Sea Pines Co. v. Kiawah Island Co., Inc.

232 S.E.2d 501, 268 S.C. 153, 1977 S.C. LEXIS 397
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 8, 1977
Docket20357
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 232 S.E.2d 501 (Sea Pines Co. v. Kiawah Island Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sea Pines Co. v. Kiawah Island Co., Inc., 232 S.E.2d 501, 268 S.C. 153, 1977 S.C. LEXIS 397 (S.C. 1977).

Opinion

Littlejohn, Justice:

On April 28, 1976, the appellant Sea Pines Company (Sea Pines), filed a statutory mechanic’s lien in the amount of $3,600,000.00 against the respondent, Kiawah Island Company, Inc. (Kiawah), claiming a lien upon real estate known as Kiawah Island for labor performed and materials furnished in the erection, alteration, and repair of buildings or structures. This included the work of making the real estate suitable as a site for buildings and structures, and a plan for the complete development of Kiawah Island as a luxury resort.

Kiawah supplied to the court an affidavit asserting that the debt claimed by Sea Pines bore no relation to any amount due for labor performed or materials furnished, but instead represented an approximation of damages arguably due for improper termination of a contract. Based on this affidavit, special Judge Frank K. Sloan issued an Ex Parte rule to show cause dated April 29, 1976, requiring Sea Pines to show cause why the mechanic’s lien should not be either withdrawn and cancelled, or reduced to such an amount as Sea Pines could reasonably hope to establish as properly cognizable under the mechanics’ liens statutes.

A return to the rule was filed by Sea Pines and a hearing held before the Honorable Clarence E. Singletary, resident judge, on May 4. After viewing the exhibits, including a long and involved contract, and considering affidavits of both parties and oral argument, the judge adjourned the hearing until May 10, with instructions to Sea Pines to produce, in affidavit form, evidence that it had actually provided services constituting a proper subject for a mechanic’s lien for which it had not been paid. Affidavits of Robert Marvin, a landscape architect, and of James W. Light, President of Sea Pines, were supplied and the hearing resumed on May *156 10. At the end of this hearing, in open court, the judge announced his ruling by stating to counsel for Sea Pines:

“I don’t think you’ve come under the mechanic’s lien statute in South Carolina. I’m going to rule with the defendants [Kiawah] and if you will prepare an order I will sign. I just think you’re going to have to look for a judgment for damages and collect it after you’ve gotten it, if you get it.

Thereafter, a written order was filed, vacating the mechanic’s lien.

We are asked by Sea Pines to rule that the lower court erred in vacating the mechanic’s lien.

Sea Pines argues first that the lower court erred in using a nonstatutory method for removing the mechanic’s lien. The statute provides four ways for discharging such a lien:

(1) by posting bond as provided by §45-261, Code of Laws of South Carolina (1962), or

(2) by showing that the filer of the lien has willfully and knowingly claimed more than is due (Code §45-260), or

(3) by showing that a suit was not commenced within six months to collect the debt, as provided by § 45-262, or

(4) by defeating the claim upon trial.

These are the customary ways that mechanics’ liens are discarged, but we refuse to hold that such a lien may not be discharged in any nonstatutory fashion. After one ceases to supply labor or materials,he has six months to commence an action for collection of the debt and foreclosure of the lien. An unscruplous claimant might file a spurious claim and curtail the landowner’s full enjoyment of his property unless the court has authority to grant relief. We can envision situations in which irreparable damages could be inflicted upon a landowner unless the door of the court be opened to ■him. A bond can be required of the landowner to secure the claimant, but no bond can be required of the claimant to secure the landowner against damages.

*157 This point has never been before this Court. There is no precedent for our ruling, but we think that the court has inherent powers to afford relief where the deprivation imposed by a wrongfully filed mechanic’s lien cannot be corrected by the statutory methods.

The authority to vacate a mechanic’s lien may be somewhat likened to the judge’s authority to grant a summary judgment if there is no genuine issue of material fact to be determined, or his authority to direct a verdict when the evidence is susceptible of only one reasonable inference. However, the judge to whom application for relief if made may not try disputed facts. These are reserved, under Code § 45-273, for the jury. This section reads in part as follows:

“Every material question of fact arising in the case shall be submitted to a jury, if required by either party or deemed proper by the court, and the trial shall be had upon a question stated or an issue framed or otherwise, as the court may order.”

We hold that the judge had the authority to entertain the motion and the authority to grant relief upon a proper showing.

Having ruled that the lower court possessed the power to vacate the mechanic’s lien, the question remains whether, in so doing, that power was properly exercised. Therefore, we must determine (1) whether the services rendered by Sea Pines are covered by the mechanics’ liens law, Code § 45-251, et seq., and (2) if the services are covered, whether Sea Pines has been paid in full for those services.

As to whether the services of Sea Pines are covered by the mechanics’ liens law, § 45-251, as amended (Supp. 1973), provides as follows:

“As used in this section, labor performed or furnished in the erection, alteration or repair of any building or structure upon any real estate shall include the work of making such *158 real estate suitable as a site for such building or structure. Such work shall be deemed to include, but not be limited to, the grading, bulldozing, leveling, excavating and filling of land (including the furnishing of fill soil), the grading and paving of curbs and sidewalks and all asphalt paving, the construction of ditches and other drainage facilities and the laying of pipes and conduits for water, gas, electric, sewage and drainage purposes.”

In Williamson v. Hotel Melrose, 110 S. C. 1, 96 S. E. 407 (1918), this Court held that an architect who furnished plans for a building and supervised the construction, and a contractor who furnished oversight for the purchase of materials and the hiring of laborers, were covered by the mechanic’s liens law. This was, of course, before the amendment quoted hereinabove.

The contract which outlines the services to be performed by Sea Pines is voluminous and complex. By its terms Sea Pines undertakes to supervise the planning and developing of Kiawah Island, which comprises some 4,000 acres of land, into a luxury resort. The services to be performed for the development of the island were basically the same kind of services performed by a landscape architect in preparing a site plan, or an architect in designing a building. Sea Pines was to supply a trained staff to Kiawah. It was to furnish plans and supervision of construction.

Taking all this into consideration, the trial judge stated, and we agree:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 S.E.2d 501, 268 S.C. 153, 1977 S.C. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sea-pines-co-v-kiawah-island-co-inc-sc-1977.