Street, the property against which, it will be recalled, the mechanic’s liens were asserted and filed. The other lienor, Siegel, was also named as a defendant in that action. A notice of pendency of the action was filed by the respondent Calagna which indicated, similarly, that Lycee Francais de New York was a copartnership, consisting of the three named individuals, de Fontnouvelle, de Sieyes and Bedard. On October 27, 1958 Bonaco Construction Co., Inc., a guarantor of the construction contract and a defendant in the foreclosure action, bonded the two mechanic’s liens, pursuant to the orders of this court, in the requisite amounts to discharge them. These bonds were issued by Travelers, and they are the bonds now sought to be cancelled of record. Thereafter Bonaco caused to be filed an undertaking in discharge of the lis pendens of the foreclosure [376]*376action. On February 20, 1959 the respondent Siegel interposed an answer in the foreclosure action and set up a counterclaim against the other defendants for foreclosure of his mechanic’s lien. In his counterclaim, Siegel made the identical allegations regarding the ownership of the subject premises, namely, that de Fontnouvelle, de Sieyes and Bedard were the owners thereof as a copartnership doing business under the name of Lycee Francais de New York.

On April 23, 1959 the defendant de Sieyes moved for summary judgment to dismiss the Calagna complaint in the foreclosure action and the Siegel counterclaim therein, on the ground that (as would appear from the deeds on file in the office of the Register of New York County) Lycee Francais de New York, a corporation- — and not the three named individuals — is and was the owner of the real property affected. The respondent Calagna countered by bringing on a cross motion to amend his notice of lien and his notice of pendency of action nunc pro tunc so as to designate Lycee Francais de New York, a corporation, as the owner of the premises. The defendant de Sieyes opposed the cross motion on jurisdictional and procedural grounds and on the merits, claiming that the notice of lien was defective and that it could not be amended. The court granted the motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint and counterclaim against the individual defendants de Fontnouvelle, de Sieyes and Bedard and denied, without prejudice, the application to amend. It does not appear that either the notices of lien or the notice of pendency was ever amended. Thereafter, and on July 13, 1959, the respondent Calagna, as plaintiff therein, obtained an order of the court permitting the discontinuance of the foreclosure action without prejudice.

The petitioner contends that the mechanic’s liens filed by the respondents are jurisdictionally defective because they fail to state the true name of the owner of the property against which the liens are claimed, and that, as the respondent Siegel did not commence a foreclosure action or file a notice of pendency of action within one year after his notice of lien was filed, his lien, if valid ab initio, has lapsed. Contrariwise, the respondents contend that the notices of liens are valid in that 1 ‘ Lycee Francais de New York ”, in so many words, was named as the owner; and that if, from the process and pleading in the subsequent foreclosure action, the owner was mistakenly described as a partnership of three individuals doing business as “ Lycee Francais de New York”, the notices as filed nevertheless constitute sufficient notice to the owner. Secondly, it is contended [377]*377by them that, in pursuance of section 17 of the Lien Law (which provides that a lien may be continued for a period of one year by order of the court), Calagna on June 29, 1959 duly obtained an ex parte order continuing his lien accordingly, and that, on September 8, 1959, after this order was granted, he commenced a new foreclosure action naming as the defendants therein the petitioner, the respondent Siegel as a lienor, and others. Further, it is asserted that, in this new action, Siegel has already been served with the summons and complaint and that process has been issued for service on the other defendants. It is, therefore, contended that Siegel’s lien was continued by the commencement of this last action.

In response thereto, the petitioner asserts that it ascertained for the first time after bringing this present application that the respondent Calagna had obtained the ex parte order from this court continuing his lien, or that Calagna had commenced a new action in foreclosure. Moreover, the petitioner contends that the continuation of the Calagna lien by the ex parte order of the court was ineffective to keep the lien alive, as the lien filed originally was jurisdictionally defective. In addition, it asserts that it has not been served with process in the new foreclosure action, and that it does not appear that any of the defendants therein (with the possible exception of Siegel) has been served with the summons and complaint in such second action, or with any answer that might have been interposed by Siegel. Nor, as pointed out by the petitioner, does it appear that Calagna or Siegel had ever filed a notice of pendency of the new action.

The first question that must be considered is whether or not the notices of lien were valid. The filing of the notice is the act that creates the lien. There is no lien prior to notice. The Lien Law provides specifically, and in mandatory terms, for the contents of the notice (§ 9).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Misc. 2d 374, 204 N.Y.S.2d 490, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lycee-francais-v-calagna-nysupct-1960.