Southern Residence Corp. v. City Supply Co.

169 S.E. 579, 160 Va. 660, 1933 Va. LEXIS 247
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 15, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 169 S.E. 579 (Southern Residence Corp. v. City Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Residence Corp. v. City Supply Co., 169 S.E. 579, 160 Va. 660, 1933 Va. LEXIS 247 (Va. 1933).

Opinion

Epes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in chancery brought by the City Supply Company, Incorporated, the bill in which names W. H. McCoy, Southern Residence Corporation, J. T. Stafford and G. L. Brickwell as parties defendant. There is, however, no allegation in it showing why Stafford and Brickwell were made parties defendant and no relief is prayed for against them; and we shall treat the bill as a bill against only McCoy and the Southern Residence Corporation.

The material facts shown by the evidence, which are sufficiently alleged in the bill, are as follows:

The Southern Residence Corporation owned in fee simple two lots in the city of Portsmouth, Virginia, on which there were two buildings, designated as 2520-2522 and 2524-2526 Effingham street. On June 22, 1929, it entered into a written contract with W. H. McCoy to rebuild and repair these two buildings and to furnish all material for such work. The material provisions of this contract read as follows:

“The party of the first part agrees to fully complete the said building in all particulars to the satisfaction of the party of the second part and the party of the second part agrees to pay to the party of the first part the said sum of [663]*663$2,550 upon the completion of said work to its satisfaction less any small amounts it may from time to time at its pleasure advance to the party of the first part on account of labor during the progress of said work.

“Said work is to begin on the first day of July, 1929, and completed within ninety (90) days, work thereupon to be continuous, inclement weather excepted. Should said alterations be not completed within the time specified and should the said W. H. McCoy fail in any three successive days to have mechanics and artisans at work upon said building, the said Southern Residence Corporation may employ such help as is necessary to complete this contract, charging the cost thereof to the said W. H. McCoy.”

Between July 31st and October 14, 1929, City Supply Company, Incorporated, sold and delivered to McCoy for this job materials amounting to $325.92.

On October 14, 1929, McCoy signed and gave to City Supply Company, Incorporated, the following order and assignment dated October 14, 1929, addressed to Southern Residence Corporation:

“Gentlemen:

“Kindly pay to the City Supply Company, Incorporated, of Portsmouth, Virginia, the sum of five hundred and fifty ($550.00) dollars of the amount due me from you for labor and material furnished at 2522 and 2424 Effingham street, Portsmouth, Virginia, and I hereby assign said due me from you to the City Supply Company, Incorporated, to the extent of five hundred and fifty ($550.00) dollars.”

This order of assignment was mailed to Southern Residence Corporation by City Supply Company, Incorporated, and received by the former on October 16, 1929. It admits that it was received, but the testimony is that it declined to accept it. City Supply Company, Incorporated, furnished other materials to McCoy on this job between October 14th and November 29, 1929, the total price of such material furnished to McCoy July 31-November 29, 1929, amounting to $783.01. All of this material was used by McCoy on this [664]*664job and none of it has been paid for by him or any other person.

Prior to the date this assignment was delivered to the Southern Residence Corporation it had made payments to McCoy aggregating $964. During the period November 16th-December 2nd, it paid to McCoy $456.50 by checks drawn to his order for the following amounts, $175, $115, $3.50, $163. The check of December 2nd for $163 was the last payment made by it to McCoy himself. Subsequently it made other payments direct to laborers, mechanics and materialmen for labor and materials furnished by them to McCoy for this job before he discontinued work on it and threw up the job.

McCoy quit the job before it was completed and it was thereafter completed by Southern Residence Corporation at a cost of $529.90. The evidence does not fix exactly the date upon which McCoy discontinued work on this job, but it warrants the inference that it was prior to January 10, 1930; and the commissioner in chancery reports that the rebuilding, repair and improvement of the property was finally completed on or about March 10, 1930.

On January 10,1930, City Supply Company, Incorporated, filed a mechanic’s lien on these buildings for the amount of $783.01 with interest from November 29, 1929, and duly perfected it under the provisions of section 6428 of the Code, notice in writing of the amount and character of its claim being duly served on Southern Residence Corporation on January 18, 1930.

Section 6428, which relates to the perfection of mechanics’ liens by subcontractors, reads in part as follows: “* * * But the amount for which a subcontractor may perfect a lien under this section shall not exceed the amount in which the owner is indebted to the general contractor at the time the notice is given, or shall thereafter become indebted to the general contractor upon his contract with said general contractor for said structure or building * *

So far as the record discloses no other mechanic’s lien [665]*665was filed on this property, and neither City Supply Company, Incorporated, nor any other subcontractor took steps under Acts 1924, page 658, ch. 435 (Michie’s Va. Code, 1930, section 6429a), to fix a personal liability on Southern Residence Corporation.

It is not possible to determine from the record the exact amount of the contract price which remained unpaid on January 10, 1930; but it did not exceed $1,129.50 and was probably materially less. So, on that date the amount due or to become due to McCoy in excess of the $529.90, which Southern Residence Corporation had to expend to complete the job after it was thrown up by McCoy, did not exceed $599.50, and the evidence warrants the inference that it did not exceed $550 on January 18, 1930.

If the Southern Residence Corporation had paid the $550 order of October 14, 1929, there would have been nothing in its hands on January 10, 1930, which was due or thereafter became due to McCoy under its contract with him.

The total amount paid by Southern Residence Corporation to and for the account of McCoy, including the $529.90 paid to complete the job after he threw it up, amounted to $2,280.72; and at the time this suit was brought it had on its hands $269.28 which was due him.

The commissioner in chancery, to whom the cause was referred, reported that the order of October 14, 1929, was an equitable assignment pro tanto of the money then due or to become due to McCoy under the contract of June 22, 1929; that upon receipt of notice of the assignment, it became the duty of Southern Residence Corporation to make the application directed by it of any sums due or to become due to McCoy; that if it afterwards voluntarily paid to the contractor the part of the fund so assigned, it did so in its own wrong; that the $269.28 then in the hands of Southern Residence Corporation, “together with the amount wrongfully paid to the contractor, constituted a fund from which plaintiff should be paid the sum ($550) specified in the order and assignment”; that the order should have been [666]

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169 S.E. 579, 160 Va. 660, 1933 Va. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-residence-corp-v-city-supply-co-va-1933.