Pulaski Lumber Co., Inc. v. Harpeth South, Inc.

501 S.W.2d 275, 1973 Tenn. LEXIS 533
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 501 S.W.2d 275 (Pulaski Lumber Co., Inc. v. Harpeth South, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pulaski Lumber Co., Inc. v. Harpeth South, Inc., 501 S.W.2d 275, 1973 Tenn. LEXIS 533 (Tenn. 1973).

Opinion

OPINION

W. M. LEECH, Special Justice.

From a final decree of the Chancery Court for Davidson County, two of the defendants in that court were granted and perfected an appeal to the Court of Appeals. The Chancellor’s decree recites:

“This cause came on this 10th day of February, 1972, to be heard before the Honorable Ned Lentz, Chancellor, Part I Seventeenth Chancery Division, sitting at Nashville for Davidson County, Tennessee, upon the bill filed in this cause on February 19, 1971; the exhibits thereto being A, B, C, D, and E, the Answers of Harpeth South, Inc., of Thomas P. Bugg, and wife, Miranda Buss, of James H. Bell and wife, Cleo B. Bell, of J. J. Foley, Trustee and J. I. Kislak *276 Mortgage Corporation of Florida, of J. O. Scoggins, d/b/a Scoggins Enterprise and/or Twentieth Century Co., admissions and statements of counsel in open court, from all of which it duly appears to the Court:”

The above quote discloses that this was a final decree of a lower court determined by a “method not involving a review or determination of the facts”, and the appeal should have been to this Court. For that reason, we have granted certiorari and will review the record upon the assignments of error made in the Court of Appeals as if the appeal had been made direct to this Court. See, T.C.A. § 16-408.

The Pulaski Lumber Company, Inc., filed suit in the Chancery Court to enforce liens for materials furnished in the construction of houses in a subdivision in Davidson County, Tennessee. The complaint alleged that plaintiff furnished materials and supplies to the defendant, J. O. Scog-gin, doing business as Scoggin Enterprises and/or Twenty-first Century Company, who was the contractor for the defendant, Harpeth South Company, Inc., in the construction of houses on eleven lots in two subdivisions owned by Harpeth South. In addition, the complaint alleged that the materials were used in the construction of the houses on said lots and that the sum of $2,590.56 was due plaintiff.

The complaint also alleged that:

“Notices of these liens were also mailed to the defendants J. J. Foley, Attorneys Title Company and J. I. Kislak Mortgage Corporation of Florida, who are trustees and/or mortgagees under deeds of trust involving the aforesaid property.
The notice of the liens claimed on the aforesaid lots were registered, in due form, in the Register’s Office of Davidson County, on November 23, 1970, and appear at Book 4461, page 790 and Book 4461, page 793, in the Register’s Office of Davidson County.”

The above averment is the only reference in the complaint pertaining to the interest of the two defendants who have appealed, J. J. Foley, Trustee, and J. I. Kislak Mortgage Corporation of Florida.

In response to the complaint, defendants filed a motion to dismiss as follows:

“The above styled defendants move the Court to dismiss the action because the complaint fails to state a claim against the Defendants upon which relief can be granted, in that Plaintiff’s notices of liens (Exhibits ‘D’ and ‘E’, attached to said Complaint filed herein) reveal on their face that they are defective and unenforceable in that they were not prepared and executed in the proper form so as to be in compliance with the following mandatory statutory provisions of Tennessee Code Annotated:
1. Sections 64 — 1112 and 64-1117 both expressly require that every notice of Hen must be supported by a sworn statement as to the amount due for work, labor or materials;
Exhibits ‘D’ and ‘E’, attached to the Complaint filed herein, reveal on their face that Plaintiff’s notices of lien are supported solely by the Plaintiff’s corporate acknowledgment of the type to authenticate a corporate instrument for recording, but nowhere is Plaintiff’s statement as to the amount due supported by affidavit as required by law.
2. Section 64-1118 expressly requires that where two (2) or more lots, parcels, or tracts of land, are improved, the lienor must apportion his claim between the several lots, parcels, or tracts of land and file a separate notice of lien for the amount demanded against each lot, parcel or tract of land ;
Exhibits ‘D’ and ‘E’ reveal on their face that in each instance, Plaintiff has improperly included Multiple lots under one notice of lien.”

*277 The motion to dismiss was overruled and the defendants filed separate answers. However, these answers, with the exception of those of the contractor Scoggin, did not raise any new or additional defense to' those in the motion to dismiss. Scoggin in his separate answer affirmatively alleged that he had filed a petition in bankruptcy.

The cause was heard upon the technical record, admissions and statement of counsel in open court and a decree was subsequently entered by the Chancellor awarding a recovery to plaintiff for the amount of the claim with interest from the date of the filing of the bill, but stating that since the defendant, Scoggin, had filed a petition in bankruptcy and had been discharged no recovery was awarded against him.

Since J. I. Kislak Mortgage Corporation of Florida and J. J. Foley, Trustee, are the only parties that have appealed, we quote only that portion of the decree that affects their interest, as follows:

“That said bankruptcy does not defeat the lien of Pulaski Lumber Company and that the sums aforesaid are liens against the aforesaid houses and lots, and complainant is entitled to have said liens enforced by the sale thereof of each respective lot, above described, unless previously paid and discharged.”
# ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ jji ⅜
“It is specifically adjudicated that any of the deeds of trust placed of record after the furnishing of said materials is a secondary lien on the above described property.
The motions of J. J. Foley, Trustee and J. I. Kislak Mortgage Corporation of Florida and the defendant, Harpeth South, Inc. renewed in their answers, but heretofore overruled by this Court, are hereby specifically overruled.” (Emphasis added).

The defendants have assigned errors as follows:

“I. The Chancery Court erred in holding that the plaintiff’s notice of furnish-er’s lien was in proper form.
II. The Chancery Court erred in holding that the deeds of trust in favor of these defendants are secondary to the furnisher’s lien of the plaintiff.
III. The Chancery Court erred in not hearing proof on the issues raised by the complaint and the answer of these defendants.”

The third assignment will not be considered because the recitals in the decree reveal that no proof was necessary.

Turning then to the first assignment, defendants contend that, since the notices of liens which were filed for record were not sworn to, they do not comply with T.C.A.

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501 S.W.2d 275, 1973 Tenn. LEXIS 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pulaski-lumber-co-inc-v-harpeth-south-inc-tenn-1973.