Mowbray v. Levy
This text of 85 A.D. 68 (Mowbray v. Levy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
• The decision is in the short- form authorized by section 1022 of the Code. The appeal by the defendant is upon the judgment roll alone, and, therefore, the decision that the plaintiff was never, entitled to any lien must stand. (Gardner v. N. Y. Mut. S. & L. Assn., 67 App. Div. 141; Matter of Health Department v. Weekes, 22 id. 110.) But the court gave personal judgment against the defendant for- $400 for services, and the defendant excepted1 to that part of the decision on' the ground of want of jurisdiction. The sole question, then, for review, is whether, in an action to foreclose, a [69]*69mechanic’s lien, when it is finally determined therein that the plaintiff could never have had any mechanic’s lien, the court may proceed to render a personal judgment. It is insisted that this is permitted by section 3412 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which reads as follows: “ If the lienor shall fail, for any reason, to establish a valid lien in an action under the provisions of this title, he may recover judgment therein for such sums as are due him, or which he might recover in an action on a contract against any party to the action.”
Upon his plea of statutory lien the plaintiff invokes the statutory remedy to enforce it, and only thus gains the ear of the equity court* Though that court decides that a mechanic’s lien was never avail» able, the suitor nevertheless insists that he is entitled to a common-law judgment because the statute providing for the enforcement of •such lien incidentally permits it. If in.such a case it does afford such remedy, then I think it is unconstitutional in that it deprives his adversary of a jury trial. The distinction to be kept in mind is that the court of equity has determined it could never have acquired jurisdiction in this case. The equity court will not steal its jurisdiction from the law side of the court, but when it fairly belongs there it may retain it in order to do justice, even though it is necessary to give a personal judgment. The distinction is stated by O'Brien, J., in Dudley v. Congregation, etc., of St. Francis (138 N. Y. 451) and Parker, Ch. J., in McNulty v. Mount Morris Electric Light Co. (172 id. 410). That so drastic an application of the statute law would be unconstitutional is, I think, virtually the ground of the decision in McDonald v. Mayor (58 App. Div. 73; 170 N. Y. 409) and Altieri v. Lyon (13 N. Y. Supp. 617).
But I think that section 3412 of the Code of Civil Procedure is not so to be construed. Its terms are not a declaration that, although there could never be a lien, the plaintiff may proceed to personal judgment under the guise of a proceeding to enforce a lien. I construe the statute to mean that in a case where equity has jurisdiction, where a mechanic’s lien was permissible and was filed, and it appears on the foreclosure trial that in consequence of some technicality or informality the lienor must be defeated on his lien, the court may, nevertheless, in the interest of substantial justice, render a personal judgment. I think that' the fail[70]*70ure “ to establish a valid lien,” which permits the lienor nevertheless to go on and to recover a money judgment, does not mean that this can be done if the plaintiff could never have had a lien at all; but that it applies to. cases in which the lien has been .defeated by the lapse of time, the intervention of prior liens which eat up the fund, or some occurrence of like character or import, the effect of which is to prevent the creation of a lien to which the plaintiff would otherwise be entitled. I have not attempted any general definition. Definitions are often dangerous. But I have tried to" indicate demarcation. In other words,, where a court of equity, . “upon the broad facts” in the case, has jurisdiction, it will retain it to' prevent injustice, even though the remedy must be a personal judgment. The very cases cited by the learned counsel for the respondent indicate, almost without exception, the distinction which I have sought to express. . In Glacius v. Black (67 N. Y. 563) we are referred to the same case (50 bl. Y. 145). There the court say: “ The point is made by the appellant that the judgment should be reversed without a new trial, claiming that the lien lias expired, and no personal judgment can be rendered against the defendant. This position is not tenable. If the lien has expired, the action can still be. prosecuted as a personal action. The twentieth section as amended in 1871
The-judgment should be reversed.
Bartlett, Woodward, Hirschberg and Hooker, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the final award of costs.
Laws of 1854, chap. 402, §20, as amd. hy Laws of-1871, chap. 188.— [Rep.
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85 A.D. 68, 82 N.Y.S. 959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mowbray-v-levy-nyappdiv-1903.