Peoples Bank of Jax. v. Va. Bridge Iron Co.

113 So. 680, 94 Fla. 474
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedAugust 1, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 113 So. 680 (Peoples Bank of Jax. v. Va. Bridge Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peoples Bank of Jax. v. Va. Bridge Iron Co., 113 So. 680, 94 Fla. 474 (Fla. 1927).

Opinion

Statement.

The Virginia Bridge and Iron Company, one of the appellees here, filed its bill in the Circuit Court for Duval County against the Tidewater Glass Manufacturing Company and the United States Trust Company to enforce a material man’s lien for certain structural steel which had been sold by the complainant on written contract to the Glass Company for use by the latter for the construction of a certain furnace room and warehouse building on certain property in the City of Jacksonville. The United States Trust Company was also made a party defendant to the bill, it being alleged that the Trust Company claimed some interest in the premises, as purchaser, mortgagee or otherwise, the precise nature thereof being unknown to complainant, but that such interest, claim or lien, if any, was created or arose while the construction of the buildings of said Glass Company, in which complain *477 ant’s material was used, was in progress, and that, therefore, said Trust Company was a purchaser or creditor with notice of complainant’s lien, and prayed a foreclosure of its lien as a prior lien over that of the Trust Company for the amount due it for such structural steel above mentioned, and also for a money decree for certain steel which had been contracted for but which the Glass Company had declined to take for the amount of the contract price less the fair market value of such unshipped material which had been fabricated by the complainant for the Glass Company in accordance with said written contract. Demurrers to the .bill filed by the Glass Company and the Trust Company were overruled. Both defendants then filed their separate answers. The Trust Company alleged that its lien on the property had been created by a mortgage executed by the Glass Company to it and denied that its interest in the property described in the bill was created or arose while the construction of the building or buildings of said Glass Company were in progress, and alleged upon information and belief that prior to the acquisition by the Trust Company of its mortgage lien the construction on said buildings had ceased or had been suspended. This answer also denied that the Trust Company had any actual notice at the time of the acquisition of its lien that the complainant had supplied any material for said buildings, and hence that its lien was not inferior to the lien of the complainant. It also denied that complainant ’s alleged lien for material furnished had been recorded in accordance with the statute at the time of the execution and delivery of said mortgage. No copy of the mortgage was set forth in or attached as an exhibit to the answer. General replications were filed by the complainant to both answers and a special master was appointed. Most of the evidence taken before the special master consisted of the *478 stipulation as to the facts entered into between the parties. This stipulation showed that the complainant Bridge and Iron Company had entered into a contract with the Glass Company for the fabrication and shipment to it of certain structural steel, and that under this contract four carloads of such steel was shipped and delivered by the Bridge and Iron Company to the Glass Company between December 8th and the following January 9th. That the Glass Company had accepted and used said materials in the erection of a building or buildings upon the plant site described in the bill and thereupon became indebted to the Bridge and Iron Company in the sum of $7,999.33, for which amount the Bridge Company claimed a lien; that the Bridge and Iron Company was ready, willing and able to ship and deliver the balance of such material covered by the contract, but that the Glass Company had defaulted in its payments under the contract and had notified the Bridge Company that it was not ready to accept delivery of the remainder. That thereupon the Bridge and Iron Company suspended loading and shipping the material under said contract, with the exception of four angles weighing seventeen pounds which were shipped and delivered on April 9th, and that on the 14th of May it gave written notice to the Glass Company and terminated said contract in accordance with its terms. There was also evidence tending to show that the Bridge Company was entitled to a balance of $4,727.14 for the remainder of the material which it had prepared to ship under the contract less its scrap value.

The final decree adjudged that the complainant was entitled to a lien for $7,999.33 on the lands and property described in the bill, superior to the mortgage of the defendant Trust Company, and that the complainant was also entitled to a money decree for said sum of $4,727.14, *479 but that this latter claim did not constitute a material man’s lien and was not superior to the Trust Company’s mortgage. A foreclosure sale was decreed and execution was ordered to issue for the amount of the money decree.

About a month after the rendition of the final decree, and before the sale had taken place thereunder, .the Peoples Bank of Jacksonville filed a petition for intervention. At this time the litigation had been proceeding for about a year. Among other things, this petition alleged that said Peoples Bank was the owner and holder of eight promissory notes, aggregating $20,000.00, together with interest thereon at 8%, which was secured by the mortgage given by the Glass Company to the United States Trust Company, which mortgage was dated on April 2nd and recorded on April 23rd, and that petitioner paid to said Glass Company the sum of $20,000.00 for said notes on April 25th, without any notice, actual or constructive, of the alleged lien of the Bridge Company on the property described in the mortgage or trust deed and in the belief that said mortgage was a first lien on the property and building described. That the contractor had not filed any notice of intention to hold any lien on said premises described in the final decree until May 8th, subsequently to the execution and recording of said mortgage on April 22nd and 23rd respectively, and that the complainant Bridge Company had done no work on said premises and furnished no material subsequent to January 9th, except that on April 11th it delivered four angles without any additional charge, same being negligible in nature and amount and should have been shipped by the contractor with the last delivery made on January 9th. It will be observed that this petition does not deny that the building was in course of construction at the time the mortgage to the Trust Company was executed. The petition further *480 averred that said Peoples Bank was an indispensable party to the cause, and that the bill failed to set forth any allegations which would make the joinder of the Mortgage Company in its individual capacity binding upon the rights and interests of petitioner. The petition does not deny knowledge on the part of petitioner of the pendency of the litigation, but it alleges that it had only lately heard of the decree, and since that time had been busy trying to procure the Glass Company to pay off the claim of the Bridge and Iron Company and had been assured that it would be done, thus leaving the mortgage securing the notes as a first lien, and that when it became apparent that the Glass Company would be unable to do this, petitioner decided to file the petition for intervention.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 So. 680, 94 Fla. 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-bank-of-jax-v-va-bridge-iron-co-fla-1927.