Schillinger Fire Proof Cement & Asphalt Co. v. Arnott

46 N.E. 956, 152 N.Y. 584, 6 E.H. Smith 584, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 994
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 20, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 46 N.E. 956 (Schillinger Fire Proof Cement & Asphalt Co. v. Arnott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schillinger Fire Proof Cement & Asphalt Co. v. Arnott, 46 N.E. 956, 152 N.Y. 584, 6 E.H. Smith 584, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 994 (N.Y. 1897).

Opinion

Bartlett, J.

These actions were brought to foreclose mechanics’ liens against the defendants, Arnott & Company, as contractors, and Rachel Oolmfeld as owner of a ten-story building at the corner of Bleecker and Mercer streets in the city of 27ew York. Arnott and Company, defendants in both actions, contracted to do the entire mason work in this building. The Schillinger Company were sub-contractors under Arnott & Co., and agreed to do a certain part of the mason work for $24,000. Gabriel and Schall were sub-contractors under the Schillinger Co. and agreed to furnish it a quantity of cement.

*589 The learned trial judge found that the Schillinger Co. substantially performed its contract and that there was due to it from the defendants the sum of $9,275; that the architect unreasonably refused his certificate notwithstanding the substantial performance of the contract; that the Schillinger Co. duly filed a mechanic’s lien against the property, and at the time the owner was indebted to Arnott & Co. in the sum of $80,000 and upwards; that Gabriel & Schall duly filed their lien for $5,044, and there was due to the Schillinger Co. at the time from Arnott & Co. the amount of $9,275; that this action came on for trial at the Special Term and an amendment of the complaint was allowed upon the condition that Arnott & Co. might withdraw the money which had been deposited with the clerk of the city and county of Hew York in discharge of the mechanic’s lien of the plaintiffs, provided they substituted therefor their personal responsibility; that all the defendants in the action had defaulted except Arnott & Co., and the liens of the several defendants were subsequent and subordinate to the lien of the Schillinger Co., except that of Gabriel & Schall, which was entitled to preference, being for cement furnished to the Schillinger Co.; that the claim of the Schillinger Co., including interest, was $11,215, and that of Gabriel & Schall with interest was $6,103.24, leaving due the Schillinger Co. a balance of $5,111.76.

As conclusions of law the trial judge found that as the Schillinger Co. had substantially performed its contract with Arnott & Co., the refusal of the architect under such circumstances to give a certificate was no bar to a recovery in this action; that the lien of the Schillinger Co. was transferred from the real estate to the moneys which were deposited with the clerk of the city and county of Hew York, and that when the moneys were withdrawn and the personal responsibility of Arnott & Go. substituted therefor the lien was transferred to said personal responsibility.

Judgment was thereupon entered in favor of the Schillinger Co. against the surviving members of' the firm of Arnott & Co. for the amount due it and costs after deducting the *590 claim of Gabriel & Schall. The judgment further provided that it was exclusive of' and inferior to a similar judgment rendered against the defendants in an action tried with this one wherein Gabriel and Schall were the plaintiffs.

Judgment was entered in the Gabriel & Schall action establishing their lien against the Schillinger Co. and declaring its priority to any lien of that company; also declaring that the lien of Gabriel & Schall had been transferred, first to the moneys on deposit and afterwards to the personal responsibility of Arnott & Co., which had been duly substituted therefor.

It also adjudged that Gabriel & Schall recover of the surviving members of the firm of Arnott, & Co. the amount due with costs.

The first point raised by the defendants is that they were entitled, as matter of right, to a jury trial. It appears that when this case came on for trial, counsel for the defendants moved to strike it from the equity calendar and to dismissJhe complaint for want of jurisdiction on the ground that the defendants were entitled to a jury trial. The defendants base this contention upon two propositions: '

1st. The court erred in not sending the case to be tried at a Circuit, as there was nothing left to try except the question of the performance by the Schillinger Co. of its contract with Arnott & Co.

2nd. That defendants had a constitutional right to a jury trial, and if it was cut off by the Mechanics’ Lien Law of 1885 then that act is unconstitutional.

We are unable to agree to the first proposition that there was nothing left of these actions but a suit at law against Arnott & Co. for the balance due on the contract, and that no basis remained for the exercise of the equitable jurisdiction of the court.

This court has held that an action to foreclose a mechanic's lien is a suit in equity, triable by a court without a jury, in which neither party has a right to a jury trial, except as to such issues as may be framed and sent to a jury. (Kenney v. Apgar, 93 N. Y. 539, 550.)

*591 The trial judge properly found as a conclusion of law that the liens involved in this action were transferred from the real estate to the money deposited with the clerk of the city and county of New York, and afterwards to the personal responsibility of Arnott & Co., which was substituted for the money on deposit by the order of the court.

These cases are not distinguishable in principle from the situation presented, where a bond has been filed in order to discharge a lien conditioned for the payment of any judgment against the property. (Morton v. Tucker, 145 N. Y. 244.)

It was a condition precedent to reaching the money dejrosited with the clerk of the court, or enforcing the personal liability of Arnott & Co., that the liens should be established and the suits proceed to judgment precisely as if the real estate had never been relieved of the liens.

These actions, until final judgment, continue to be suits in equity to enforce mechanic’s liens, and their character is in no way changed by the course of the proceedings prior to the trial.

This being so, the point raised as to the unconstitutionality Of the Mechanics’ Lien Law of 1885 would seem to be without force. We will, however, briefly consider it. The defendants’ position is that article 1, § 2, of the Constitution of 1846 provides that the trial by jury, in all cases in which it has been heretofore used, shall remain inviolate fore.ver,” and that on the day when this provision took effect there was in force a Mechanics’ Lien Law in the city of New York (Chap. 220 of the Laws of 1844), which provided (section 7) that issues should be joined and tried and the judgment therein enforced in all respects in the same manner as upon issues joined and judgments rendered in actions of assumpsit.

From this the defendants argue that questions between the lienholder and the owner or head contractor must be tried by a jury as they were under the act of 1844.

The existing Mechanics’ Lien Law (Chap.

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.E. 956, 152 N.Y. 584, 6 E.H. Smith 584, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schillinger-fire-proof-cement-asphalt-co-v-arnott-ny-1897.