Reliable Collection Agency, Ltd. v. Aquarius Industries, Inc.

535 P.2d 129, 56 Haw. 251, 1975 Haw. LEXIS 95
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 1975
DocketNO. 5542
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 535 P.2d 129 (Reliable Collection Agency, Ltd. v. Aquarius Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reliable Collection Agency, Ltd. v. Aquarius Industries, Inc., 535 P.2d 129, 56 Haw. 251, 1975 Haw. LEXIS 95 (haw 1975).

Opinion

*252 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

RICHARDSON, C.J.

The defendants Wetzels appeal from a judgment of the First Circuit Court which decreed that plaintiff has a valid mechanic’s and materialman’s lien against the defendants Wetzels’ leasehold interest in their Kailua home, and awarded plaintiff Reliable Collection Agency $965.74 against defendant Aquarius Industries.

The trial court found that on or about February 25, 1972, Paeific Concrete and Rock Co., Ltd. (hereinafter Pacific Concrete), furnished 28 cubic yards of gunite worth $806.56, to defendant Aquarius Industries for the construction of a swimming pool on the Wetzels’ leasehold property. On July 25, 1972 Pacific Concrete assigned its claim to plaintiff Reliable Collection Agency.

Notices of completion of the swimming pool were filed on September 2, 1972 and September 15, 1972. Plaintiff filed notice of mechanic’s lien and demand on October 4, 1972, and served the notice as required. Plaintiff filed the complaint to enforce the lien on December 8, 1972. Judgment enforcing the lien was rendered on July 12, 1978.

In addition, the record illuminates the relationship between Pacific Concrete and Aquarius Industries.

Pacific Concrete started supplying Aquarius with gunite in February 1971, and from that time through March 31,1972, Aquarius did about $12,500 of business per month with Pacific Concrete ($10,035 per month arithmetic average) with the extremes per month being $1,826 and $23,611.

Early in 1971, Neudeck Pools, Inc., a corporation for whom Aquarius was subcontracting, warned Pacific *253 Concrete’s credit manager to keep Aquarius on 10 to 14 day credit. In June of the same year Pacific Concrete received a request from Progressive Construction, another general contractor for whom Aquarius was subcontracting, for notification of any delays in payment by Aquarius on its account with Pacific Concrete.

Aquarius defaulted on its September 1971 bill of about $12,500 from Pacific Concrete and resumed substantial payments in October 1971, but this left Aquarius a month behind in its payments. For example, the billing for November 1971 was paid by Aquarius in January 1972. Aquarius defaulted completely on its bills for December 1971, January 1972 and February 1972, for amounts of $7,821, $6,977 and $1,826 respectively. On February 14, 1972, Pacific Business News published a notice of a state tax lien against Aquarius which had been filed earlier that month. On February 24, 1972, Pacific Concrete delivered the gunite to Aquarius for building the Wetzels’ pool. On February 25, 1972, Pacific Concrete notified Progressive Construction that Aquarius was falbng behind in its payments. By early March 1972 at the latest, Pacific Concrete was aware of the tax lien and tightened Aquarius’ credit by putting Aquarius on a C.O.D. basis. The C.O.D. was actually a “one week C.O.D.,” meaning Aquarius had only one week’s credit. In March 1972 Aquarius started paying on specific invoices instead of on open account.

In late March 1972 the Wetzels’ pool was completed by Aquarius. The Wetzels paid Aquarius for the pool shortly thereafter.

Despite the above warnings of Aquarius’ financial difficulties, on April 26, 1972 and May 2, 1972, Pacific Concrete supplied gunite to Aquarius for new pool projects, projects on which liens were eventually imposed by Pacific Concrete despite full payment to Aquarius by the pool owners.

Around May 2, 1972 Pacific Business News published notice of a federal tax lien. On May 4, 1972 Aquarius’ creditors met presumably to discuss their debtor’s situation and future payments, but in mid-May 1972 the Internal Revenue *254 Service shut Aquarius down for failure to pay taxes. Pacific Concrete was still supplying Aquarius with gunite when it was shut down because Aquarius was still paying weekly on a C.O.D. basis.

Pacific Concrete never informed any property owners who contracted with Aquarius of Aquarius ’ financial difficulties, and Pacific Concrete ultimately imposed 20 to 30 liens on various projects because of Aquarius’ insolvency.

While Pacific Concrete maintained a credit manager of 14 years’ experience who had responsibility for extending credit and collections, and while the interchange of information was very common among credit managers, the defendants Wet-zels were in a vastly different situation. Despite his education and experience, Mr. Wetzel was unaware both of the law and of Pacific Concrete, just as the public generally is acknowledged to be unaware of mechanic’s and materialman’s liens.

Defendants Wetzels argue that given Aquarius’ known financial difficulties, Pacific Concrete’s failure to warn the defendants (and thus to allow the defendants an opportunity to protect themselves) equitably estops Pacific Concrete, and its assignee Reliable Collection Agency, from enforcing the lien.

Equity is clearly relevant in mechanics’ lien cases. As this court noted in Shelton Engineering v. Hawaiian Pacific Industries, 51 Haw. 242, 247-248, 456 P.2d 222, 226 (1969), referring to HRS §§ 507-41 to 507-48, “The law was intended to compensate a person equitably, and was never intended to operate in a manner which might enable the subcontractor to recover twice or to oppress the defendants to his claim. ’ ’ This court has previously passed on other estoppel questions involved in mechanics’ lien cases. Also, other jurisdictions apply estoppel in certain mechanics’ lien situations. 1

*255 The elements of equitable estoppel by conduct are set forth in our cases of Broida v. Hayashi, 51 Haw. 493, 499, 464 P.2d 285, 289 (1970); Molokai Ranch, Ltd. v. Morris, 36 Haw. 219, 223 (1942); and Peabody v. Damon, 16 Haw. 447, 451 (1905). In Broida v. Hayashi, supra, we quoted the following passage from Molokai Ranch, supra:

In order to [have] an estoppel by conduct, there must have been a representation or concealment of material facts, known by the party to exist, and with the intention of inducing a party, ignorant of the facts, to act upon the repr es entations.

In this case the elements of estoppel against enforcement of the lien are present.

I. Pacific Concrete’s False Representation or Concealment of a Material Fact

Pacific Concrete never telephoned or in any other way notified the defendants of the risk posed by Aquarius’ financial precariousness. The question becomes whether on the facts of this case Pacific Concrete has a duty to speak, as required for estoppel by Broida v. Hayashi, supra at 499, and by Peabody v. Damon, supra at 452-456.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
535 P.2d 129, 56 Haw. 251, 1975 Haw. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reliable-collection-agency-ltd-v-aquarius-industries-inc-haw-1975.