Noland Co. v. Chelsea Housing Corp.

128 F.2d 872, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3744
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJune 8, 1942
DocketNo. 7882
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 128 F.2d 872 (Noland Co. v. Chelsea Housing Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Noland Co. v. Chelsea Housing Corp., 128 F.2d 872, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3744 (3d Cir. 1942).

Opinion

MARIS, Circuit Judge.

Chelsea Housing Corporation, as owner, entered into a contract in New Jersey with Anthony P. Miller, Inc., as contractor, for the construction of a housing project in Atlantic City, New Jersey. The construction contract specifications were duly filed in the office of the county clerk of Atlantic County as prescribed by the Mechanics’ Lien Law of New Jersey, N. J.S.A. 2:60 — 105 et seq. The contractor entered into a contract in writing with Irving J. Gluck, Inc., the subcontractor, to furnish and install the complete plumbing, heating and drainage system for the building project. The subcontractor purchased from the plaintiff, Noland Company, Inc., plumbing and heating materials having a stipulated value of $34,468.10. On December 6, 1939 the subcontractor failed to meet its weekly payroll and on December 14th it wrote the contractor requesting the latter to meet the payroll and authorizing it to deduct amounts so paid from the moneys due the subcontractor. The contractor did so. It completed the work at a cost at least equal to the sum which it owed the subcontractor. In completing the work the contractor used all the materials supplied by the plaintiff. After the subcontractor failed to comply with the plaintiff’s demand for payment the latter filed its stop notice in accordance with the New Jersey Mechanics’ Lien Law, N.J.S.A. 2:60-116 and served copies of the notice upon the owner and contractor. Despite the notice the owner paid the contractor the entire balance of $319,018.84 still owing on the contract between them. The plaintiff recovered a default judgment against the subcontractor and then instituted suit against the owner in the District Court for the District of New Jersey. It recovered judgment for $34,468.10 with interest. This appeal by the owner followed.

The appeal presents the question whether one who has supplied materials to a subcontractor for a building project and has filed and served a stop notice in compliance with the New Jersey Mechanics’ Lien Law is entitled under that law to priority of payment out of moneys due the contractor by the owner upon the principal contract even though the contractor is not indebted to the subcontractor. In deciding this question we must apply the statute as it has been construed by the New Jersey courts even though, if we were to give independent consideration to its meaning, we might reach a different result. The provisions of the Mechanics’ Lien Law which are involved are Sections 2:60-116 and 117, N.J.S.A. 2:60-116, 117. Their text is set out in a footnote.1 The effect [874]*874of these statutory provisions in a situation such as the one now before us has been twice before the New Jersey courts. In each of these, cases the dispute was between the contractor and a materialman of a subcontractor as to .moneys due the contractor by the owner but which the owner-had deposited in the registry of the court because of the question raised by the filing of the stop notice by the material-man. In each case the contractor completed the work of the subcontractor at a cost in excess of the sum owing under the subcontract.

In the earlier case, Morris County Golf Club v. Hegeman-Harris Co., N.J.Ch.1923, 121 A. 528, the Court of Chancery held that under the statutory provisions to which we have referred the contractor was entitled to the fund payable by the owner as against the unpaid materialman of the subcontractor. The decision was affirmed by the Court of Errors and Appeals, sub nom. George A. Mills Co. v. Hegeman-Harris Co., 94 N.J.Eq. 802, 122 A. 926, 125 A. 127, upon the opinion of the Court of Chancery. It squarely rules the question now before us and would end the discussion except for a case decided ten years later, St. Michael’s Orphan Asylum and Industrial School of Hopewell v. Conneen Constr. Co., 1933, 114 N.J.Eq. 276, 166 A. 458, affirmed upon the opinion below 115 N.J.Eq. 334, 170 A. 649, upon which the plaintiff relies as authority in support of its judgment.

The plaintiff’s first contention is that the Conneen case has in effect overruled the decision in the Hegeman-Harris case. Our examination of the Conneen opinion, however, convinces us that this contention cannot be sustained. The opinion in the case was written by a vice chancellor. Obviously it was not within his competence to overrule the prior decision of his court in the Hegeman-Harris case since that decision had been affirmed by the Court of Errors and Appeals. While he expressed disagreement with the construction placed upon the statute by the Hegeman-Harris case he recognized the binding force of that decision but concluded that it was inapplicable to the situation before him because of a difference in the facts which he emphasized as significant and of such weight as to require a different ruling. The distinction upon which he relied was that in the Con-neen case title to the materials involved was by the provisions of the subcontract intended to pass and did actually pass to the contractor upon their delivery at the site of the work. This fact, which was not present in the Hegeman-Harris case, does raise a valid distinction for, as the Vice Chancellor said (114 N.J.Eq. page 281, 166 A. page 460) : “It -is unthinkable that a contractor, who is liable for the performance of his contract with the owner in a case where by his contract with the subcontractor he assumes title to all the property and materials delivered on the job, can avoid payment for these materials because he expends more money in the completion of the subcontractor’s contract than the balance due under that contract.” It may be that the Vice Chancellor stressed this difference in facts because he was anxious to avoid giving effect to the construction of the statute by the Hegeman-Harris case which he considered unsound but, which he was without power to overrule. The Court of Errors and Appeals, however, when the Conneen case came to it on appeal, did not take the plainly proffered opportunity to overrule the Hege-man-Harris decision. Instead it affirmed [875]*875the decision of the Court of Chancery [115 N.J.Eq. 334, 170 A. 652] “for the reasons expressed in the opinion delivered by Vice Chancellor Davis,” which, as we have seen, expressly distinguished the two cases. We must, therefore, accept the decision in Hegeman-Harris as still expressing the law of New Jersey and apply it, unless we find present in this case the distinguishing fact which was present in the Conneen case, namely that title to the materials furnished by the plaintiff was intended to and did pass to the contractor.

It is the second contention of the plaintiff that the present case is ruled by the Conneen case and not by Hegeman-Harris because the distinguishing feature of the Conneen case, transfer of title to the materials, is in fact present here. In support of this contention it relies upon several clauses in the subcontract and one in the principal contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 F.2d 872, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noland-co-v-chelsea-housing-corp-ca3-1942.