P. Grassi & Bro., Inc. v. Lovisa & Pistoresi, Inc.

182 N.E. 68, 259 N.Y. 417, 83 A.L.R. 1149, 1932 N.Y. LEXIS 961
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 19, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 182 N.E. 68 (P. Grassi & Bro., Inc. v. Lovisa & Pistoresi, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
P. Grassi & Bro., Inc. v. Lovisa & Pistoresi, Inc., 182 N.E. 68, 259 N.Y. 417, 83 A.L.R. 1149, 1932 N.Y. LEXIS 961 (N.Y. 1932).

Opinion

Kellogg, J.

Sherman Square Studios Realty Corporation was the owner of premises in New York city known as 160 West Seventy-third street. Henry Cohen was the president of the corporation and its principal stockholder. He conceived a plan for the improvement of the premises by the erection of an apartment house building thereupon. As the first step toward this end Cohen caused a corporation to be organized under the name of 160 West Seventy-third Street Corporation. The certificate of incorporation provided that the capital stock should be $1,051,400; that the board of directors should consist of five members. Of the directors named in the certificate, one was a nephew of Henry Cohen and three others were employees of a firm of attorneys which acted throughout for Cohen and the Sherman Square Studios Realty Corporation. The new corporation was organized without capital paid in, and, for an extended period, issued no stock.

*419 In April, 1928, within two weeks after its organization, 160 West Seventy-third Street Corporation entered into a written contract with Sherman Square Studios Corporation. By this contract the latter corporation agrees to convey to the former the premises. 160 West Seventy-third street, with the buildings erected or to be erected thereupon, and the former agrees to purchase the same. Sherman Studios agrees to erect upon the premises an apartment house in accordance with certain plans and specifications. The corporation, 160 West Seventy-third Street, agrees, in consideration of the conveyance of the premises and the erection of the building, to deliver to Sherman Square Studios the entire issue of its capital stock, viz., 10,514 shares of the total par value of $1,051,400. It further agrees to pay over to Sherman Studios the proceeds of all loans, not exceeding $1,051,400, which it may procure through mortgages upon the premises, and to execute and deliver to it all leases of apartments in the building which it might negotiate. Thereafter, on April 9,1928, Sherman Studios Corporation conveyed to the corporation 160 West Seventy-third Street the premises 160 West Seventy-third street. Thereupon Sherman Studios began the construction of the building.

In the course of construction the corporation, 160 West Seventy-third Street, borrowed more than $900,000, securing the loan with mortgages on the Seventy-third street property. The moneys were paid out in part to cancel underlying mortgages, and the balance was paid to Sherman Studios. In April, 1929, the building was completed, and upon its completion the corporation, 160 West Seventy-third Street, in fulfillment of its contract, issued and delivered to Sherman Studios, or its transferees, 10,514 shares of its stock, representing the entire capital of the corporation.

In the course of the construction, the plaintiff furnished the labor and materials for the plastering; the defendant *420 Lovisa & Pistoresi the labor and materials for the marble installation; the defendant Jarcho Bros., Inc., the labor and materials for the plumbing. These were furnished to Sherman Studios under contracts made with it. After the corporation, 160 West Seventy-third Street, had paid over its shares of stock to Sherman Studios, and had otherwise complied with its contract, the material-men named filed mechanics’ liens against the premises to secure the payment to them of unpaid balances. Subsequently, upon the filing of undertakings, executed by the 160 West Seventy-third Street Corporation as principal and the defendant New Jersey Fidelity and Plate Glass Insurance Company as surety, conditioned for the payment of any judgment which might be recovered in actions to enforce the liens, the Supreme Court made an order discharging the Hens. In this action to enforce the claims of the plaintiff and the two materialmen who are defendants, judgment for the full amount of such claims has been granted in their favor.

It is provided in section 3 of the Lien Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 33) as follows: A contractor, subcontractor, laborer or material man, who performs labor or furnishes materials for the improvement of real property with the consent or at the request of the owner thereof, or of his agent, contractor or subcontractor, shall have a lien for the principal and interest of the value, or the agreed price, of such labor or materials upon the real property improved or to be improved and upon such improvement, from the time of filing a notice of such lien as prescribed in this chapter.” It is provided in section 4 as follows: “ 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.” Obviously the corporation 160 West Seventy-third Street was an owner with whose consent the plaintiff and the two defendant lienors furnished *421 materials and performed labor for the improvement of the real property of that corporation. Unless, therefore, Sherman Studios was a “ contractor,” within the meaning of section 4 of the Lien Law, such claimants acquired liens upon the premises for the full amount of their claims. On the other hand, if Sherman Studios were a contractor for 160 West Seventy-third Street Corporation, the claimants acquired no liens, for the reason that the latter corporation, at the time of the filing of the hens, had fully satisfied its contract with the former. The question is, therefore, whether or not Sherman Studios was in truth a contractor.”

The term ' contractor,’ when used in this chapter, means a person who enters into a contract with the owner of real property for the improvement thereof, or with the state or a municipal corporation for a public improvement.” (Lien Law, § 2.) The contractor whom the Lien Law has in view is one who would be so characterized in the common speech of men. He is one who, in the usual course of trade, has undertaken to improve the property of another. If he happens to have some interest in the land himself, his interest is an accident, and not the source and origin and occasion of his action.” (Per Cardozo, J., in McNulty Bros. v. Offerman, 221 N. Y. 98, 105.) In that case the facts considered were these: The owner of premises, upon which a department store had been erected, leased them to another. The lease contained provisions to the effect that the tenant might make certain alterations in the store of a character specifically described. The tenant agreed to make the alterations and the lessor agreed to contribute a substantial sum toward the performance of the work. The promise of the lessor was conditioned upon the performance of the work in the manner prescribed, and the prompt payment of all installments of rent. Material and labor, with which to make the improvements, were supplied to the tenant *422 by various persons. At the conclusion of the work these persons, not having been paid in full, filed mechanics’ hens against the property. As the tenant had not made the alterations prescribed by the lease, and had not paid the rentals provided for, the lessor was released from the obligation to make contribution, and owed the lessee nothing.

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Bluebook (online)
182 N.E. 68, 259 N.Y. 417, 83 A.L.R. 1149, 1932 N.Y. LEXIS 961, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/p-grassi-bro-inc-v-lovisa-pistoresi-inc-ny-1932.