M. F. Hickey Co. v. Imperial Realty Co.

65 Misc. 2d 1088, 319 N.Y.S.2d 972, 1970 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1184
CourtCivil Court of the City of New York
DecidedNovember 9, 1970
StatusPublished

This text of 65 Misc. 2d 1088 (M. F. Hickey Co. v. Imperial Realty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Civil Court of the City of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M. F. Hickey Co. v. Imperial Realty Co., 65 Misc. 2d 1088, 319 N.Y.S.2d 972, 1970 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1184 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1970).

Opinion

Leonard H. Sandler, J.

This action to foreclose mechanic’s liens presents for the court’s consideration some unusually interesting questions under the mechanic’s lien sections of the Lien Law. A preliminary statement of the background facts will facilitate an orderly analysis of the issues.

On or about March 3, 1964, 43rd Street Estates, Inc. (43rd Street) leased from a predecessor of Imperial Realty Co., Inc. (Imperial) premises 9-11 Park Avenue. That lease plainly contemplated that 43rd Street, with the consent of the lessor, would build a garage on the property, and included detailed provisions regulating aspects of the construction.

On August 23, 1965, 43rd Street entered into an agreement with G-.B.S. Construction Corporation (Gr.B.S.) to do the concrete work for the garage. It is agreed that the value of the contract, including extras, was $43,571. The contract included a provision that 43rd Street agreed to guarantee payment to suppliers of “ Concrete, lumber, reenforcing steel and/or mesh ’ ’. On August 27, 1965, 43rd Street executed written guarantees to two suppliers Capitol Steel Corporation (Capitol) and Canasco, Inc. (Canasco).

Shortly thereafter, Gr.B.S. assigned to Coleman Capital Corporation (Coleman) its rights to receive all money due and to become due on the contract, in consideration of Coleman’s agreement to lend up to $50,000 to finance its performance of the work under the contract. This assignment was duly filed and [1090]*1090notice was given to 43rd Street on or about September 10, 1965, before any claims had matured against G.B.S. for material or labor.

G.B.S. entered upon the performance of the work, and Coleman advanced moneys to it from time to time, reaching- a total of $35,803.36. 43rd Street made payments to G.B.S. and Coleman amounting to $22,500.

A dispute developed between G.B.S. and 43rd Street, the precise origin of which is obscure, but which culminated in a refusal by G.B.S. to complete the work, and a refusal by 43rd Street to make further payments.

The amount of work left undone, and the satisfactory quality of some aspects of the work that was finished presented the principal factual issue at the trial.

Following the cessation of work by G.B.S., notices of lien were filed in the following sequence: (1) by G.B.S. on November 26, 1965, alleging as the unpaid amount $20,229, identifying as the owner of the premises 43rd Street and Lawrence Wolf (which lien was assigned to Coleman); (2) by Capitol and Canasco on December 23, 1965; and (3) by the plaintiff M. F. Hickey Company, Inc. (Hickey) on January 20, 1966, alleging as the unpaid amount $6,704.08, and correctly identifying Imperial as the owner.

•Separate actions were thereafter commenced against 43rd Street by Capitol and Canasco, based on the guarantee agreements, which resulted in judgments in their favor totaling $3,146.61, that were in fact paid by 43rd Street.

During the same period, G.B.S. and Coleman sued 43rd Street and Lawrence Wolf, and secured a partial summary judgment in the amount of $12,926.52, plus interest and costs, which was collected by execution against Wolf. Another motion for partial summary judgment, in which the legal effects of the payments to Capitol and Canasco were contested, was denied.

The present lawsuit was commenced by Hickey, seeking to establish and foreclose a lien for $6,704.08 for material it provided and for related relief. Named as defendants were Imperial G.B.S., Coleman, Canasco and Capitol (which did not appear), and other companies which did not participate and are of no present concern. Imperial interposed an answer denying (irresponsibly, as it developed) that it had consented to the construction of the garage, and also impleaded 43rd Street, alleging accurately that 43rd Street had promised to assume full responsibility for and to discharge any liens resulting from the construction.

[1091]*1091Coleman, interposed a cross claim, seeking to establish and foreclose on a lien as to both the fee and leasehold interests for an amount ultimately estimated by it to be $7,294.48.

At the close of the trial Coleman moved to amend its pleadings to add a claim in contract against 43rd Street for the -same amount — a motion which I herewith grant, finding it fully consonant with the language and purposes of sections 54 and 64 of the Lien Law.

The threshold question of whether Imperial consented to the construction of the garage requires not discussion but a rebuke. Imperial’s claim that it had not consented, elaborated at length in a memorandum submitted at the beginning of the trial, is transparently false. The governing lease, not available to the court during trial, could not be more explicit in disclosing that Imperial had indeed ‘‘ consented ’ ’.

What makes this reckless denial a matter of acute concern is the circumstance that a Judge of this court was clearly prevailed upon to reopen a prior default judgment by this contention, which is now revealed as spurious and a shabby imposition on the court.

Although strongly tempted to reconsider my refusal at trial to reinstate the default judgment, I have decided not to do so in view of the substantial issues that were in fact raised on the trial.

In this case, as in every case in which foreclosure of a mechanic’s lien is sought, a prime question is to ascertain the ‘ ‘ fund ’ ’ to which the liens attach. This follows from the controlling language of section 4 of the Lien Law: 1 c If labor is performed for, or materials furnished to, a contractor or subcontractor for an improvement, the lien shall not be for a sum greater than the sum earned and unpaid on the contract at the time of filing the notice of lien, and any sum subsequently earned thereon. In no case shall the owner be liable to pay by reason of all liens created pursuant to this article a sum greatér than the value or agreed price of the labor and materials remaining unpaid, at the time of filing notices of such liens

In the light of this provision I believe that the issues raised can be most usefully analyzed by considering in order the following questions.

First, how much money, if any, was owed Gr.RS. when it terminated its work, and when the notices of lien were filed? This question is primarily factual.

Second, what are the legal effects on the claims of Coleman and Hickey of the payments made after the filing of the notices to (1) Coleman, and (2) to Capitol and Canasco?

[1092]*1092Finally, assuming that either or both of the claims survive that inquiry, what are the respective priorities of the claims as against one another, and to what interests do the claims attach?

Turning to the question of the amount owing to Gr.B.S. when' it terminated the work, a sharp issue of fact was presented. Gr.B.S. claimed that it had fully and properly performed except for several minor items, the value of which it estimated at about $850, whereas 43rd Street claimed that the unfinished work and Avork improperly done had a significantly greater value.

After a careful review of the testimony, I find that the account presented by Gr.B.S., taken as a whole and in its individual aspects, is more credible, consistent and persuasive than the contrary version.

Accordingly, I conclude that, when the work terminated, Gr.B.S. had completely performed except for items with a total value of $850.

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Bluebook (online)
65 Misc. 2d 1088, 319 N.Y.S.2d 972, 1970 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-f-hickey-co-v-imperial-realty-co-nycivct-1970.