Scheas v. Boston & Paris

101 S.W. 942, 125 Ky. 535, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 312
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 2, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 101 S.W. 942 (Scheas v. Boston & Paris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scheas v. Boston & Paris, 101 S.W. 942, 125 Ky. 535, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 312 (Ky. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Barker

Reversing.

This action involves a question of priority between a mortgagee and certain materialmen who furnished building material used in the erection of the house by which the payment of the mortgage was secured. Chittenden and Whitehouse owned a lot. in Marion, Crittenden county, Ky., upon which they erected a two-story dwelling house. In order to secure funds sufficient to erect the building, they borrowed from the appellant, John Scheas, $2,700, for which they executed their notes, the payment of which was secured by a mortgage on the building and lot, and which was recorded in the county clerk’s office of Crittenden county on the 7th day of August 1905. Afterwards they borrowed from the appellant the [538]*538additional sum of $1,000, which they secured by a mortgage on the same house and lot. This mortgage was recorded in the proper office on the 29th day of December, 1905. Boston & Paris, lumbermen of Marion, Ky., under a contract which began on the 21st day of June, 1905, furnished the owners of the building from time to time lumber which went into their house, to the value of $831.85, upon which payments were made reducing the amount to $630.60. They filed in the office of the clerk of the Crittenden county court a notice that they claimed a material-men’s lien on the property in question on the 13th day of February, 1906. John O’Donnell, under a contract dated the 16th of September, 1905, furnished a complete heating system for the house, upon which there was a balance unpaid of $405. On the 2d day of March, 1906, he filed notice of his lien in the clerk’s office. Cochran and Pickens furnished material to the extent of $85.38, and filed a notice of their lien on the 4th day of May, 1906. This action was instituted by Boston & Paris in the Crittenden circuit court to enforce their lien. They made all the other lien claimants hereinbefore mentioned parties defendant, who came in by appropriate pleading and set up their respective claims'. After pleadings were brought to an issue, the case was referred to the commissioner for the purpose of taking proof and reporting on the claims and the question of priority of lien between the parties. So far as the existence .of the debts were concerned, the commissioner properly established them as claimed by the parties. He then found that $69.20 of Boston & Paris’ account, $12.50 due the Kentucky Fluor Spar Company, and $10.75 of the claim of C'oehran and Pickens constituted a •first lien upon the property; that John-'Sebeas’ mort[539]*539gage for $2,700 constituted a second lien to the before-mentioned items; that the balance of the claims of Boston & Paris, Cochran and Pickens, the Kentucky Fluor Spar Company and John O’Donnel were all prior and preferred liens over the second mortgage of John Scheas. To this report of the commisisoner the materialmen filed exceptions. In the judgment on the final submission, the court established the commissioner’s report, so far as the debts were concerned; but, on the question of priority, sustained them, using the following language: “But the court, being further advised, sets aside said report of said master commissioner, and refuses to confirm the same in so far as the matter of priority of liens is concerned, and finds that the defendant John Scheas did not make sufficient proof of the fact that he had no notice.” From this judgment, John Scheas is here on appeal.

Section 2463, Ky. Stats., 1903, which gives a lien in favor of mechanics and materialmen, in so far as applicable to the subject in hand, is as follows: “ * * * And said lien on the land or improvement shall be superior to any mortgage or incumbrance created subsequent to the beginning of the labor or the furnishing of the materials; and said lien, if asserted as hereinafter provided, shall relate back and take effect from the time of the commencement of the labor or the furnishing of the materials: Provided, that such lien shall not take precedence of a mortgage or other contract lien or bona fide conveyance for value without notice, duly recorded or lodged for record according to law, unless the person claiming such prior lien shall before the recording of such mortgage or other contract lien or conveyance, have filed in the clerk’s office of the county court [540]*540of the county wherein he shall have performed labor or furnished material, or shall expect to perform labor or furnish materials, as aforesaid, a statement showing that he has performed or furnished, or that he expects to perform or furnish, such labor or materials, and the amount in full thereof, and his lien shall not, as against the holder of said mortgage or other contract lien or conveyance, exceed the amount of the lien claimed, or expected to be claimed, as set forth in such statement.” Section 2468 provides: “The liens mentioned in the preceding section shall be dissolved unless the claimant, within six months after he ceases to labor or furnish materials as aforesaid, files in the office of the clerk of the cotmty court of the county in which such building, or improvement is situated, a statement of the amount due him; with all just credits and set-offs known to him. together with a description of the property intended to be covered by the lien, sufficiently accurate to identify it, and the name of the owner, if known, and whether the materials were furnished, or the labor performed, by contract with the owner, or with a contractor or subcontractor, which shall be subscribed and sworn to by the person claiming the lien, or by some one in his behalf.”

It will be observed that the foregoing excerpts from the mechanic and materialmen’s statute contemplates the filing of two different and distinct notices — one is a preliminary notice, which provides for a priority of lien in favor of the mechanic or materialman, and the other is the final notice which preserves this lien for a given time. All of the materialmen involved-in this action gave the final notice provided for by section 2468, but none gave the preliminary notice required by section 2463. So far as this case is con[541]*541cerned, we are interested only in the preliminary notice, and therefore dismiss from further contemplation section 2468, which we have quoted merely to distinguish more completely the two notices. Section 2463 requires the mechanic or materialman, in order that his lien shall be prior to that of a mortgage or other contract lien or bona fide conveyance for value without notice which has been duly recorded or lodged for record according to law, to file a statement in the clerk’s office of the county court showing that he has performed labor or furnished material, or expects to perform labor or furnish material, and the amount in full thereof. Clearly, the mechanic and material-man’s lien does not take precedence over any bona fide mortgage without notice which is recorded in advance of the filing by the claimant — a notice of his lien, and it is immaterial whether the material or labor be furnished before or after the recording of the mortgage. It is notice on the part of the mortgagee, either constructive or actual, of the material-man’s lien that gives the latter precedence over the mortgagee.

In the case of Harris’ Assignee v. Gardiner, etc., 68 S. W. 8, 24 Ky. Law Rep.

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4 S.W.2d 737 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1928)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 S.W. 942, 125 Ky. 535, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scheas-v-boston-paris-kyctapp-1907.