Lynch v. Cashman
This text of 3 E.D. Smith 660 (Lynch v. Cashman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Although, by the terms of the building contract, payments may become payable from the owner to the contractor after the lien is filed; a subcontractor has no remedy under the act of 1851, if such payments have in good faith been previously anticipated and discharged.
Otherwise, however, if the prepayments were designed to evade the statute and defraud the laborer or material man of its benefits.
May, 1857.
Before Brady, J.
This was an action instituted under the statute of 1851, “ for the better security of mechanics and others,” to enforce a claim for labor performed and materials furnished by the plaintiffs, pursuant to an agreement with a builder, in conformity with the latter’s contract with an owner of a house and lot.
' The ordinary proceedings having been taken to effect and bring to a close a lien upon the premises, issues were joined, upon' complaint and answer, between the subcontractors as plaintiffs and the owners as defendant.
The cause came before the court and a jury, in its order upon the trial calendar.
The original contract for the erection of the building provided that the builder should receive his payments, in installments at intervals of time. Some of these periods of payment, as fixed in the contract," were subsequent to the filing of the plaintiffs’ notice of lien. . But the testimony disclosed the [661]*661fact, that the owner had anticipated the times when the installments would, become payable, and had paid them to his contractor, in full, before the lien was docketed with the county clerk. In all respects, except as to time, the payments were made in conformity with the provisions of the contract.
The testimony was objected to by the defendant’s counsel, who insisted, that by the statute the plaintiffs acquired no equitable remedy, other than to secure the money actually due or to become due to the contractor at the time and after the notice of lien was filed; that the fact, that as between the owner and his contractor, all claims for payment were satisfied, was conclusive upon the claimants, and a legal, absolute bar to the maintenance of any action or proceeding under the statute in question.
The court, Beady, J., presiding, admitted the proffered testi- • mony, but held, at the close thereof, that the allegations of fraud and bad faith were so clearly negatived, as to render proper a dismissal of the suit.
Upon the defendant’s motion, the complaint was therefore dismissed, with costs. ■ •
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3 E.D. Smith 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynch-v-cashman-nyctcompl-1857.