To preserve its lien, the plaintiff, as a subcontractor, was bound to give the defendant written notice that it had commenced to furnish materials for the construction of his building and intended to claim a lien therefor. It was bound to give this notice "after commencing, and not later than sixty days after ceasing, to furnish materials or render services." General Statutes, § 4137. The statute gave the plaintiff the option to serve the notice at once, upon commencing to furnish the materials, or to delay it to any date not later than sixty days after ceasing to furnish them. It was clearly within its rights, therefore, in delaying the notice until twenty days after it had ceased to furnish materials.
Under § 4138 of the General Statutes the plaintiff's lien could in no case attach upon the defendant's building to a greater amount than he had agreed to pay the original contractor for its construction; and, if he had reduced the amount due the contractor by payments under the contract made to him in good faith before notice of the lien, the lien could not attach for a greater amount than the balance due to the contractor. The question is whether the payments amounting to $910 are to be allowed as made in good faith. The statute last mentioned provides that "in determining the amount to which any lien or liens shall attach upon any land or building, the owner of such land or building shall be allowed whatever payments he shall have made, in good faith, to the original contractor or contractors, before receiving notice of such lien or liens. No payments made in advance of the time stipulated in the original contract shall be considered as made in good faith, unless notice of intention to make such payment shall have *Page 506 been given in writing to each person known to have furnished materials or rendered services at least five days before such payment is made." The payments in question were made in advance of the time stipulated in the contract, and when the defendant knew that the plaintiff had been and was furnishing materials for his building, and without giving it any notice of the intended payments. If, therefore, the statute is to receive a literal construction, these payments are not to be considered as made in good faith, and so cannot be allowed to the defendant in determining the amount for which the plaintiff's lien attaches.
The defendant insists that to refuse to allow payments thus made before notice of intention to claim a lien had been given, and which, although made in advance of the stipulated time, might have been made at the stipulated time and still in advance of the notice, is to defeat the purpose of the statute, which, he claims, is solely to secure the subcontractor's "right, if he serve his notice of intention to claim a lien before a payment comes due, to find in the hands of the owner the entire sum." It is apparent that if this is its sole purpose the last sentence of the statute is of no force. Under the statute prior to its amendment in 1899 (Public Acts of 1899, p. 1052, Chap. 121) this provision did not appear. The lienor was then bound to give his notice "within sixty days from the time when he shall have commenced to furnish materials," etc., and the owner was "allowed whatever payments he shall have made, in good faith, to the original contractor or contractors, before receiving notice of such lien." General Statutes (1888), §§ 3020, 3021. The amendment of 1899 permitted the subcontractor to delay filing his notice of lien until sixty days after he ceased to furnish materials or services, and the closing language of what is now § 4138 was added at that time. To say that the present statute means only what the defendant claims it does, is to say that the added language means nothing in the statute to which it was annexed. *Page 507
The statute, as it stood before, gave the lienor the right which the defendant claims is the only one given by the present law — the right, if he served his notice before a payment became due, to find in the hands of the owner when the lien matured the entire sum which was there when notice was served. It is to be presumed that the amendment was not made without a purpose. Sections 4137 and 4138 are for the benefit of person who furnish labor and material for the construction of the building. It gives them a lien upon the building as against an owner between whom and themselves there is no privity. It gives their lien a preference over that of the original contractor. They are thus given a means of securing, through the owner's property, a debt due to them from the contractor alone. The tendency to extend the time within which the notice of intention to claim the lien may be served appears in the amendments already referred to. It is not material at present to inquire why the parties do not serve these notices upon beginning to furnish the labor or materials. Possibly such a course is not favored by the original contractor. The longer the delay the greater the opportunity by payments made collusively or in bad faith, to defeat the subcontractor's lien, and the greater the difficulty in discovering and proving the bad faith. The provision in question, by providing that no payment made in advance of the time stipulated shall be considered as made in good faith, unless notice of intention to make it shall have been given to each person known to have furnished materials or rendered services at least five days before such payment is made, is therefore of material benefit to the subcontractor. If by inadvertence or design he has delayed giving early notice of his lien, notice of the intended payment will enable him to protect himself against it by at once serving notice of the lien. On the other hand, if such notice of lien is not served within five days after notice of the intended payment has been given, the owner may proceed with the contemplated *Page 508 payment in safety, if made in good faith. Under the former law he could make no payments after notice of an intended lien had been served upon him; but before such notice was served he could make payments both at, and in advance of, the stipulated time, if made in good faith. Under the present law he is, as before, allowed all payments made when due and in good faith before notice, but he is not allowed for payments made when not due, although made before notice of a lien, unless he first gives five days' notice of the intended payment to those persons whom he knows have furnished materials and labor. Under the law before amendment, notice of the intended lien prevented any payment; under the amended law knowledge of the furnishing of materials and labor prevents the making of any payment which is not due, unless five days' notice of such intended payment is given. There is no injustice in compelling the owner, when he contemplates making a payment before the time provided in his contract, to notify all those, of whom he has knowledge, who, perhaps with knowledge of the provisions of the contract and relying upon the same, have neglected to file their liens. If he has failed to do this, and is thus compelled to pay again, the fault is his own. Under the statute as we interpret it, the defendant's advance payment cannot be considered to have been made in good faith.
Whether the note for $100, given to another subcontractor who had given notice that he claimed a lien upon the defendant's building, should be allowed the defendant in determining the amount of the plaintiff's lien, depends upon different considerations. The question is, was the giving of the note, under the circumstances detailed in the statement of the case, a payment. It was given after the final payment under the contract was due, and if it is to be considered as a payment to the contractor it should be allowed to the defendant. But the mere giving of the note, in the absence of any agreement that it should be in payment *Page 509 of the contractor's indebtedness to the subcontractor, would not extinguish that indebtedness or be a payment of it. Bill v. Porter,9 Conn. 23, 30; Hopkins v. Forrester, 39 id. 351, 354; Usher v.Waddingham, 62 id. 412, 426, 26 A. 538; Cummings v. Gleason, 72 Conn. 587,589, 45 A. 353. No such agreement is found, but it is found that the party receiving the note did not receipt the bill but merely gave a memorandum of credit by note. The party receiving the note, therefore, had he seen fit, could have filed his certificate of lien as a security for the original debt, and could then have claimed an apportionment of the security between himself and the plaintiff. The case is quite similar to Hopkins v. Forrester, 39 Conn. 351, where it is held that notes given by the owner to the lienor were not a payment and did not discharge the lien. Upon the finding the defendant failed to prove that the note was a payment.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.