Southern California E. Co. v. McDonald

173 P. 760, 178 Cal. 386, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 487
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1918
DocketL. A. No. 4139. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 173 P. 760 (Southern California E. Co. v. McDonald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern California E. Co. v. McDonald, 173 P. 760, 178 Cal. 386, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 487 (Cal. 1918).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The record presents two appeals from parts of the judgment, one by the plaintiff, the other by the defendant Alex Grant.

The main question presented on plaintiff’s appeal is whether or not, under the mechanic’s lien law as revised in 1911 (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 1183-1203), a claimant for labor or materials *388 bestowed upon a building, who first serves on the owner a notice to withhold payments, as provided in section 1184, is entitled to preference in the money due from the owner to the contractor, intercepted by such notice, over another claimant who serves a later notice. A brief statement will show the facts upon which this question arises.

Alex Grant was the original contractor for the erection of a school building for the Los Angeles school district. C. F. McDonald was a subcontractor for the electrical work under said contract. The plaintiff furnished to McDonald a part of the work and materials necessary for the performance of the subcontract, and thereby McDonald became indebted to and still owes plaintiff a balance of $570.

The Lorbeer Electrical Supply Company furnished other labor and materials to McDonald on said subcontract, whereby McDonald became indebted to and still owes it a balance of $550. Some extra work was done by McDonald at the request of Grant upon which the Lorbeer Company performed labor and furnished material to McDonald to the amount of $106, for which McDonald is still indebted to it.

The building was completed in accordance with the contract. On October 10, 1913, the plaintiff served upon the school district a notice to withhold money from the contractor for the payment of its claim aforesaid. At that time there was no money due on the contract price from the school district to Grant, but thereafter, on October 14, 1913, the sum of five hundred dollars became due thereon to Grant. Apparently this was the final payment, although the record does not show the fact. Before the trial the district paid this sum into court, and thereupon, by order of the court and with the consent of the parties, the district was exonerated from further liability and the ease was dismissed so far as it was concerned. On October 16, 1913, two days after said five hundred dollar payment became.due, the Lorbeer Company served upon the school district a notice to withhold payments from Grant to the amount of its claim for $550 aforesaid. Thereafter, on November 7, 1913, it served on the district a second notice covering only the claim for $106 on account of said extras.

The plaintiff’s complaint states a cause of action to recover from McDonald the entire amount of its claim against him and to have the money due from the school district to Grant applied on said claim. ■ The Lorbeer Company filed a cross- *389 complaint setting up its claim against McDonald and Grant and praying that the money due from the school district he applied thereon. The court below divided the five hundred dollars due from the school district proportionally between plaintiff and the Lorbeer Company, giving the plaintiff $254.46 and the Lorbeer Company $245.54. In making this apportionment it excluded the Lorbeer claim on account of the extras aforesaid. These sums were credited to Grant on the respective claims aforesaid and judgment was rendered against him for the balance, that is, for $315.54, in favor of the plaintiff, and for $410.46, including the $106 for extras in favor of the Lorbeer Company.

The plaintiff’s argument in support of its appeal is, as indicated above, that the effect of section 1184 is that the one of two or more claimants who first serves a stop notice on the owner is entitled to preference, not only in an installment of the contract price then overdue, but also in all installments then unpaid, whether then due or not, and that the fact that one claimant serves his notice before and the other after the maturity of an installment is immaterial. The question presented is not quite so broad. It will be observed that the installment of five hundred dollars here involved was not due when the plaintiff served his notice, but was past due when the notice of the Lorbeer Company was served. The question whether claimants who serve stop notices prior to the maturity of a given installment are to have preference therein in the order of the time of service, or whether they shall share proportionally, is not involved. It may be that in such a case they should share proportionally in such installment, but we need not and do not decide the question. We think that the fact that the installment became due after plaintiff’s notice and before the service of the Lorbeer Company’s notice is material and that it is decisive of the rights of the parties.

Section 1184 provides that any person described in section 1183 as entitled to a lien may at any time give the stop notice to the owner, stating that he has performed labor or furnished material, or has agreed to do so, to the contractor and the amount thereof in value, and then proceeds as follows: “Upon such' notice being given it shall be lawful for the owner to withhold, and in the ease of property which, for reasons of public policy or otherwise, is not subject to the liens in this chapter provided for, the owner or person who contracted *390 with the contractor, shall withhold from his contractor sufficient money due or that may become due to such contractor to answer such claim. ...”

So far as public corporations are concerned, this provision ' is in the same language as it was before the revision of 1911. The owner “shall withhold from his contractor sufficient money due or that may become due to such contractor to answer such claim.” In Diamond Match Co. v. Silberstein, 165 Cal. 282, [131 Pac. 874], this language was construed, and it was held that it made it the duty of the owner upon receiving such notice to withhold a sufficient sum to answer the claim from the first moneys that became due thereafter upon his contract with the contractor, and that if he failed to do so and later notices were served, sufficient to absorb all the subsequent installments of the contract price, the owner could be required by the person who served the first notice to pay the entire amount of his claim up to the amount of the installment which first became due after the service of his notice. Other decisions, in effect, hold that the right of a building contractor to an installment of the contract price is subject to the claims of materialmen and laborers who have given stop notices to the owner prior to the maturity of such installment, and that if the stop notice is given after maturity, the right of the materialman or laborer therein is subject to any previous disposition thereof by the contractor or any previous right acquired against the contractor therein. (First Nat. Bank v. Perris Irr. Dist., 107 Cal. 62, [40 Pac. 45]; Newport Wharf etc. Co. v. Drew, 125 Cal. 585, [58 Pac. 187] ; Miles v. Ryan, 172 Cal. 205, [157 Pac. 5].) These cases decide that if the contractor has assigned an installment, such assignment is good against a subsequent stop notice served after the maturity thereof, and that if a creditor of the contractor has garnisheed such installment, a subsequent stop notice served after maturity is subject to the rights of the attaching creditor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 P. 760, 178 Cal. 386, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-california-e-co-v-mcdonald-cal-1918.