Wortman & Mann, Inc. v. Frierson Building Supply Co.
This text of 184 So. 2d 857 (Wortman & Mann, Inc. v. Frierson Building Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
WORTMAN & MANN, INC.
v.
FRIERSON BUILDING SUPPLY COMPANY, King Floor Surfacing Company, Inc., and Capitol Insulation Company, Inc.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
Neal, Houston & Elliott, Wm. F. Goodman, Jr., Watkins & Eager, Jackson, for appellant.
B.B. McClendon, Jr., Pat H. Scanlon, Young & Young, W.F. Selph, Jr., Binder & Bush, Jackson, for appellee.
RODGERS, Justice:
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Hinds County, Mississippi, in a case in which the appellees filed a petition to enforce a statutory lien for materials furnished Alton W. Ivy, a building contractor. Appellees sought to establish a lien in their favor, as materialmen, superior and prior to the lien of Wortman & Mann, Inc., who held title to certain lots obtained by foreclosure of two construction loan trust deeds.
The record on appeal reveals the following facts. During 1964, Alton W. Ivy, hereafter designated as "Contractor", was engaged as a building contractor in the business of constructing homes. He submitted plans and specifications to the Federal Housing Administration for two proposed residences, and after having obtained an appraisal and evaluation, Wortman & Mann, Inc. agreed to advance funds to the contractor to purchase two lots for construction purposes.
On February 10, 1964, appellant, Wortman & Mann, Inc., hereafter called "Loan Company", lent the contractor $2,300 with which to purchase a lot designated as number "73", from Jackson Land & Development Syndicate. The contractor executed a promissory note and a deed of trust in favor *858 of the Loan Company on lot No. 73. At the same time, the Contractor purchased lot No. 49 and the Loan Company lent him $2,000, with which to purchase this lot. The Loan Company also took a note and deed of trust on lot No. 49 to secure this loan.
On March 6, 1964, the Contractor executed two new deeds of trust to secure two construction loans on lots Nos. 49 and 73. On March 3, 1964, the Loan Company advanced $6,900 to the Contractor but subtracted the sum of $2,332.68 from this advancement to pay the note for the purchase price of lot No. 73. On March 13, 1964, the Loan Company advanced $5,850 to the Contractor upon another trust deed on lot No. 49, but deducted $2,010.67 to pay the purchase price due the Loan Company for lot No. 49. Thereafter, at regular intervals from March 6, 1964, through May 19, 1964, the Loan Company advanced a total of $11,800 to the Contractor on the residence being constructed on lot No. 73. The Loan Company also advanced funds to the Contractor at intervals on lot No. 49 between March 3, 1964, and May 1, 1964, in the total sum of $9,750. Thus, the Loan Company advanced to the Contractor on both buildings under the two trust deeds on lots 49 and 73 the total sum of $21,550.
The testimony shows that of the total sum advanced by the Loan Company, only $12,011.69 was actually used as payment for labor and materials that went into the construction of the two residences on lots Nos. 49 and 73. This sum does not include the purchase price of the two lots in the sum of $4,300.
The Contractor failed to pay the notes when they became due, and on February 2, 1965, the deed of trust secured by lot No. 49 was foreclosed. The Loan Company, Wortman & Mann, Inc., was the successful purchaser at $8,411.84. The deed of trust on lot No. 73 was foreclosed on February 3, 1965, and again the Loan Company purchased this property for $10,177.85.
Thereafter, on February 19, 1965, appellee Frierson Building Supply Company filed its petition for a judgment against Alton W. Ivy, the Contractor, and to enforce a materialman's lien against the property purchased by the Loan Company, Wortman & Mann, Inc., for material and supplies furnished to the Contractor and used in the construction of the residences on lots Nos. 49 and 73.
On June 18, 1964, Frierson Building Supply Company filed notice of a materialman's lien and in December 1964, lis pendens notice was filed in the Chancery Clerk's Office in Hinds County, Mississippi. On March 15, 1965 Capital Insulation Company, Inc. filed a petition to intervene in the suit, and on May, 1965, King Floor Surfacing Company, Inc. filed its petition to intervene in the action. The record does not reveal, however, that the appellees, materialmen, did anything to establish a lien upon the construction in which their materials were being used until after the appellant, Loan Company, had furnished the Contractor funds, under the terms of the two recorded trust deeds.
Appellees contend in their petition that their respective claims are superior to that of the Loan Company because "Wortman & Mann, Inc. failed to use reasonable diligence and care to insure that the proceeds of the said loan were used in payment of labor and materials used in the construction of said property. The proceeds of said loan were not actually used in payment for the construction and improvement on said property."
The circuit judge, before whom the case was tried, entered a judgment against Alton W. Ivy in favor of the appellees for the respective sums claimed by each materialman, subject however to the prior and superior lien of appellant, Wortman & Mann, Inc., for the sum of $12,011.69, the money actually paid for labor and materials used in the construction of the residences here involved. The court ordered the property sold to pay the judgments rendered.
Wortman & Mann, Inc. has appealed and insists that it is entitled to retain the title *859 to the property here involved, and that the judgment appealed from should be reversed insofar as it affects the appellant, because its lien was paramount and superior to the inchoate lien of the appellees for the entire amount of its two loans on lots Nos. 49 and 73; that appellees did not perfect their claim to a materialmen's lien; that appellant had no notice of appellees' claims until March 11, 1965; and that in any case it did all that was legally required of it to determine whether or not there were claims due for material and labor each time it advanced a loan to the Contractor.
The records show that the appellant Loan Company offered testimony that the loan advancements were made by title insurance attorneys and that they obtained a statement in the form of an affidavit from the Contractor each time a loan was advanced to him to the effect that no indebtedness was due by him for materials and labor at the time the payments were made. These attorneys also examined the records of construction liens in the chancery clerk's office before delivering to the Contractor the funds advanced by appellant, Wortman & Mann, Inc.
After a careful examination of the record in this case, and a review of the decisions of this Court, we have reached the conclusion that the appellees do not have enforceable liens upon the property here involved, and that the court was in error in requiring the property to be sold to satisfy the judgment debt due to the materialmen from Contractor Alton W. Ivy.
Mississippi Code Annotated section 356 (Supp. 1964) was amended by the Legislature and became effective April 23, 1964, the pertinent parts of which are as follows:
"(a) Every house, building * * * or structure of any kind * * * constructed, altered, or repaired * * * shall be liable for the debt contracted and owing, for labor done or materials furnished * * * and debt for such services or construction shall be a lien thereon.
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