SAKS Associates, LLC v. Southeast Culvert, Inc.

638 S.E.2d 799, 282 Ga. App. 359
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 9, 2006
DocketA06A1606; A06A1607, A06A1608
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 638 S.E.2d 799 (SAKS Associates, LLC v. Southeast Culvert, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SAKS Associates, LLC v. Southeast Culvert, Inc., 638 S.E.2d 799, 282 Ga. App. 359 (Ga. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Presiding Judge.

On December 2, 2003, Southeast Culvert, Inc., a supplier of corrugated pipe and other drainage goods, filed a materialman’s claim of lien for $91,824 against a seven-acre parcel of property in Gwinnett County. In the claim of lien, Southeast identified Five Star Builders as the contractor that had requested the materials in question, and Southeast named SAKS Associates, LLC, as the owner of the property upon which its materials had been used.

A week later, on December 9, 2003, Satish A. Poddar, the sole member and manager of SAKS, sent a letter to the president of Southeast. Writing on paper bearing the SAKS letterhead, Poddar acknowledged that the lien was against SAKS’ property. He further stated that he had dismissed Five Star Builders as contractor and guaranteed future payment of $67,175 to Southeast in order to continue the project, which involved developing medical offices on the property.

Three months later, in March 2004, SAKS, Poddar and Southeast entered into an agreement which provides that SAKS owns the property that has been improved, that Southeast has not been fully paid for materials and services supplied to the property, that SAKS will pay Southeast $26,573 for the prior materials and services, that SAKS will pay Southeast $69,004 for new materials and services, and *360 that Poddar personally guarantees SAKS’ obligations under the agreement. Poddar signed the agreement both in his individual capacity and as SAKS’ manager.

Southeast eventually received the promised payment of $26,573. Pursuant to the parties’ agreement, Southeast reduced its claim of lien by that amount, filing an amended claim of lien to reflect a new amount of $65,280. The amended claim of lien once again identified SAKS as the property owner and Five Star Builders as the contractor that had requested the materials.

In the meantime, some five months after the first claim of lien had been filed, the contractor filed a bankruptcy petition. Thereafter, on November 12, 2004, Southeast filed the instant action against SAKS to foreclose the materialman’s lien. In its complaint, Southeast asserted that SAKS is the owner of all the property in question, that SAKS has been developing the property as buildings for lease or sale to medical or health care providers, and that SAKS had entered into an agreement with Five Star Design & Builders to act as the contractor for the development and improvement of the property. SAKS timely filed its answer, expressly admitting the above factual assertions made in the complaint.

SAKS later moved for summary judgment on the ground that the contractor identified in the claim of lien, Five Star Builders, is not the same contractor identified in the complaint, Five Star Design & Builders, and therefore Southeast had not complied with the requirement that it sue the contractor named in the claim of lien before seeking recovery against the property owner. The trial court denied the motion for summary judgment, and the case proceeded to a bench trial.

At trial, Southeast presented evidence that Five Star Design & Builders had applied for credit with it. But on the application, the company did not use its full name, and instead identified itself only as Five Star Builders. Southeast approved the contractor for a line of credit and subsequently provided it with materials worth more than $100,000 for use on the medical office project. Five Star, however, made only one payment of $10,844 to Southeast, using a check drawn on an account bearing the name Five Star Builders.

In its defense, SAKS, for the first time, claimed that it was not the sole owner of the property in question. Over objections by Southeast, the trial court allowed SAKS to present evidence indicating that less than two months before the claim of lien was filed, it had conveyed 1.4 acres of its seven-acre parcel to S. A. P. Associates, LLC, of which Poddar is the controlling majority member and Erchna Poddar is a minority member.

The trial court entered judgment in favor of Southeast, ruling that the lien in the amount of $65,280 is deemed perfected and that *361 Southeast is also entitled to $7,235 as interest, for a total judgment of $72,515. SAKS appeals from the final judgment in Case No. A06A1606. Southeast cross-appeals in Case No. A06A1607, and also appeals in Case No. A06A1608 from the denial of its motion to dismiss SAKS’ appeal due to a delay in the filing of the trial transcript.

Case No. A06A1606

1. SAKS contends that the contractor identified in the claim of lien, Five Star Builders, is an entirely different entity from the project contractor identified in the complaint, Five Star Design & Builders. Claiming that the instant case is identical to and controlled by the case of Brockett Road Apts. v. Ga. Pacific Corp. 1 SAKS argues that Southeast’s failure to commence suit against the contractor named in the claim of lien is fatal to its action and therefore the trial court erred in entering judgment in favor of Southeast. The argument is without merit.

OCGA§ 44-14-361.1 (a) sets out the provisions for perfecting a lien. These provisions require a materialman who has substantially complied with the contract for materials to (a) file a claim of lien in the county where the property is located within three months of furnishing the materials; (b) send a copy of the lien claim to the property owner; (c) commence an action against the contractor to recover the amount of the claim within 12 months of when the claim became due; and (d) file a notice of the action with the superior court clerk of the county where the lien was filed so that the clerk can enter information about the lawsuit in county records. 2

Under certain circumstances, including the bankruptcy of the contractor, the materialman need not commence an action against the contractor and may instead bring an action directly against the property owner. 3

OCGA § 44-14-361.1 (a) (4) provides, in part, that where a contractor is adjudicated bankrupt or, if after an action is filed, no final judgment can be obtained against the contractor because of his adjudication in bankruptcy, the material-man need not file an action or obtain judgment against the *362 contractor before enforcing a lien against the improved property. This subsection further provides that the materialman may enforce the lien directly against the property by filing an action against the owner within 12 months from the time the lien becomes due. 4

In the instant case, it is undisputed that approximately five months after the claim of lien was filed, the contractor filed a bankruptcy petition.

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Bluebook (online)
638 S.E.2d 799, 282 Ga. App. 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saks-associates-llc-v-southeast-culvert-inc-gactapp-2006.