Short & Paulk Supply Co. v. Dykes

171 S.E.2d 782, 120 Ga. App. 639, 1969 Ga. App. LEXIS 889
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 23, 1969
Docket44744, 44745
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 171 S.E.2d 782 (Short & Paulk Supply Co. v. Dykes) 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
Short & Paulk Supply Co. v. Dykes, 171 S.E.2d 782, 120 Ga. App. 639, 1969 Ga. App. LEXIS 889 (Ga. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

Eberhardt, Judge.

Code Ann. § 67-2001 (2) provides that all liens afforded by § 67-2001 shall be dissolved if the owner shall “produce the sworn statement of the contractor, or other person, at whose instance the work was done or material was furnished, or such services furnished or rendered, that the agreed price or reasonable value thereof has been paid.” It is well to note that the “agreed price or reasonable value thereof” refers not to the contract price between the owner and the contractor for completing the improvement, but to the price agreed upon between the contractor and the supplier of labor, services or materials, or the value of those. If the owner has paid the full construction contract price he should have ample evidence of that and he would not need the contractor’s affidavit as to it to comply with this statute; what he does need from the contractor is an affidavit as to the contractor’s payment of the price or value of labor, services and materials, which is something about which he may hold no other evidence of payment. Of course, there is no harm in including in the contractor’s affidavit that he has received from the owner full payment of construction contract price, and it may be of assistance for some other purpose. Harrell’s affidavit fails to meet the statutory requirement. While he does swear that he appropriated all funds paid to him by the owner to the payment of bills for labor and materials used in *642 building the house, he does not swear that all outstanding bills for labor and materials so used have been paid.

“The manifest purpose of this statute is to make the property of the owner liable for material which entered into the construction of the improvement on the employment of a contractor, within the limits of the contract price, unless the materialman waives his lien, or unless, upon the final completion of the work, the true owner, before payment of the contract price, takes from his contractor a sworn statement that all work done or material furnished has been paid for at the agreed price or reasonable value. Only one affidavit by a contractor is contemplated by the statute.” (Emphasis supplied.) Massachusetts Bonding &c. Co. v. Realty Trust Co., 142 Ga. 499, 503 (83 SE 210).

In Gignilliat v. West Lumber Co., 80 Ga. App. 652, 654 (56 SE2d 841) it was held that: “Under this statute, when the owner produces the affidavit of the contractor in compliance with such statute, stating that all bills for labor and material have been paid, the materialman’s claim against the owner by command of the statute cannot be perfected into a lien' upon the property of the owner.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Having concluded that the affidavit of the contractor does not meet the requirements of Code § 67-2001 (2), as amended, it did not work a dissolution of appellants’ liens. The claims for the liens were duly filed and recorded within the time provided in § 67-2002 (2), and suits to foreclose them were filed within 12 months after the amount claimed became due, as required by the statute. It now becomes necessary that we determine whether the owner’s affidavit, together with that of the contractor, submitted in support of the owner’s motion for summary judgment authorized the grant of judgments in her favor. We consider these in this and the succeeding division of this opinion.

The owner may establish a complete defense to an action to foreclose the liens by showing that the full construction contract price has been paid to the contractor and that the contractor, in turn, has disbursed the sum or sums representing the construction contract price which he received from the owner to the payment of valid claims of materialmen and laborers at a time *643 when they were entitled under the law to file and record their claims for liens, and that the payments were made at a time when no materialman or laborer had filed for record any claim of lien. It is the owner’s responsibility to see to it that the payments which he makes on the construction contract price are properly disbursed by the contractor to those having valid claims for labor and materials, and in establishing his defense to the foreclosure he has the burden of showing that this was done. Green v. Farrar Lumber Co., 119 Ga. 30 (46 SE 62); Tuck v. Moss Mfg. Co., 127 Ga. 729 (56 SE 1001). He is protected as against claims for liens which may have been filed and recorded subsequently to the full payment and proper disbursement of the contract price. Jones Brick Co. v. Seagler Bros., 146 Ga. 19 (90 SE 473).

Except for the amount claimed, the pleadings of each of the plaintiffs (materialmen) and the defendant (owner) are the same in these cases. As her defense the owner, admitting the jurisdictional allegations, denies that there has been any demand for payment, and says that she is without sufficient information to admit or deny allegations that plaintiffs supplied materials to the contractor in stated amounts for the job, that they have not been paid and have filed their claims for lien as provided by law. Then, as her affirmative defense, she alleges that she entered into a contract with Eddie Harrell for the construction of a house on certain realty, a copy of which is attached to her answer as Exhibit A, that the realty and improvements are the same ■ as that against which plaintiffs seek judgments in rem, and that the contract price for the improvements to be constructed was $7,000. She then asserts that “Defendant has paid the full agreed contract price to said contractor and said contractor has in turn paid the full agreed contract price to materialmen and laborers other than plaintiff in this action. Said payments were made by said contractor prior to the date that plaintiff’s claim of lien was filed and recorded in the office of the Clerk of Tift Superior Court.”

The owner moved for summary judgment, in support thereof relying upon her defensive pleadings, her own affidavit and that of Eddie Harrell, the contractor. In her affidavit she asserted *644 that she entered into a contract with Eddie Harrell for the construction of a house on the described realty, the original of which has been lost or misplaced but that a true copy is attached as Exhibit A (being the same as a copy attached to her answer and defense), that she “did pay to Eddie Harrell the full agreed contract price of $7,000, and that Eddie Harrell appropriated the full sum of $7,000, which was paid to him by affiant, to the payment of valid and just claims of materialmen and laborers other than plaintiff in this case.” She further asserts that at no time did she authorize the contractor to spend more than the contract price in construction of the house and that she “had no knowledge that the cost of said construction was more than the agreed contract price of $7,000” — thus an apparent default in her duty to see to it that the money was properly disbursed.

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.E.2d 782, 120 Ga. App. 639, 1969 Ga. App. LEXIS 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/short-paulk-supply-co-v-dykes-gactapp-1969.