Church E. Gates & Co. v. Jno. F. Stevens Construction Co.

Hotchkiss, J.:

The trustee in bankruptcy of the Jno. F. Stevens Construction Company (hereinafter called the Construction Company) appeals *224from so much of the judgment herein which sustained a number of mechanics’ liens. The Construction Company was a contractor with the city of New York for building, in what is known as the cut and cover ” method, a portion of the Westchester Avenue Rapid Transit railroad, in the prosecution of which work the Construction Company contracted for the labor and materials which are the subject of the liens in question. On August 11, 1913, the Construction Company was adjudicated a bankrupt. Subsequently the trustee in bankruptcy entered into a contract with the Richard Carvel Company, Inc., for taking over and continuing the work. The first lieii was filed August 12, and the last on December 4, 1913, all after the commencement of the bankruptcy proceedings. By an arrangement between the parties, the moneys due at the time of the bankruptcy from the city to the Construction Company were paid to the trustee, and the liens were by agreement transferred to this fund. Some of the claims in dispute may be classified so as to reduce the number to be particularly examined.

Lumber claims. These embrace the claims of Gates & Co., Yellow Pine Company, Cross, Austin & Ireland Lumber Company, Trexler Lumber Company, Higbie Company and Rheinfrank Company. These claims were for material used for building temporary derricks; building a temporary trestle to support temporary gas pipes; building temporary offices and other temporary buildings; for constructing moulds or forms for concrete, for fences; for temporary bracing in the street cut, street flooring or decking, sheeting or sheathing, and for repairing temporary cars. The claim of the Rheinfrank Company included steel “I” beams used as supports for holding up the public street. Although the findings are not identical with respect of each of the several claims, practically the findings as to all of the lumber claims were to the effect that the lumber was used up or consumed or cut up and distributed in and about said subway job.” ■

B. S. Barnard. Claim for conduit rods” used for cleaning out electrical conduits after they were permanently installed.

E. I. Du Pont De Nemours Powder Company. Claim for dynamite, fuses, connecting wire, batteries, and lead wire, all *225used in connection with blasting operations, and all of which, save the lead wire, was actually consumed and used up in the progress of the work.

A. P. Dienst Company, Inc. This claim was for a great variety of builders’ hardware and similar supplies, for a considerable portion of which the lienor conceded it had no lien. The portion for which a hen was sustained was used in the construction of a derrick and temporary buildings, repairs to plant, construction of temporary chutes, bracing, sheeting or sheathing, street decking, a temporary railway for removing dirt, in making steam drills, uprights, stringers under the street surface railroad, and for blasting mats.

Atlas Portland Cement Company, Clermont Sewer Pipe Company, and Philadelphia Electrical and Manufacturing Company. These claims were for material actually incorporated into the completed work and do not seem to be contested by the appellant.

Central Union Gas Company. Claim for labor and materials in disconnecting the permanent gas mains and furnishing and installing temporary pipes for the distribution of gas to abutting properties during the construction of the railroad.

American Bridge Company. The Construction Company had contracted with the bridge company for the riveted structural steel work and beams necessary for the work in question, payments to be made monthly in installments of ninety per cent of the value of the delivered material, deliveries to be made f. o. b. within the free lighterage limits of New York city. Subsequently, for the convenience of the Construction Company, the contract was modified so as to provide for a temporary delivery within the State of New Jersey. A considerable portion of the steel covered by the contract was delivered, paid for and used. The lien was filed for an unpaid balance of $17,781.47. Concerning the deliveries, the court below found that up to August eleventh (the date of the bankruptcy) the bridge company “ furnished and delivered ” steel of the value of $30,281.13, upon account of which $12,496.66 had been paid, leaving the unpaid balance of $17,781.47, which became due and payable as follows: August 10,1913, $6,249.93; September *22610, 1913, $8,503.13; November 0, 1913, $3,028.11; that prior to October twentieth £ £ said material ” was by the bridge company delivered to the said Richard Carvel Company, the successor in interest of the Construction Company; that part of the entire purchase of steel was actually used in the railroad work, and that the part not so used was prior to October 20, 1913, c< delivered at or near the site of said subway ” for use in the work as needed. The court also found that at the time the lien of the bridge company was filed none of the steel in question ££ was within the State of New York.” These findings leave the exact facts concerning deliveries somewhat cloudy. The evidence on the subject is to be found in the correspondence of the parties. On March 18,1913, the Construction Company wrote to the bridge company, saying that it (the Construction Company) was endeavoring to make arrangements for the use of storage space in New Jersey, pending the completion of which it requested the bridge company to arrange to store at the Pennsylvania Railroad Company’s Greenville yard, at the expense of the Construction Company, and when the latter was ready to receive the steel the bridge company (or its carrier) should reload it on lighters and deliver at any point within free lighterage limits which the Construction Company might select. Replying to the foregoing, the bridge company expressed its assent to the proposed arrangement, adding: ££It being understood that material stored at Greenville will be considered as completely delivered under our contract and payments made accordingly. ” On the day following the secretary of the Construction Company wrote to the bridge company, and in the course of his letter, referring to the proposal of the latter last above quoted, said: ££I presume you mean by this the receipt of the material, but that it is also understood, in accordance with our contract, that this material is really not delivered to us until we take it at some dock on the East river or the Harlem river * * *; in other words, there will be no additional expense to us for the lightering of this material when we are ready to use it.” On March twenty-first the bridge company expressed its assent to the foregoing. It is thus apparent that the only modification of the original contract was that the time for payments was to be computed *227from the date of the Greenville deliveries, but that the physical deliveries were to be made in New York city, as per the original contract. It seems to be undisputed that all of the steel remaining in the Greenville yard at the time of the bankruptcy was taken possession of by the trustee and sold or disposed of by him to the Richard Carvel Company, which company completed the work.

In three recent cases I think we may discover the principles which, in the case of most of the claims in question, should guide us in determining whether they are of a character entitling them to the benefit of the statute. In the dynamite case (Schaghticoke Powder Co. v. G. & J. R. Co., 183 N. Y. 306), where the court held dynamite a proper subject of a hen, in the course of the opinion Werner, J., said (pp. 312, 313, 314): “ The argument that dynamite is not a material, but a part of the contractor’s plant which, like picks and shovels or mechanical appliances, are used in the performance of work, but are not-considered materials furnished within the purview of the statute, seems to us inherently unsound. A steam shovel, an engine and boiler, picks, shovels, crowbars and the like, are tools and appliances which, while used in the doing of the work, survive its performance and remain the property of their owner. Not so, however, with materials that are used up in the performance of the work and are thereafter invisible except as they survive in tangible results. We think that explosives, when used as substitutes for other recognized ‘materials’ are covered by the same principle. They enter into and form a part of the permanent structure quite as much as the earth, rails, ties, culverts and bridges that we can see and feel. * Further on, Judge Werner said: “Mason work may be done on a road in a dry country or season when large quantities of water must be hauled many miles for the preparation of the necessary mortar. Upon the completion of the structure and the hardening of the mortar, the water has as thoroughly disappeared as the powder after the blast. Again, lumber may be used in the construction of a building for the purpose of scaffolding. However, it does not thereby literally enter into the composition of the building, nor, so to speak, become a part of it. But, in my judgment, *228both it and the water have been £ used ’ in the construction of the building and mason work, within the meaning of the Lien Law, and the purposes for which it was enacted.” In Troy Public Works Co. v. City of Yonkers (207 N. Y. 81) it was held that a steam shovel leased to a contractor for use on a public work, and then to be returned to the owner, is not ‘ materials ” within the meaning of the Lien Law, and the owner is not entitled to a lien for the unpaid rent. Judge Werner again wrote for the court, and, referring to explosives covered by the dynamite case, said (p. 83): We decided that they were [within the statute], because they were not only used in the construction of the work, but were literally £ used up ’ in its performance,” and he then proceeds to quote what was further said in that case with respect to the steam shovel, picks, shovels and other plant used in the performance of the work. Continuing, Judge Werner said (p. 84): £ £ Material means 1 matter which is intended to be used in the creation of a mechanical structure ’ (2 Bouvier Law Diet. [Rawle’s rev.] 341), or the substance matter of which anything is made’ (Webster). It does not mean the machinery that may be used in the manufacture of materials, for it might as well be said £ that the mill by which the lumber is sawed, or the tools used by the mechanic in building a house, are materials furnished in the construction of the house as to say that the machinery used in the manufacture of the artificial stone is to be considered as part of the materials used in the construction of the masonry work, ’ ” citing Basshor v. B. & O. R. R. Co. (65 Md. 99, 103). Further on Judge Werner refers to wooden moulds for concrete blocks which were to be returned to the owner after the completion of the work as being without the statute. In Shultz v. Quereau Co. (210 N. Y. 257) it was held that coal sold to a contractor engaged in building a State highway and used in generating steam for a road roller and traction engine is not ££materials” within the statute. In that case Judge Collin, writing for a unanimous court, referring to the dynamite and to the steam shovel cases, said: ££ While the line of demarcation between these two decisions is not broad, it is real and indestructible, and a clear definition of it will suggest, at least, the answer to the question presented.” Judge Collin, then points out that *229the powder was applied directly to the earth which had to be removed in order to complete the structure. “ The construction primarily, and not mediately, absorbed and included it. It and the substances which in the process of construction took the place of the earth it released entered into the construction in the same sense and with the same reality, although it did not remain a visible part of the completed improvement. It was not thus with the steam shovel. It, as an article or substance, was not applied to the construction, upon the completion of which it remained substantially as it was at the beginning and ready to be taken to and used upon another undertaking. Its effects, and not it, were applied directly to the construction, which did not absorb or include it. It did not lose its identity nor cease to exist as a separate article. It promoted and aided in, but was not a material furnished for the construction. The. distinction we are here expressing was made clear by our decisions already mentioned.” Judge Collin then proceeds to point out that the coal was but an adjunct of the steam roller, and later he cites a Wisconsin case (Barker & Stewart Lumber Co. v. Marathon Paper Mills Co., 146 Wis. 12), which held that materials used for a coffer dam constructed for the purpose of building a permanent dam, which latter was the subject of the contract, ‘ ‘ and which were, in effect, destroyed by their use in the coffer dam or subsequent use, were the lawful subject of a mechanic’s lien,” of which case Judge Collin says: “ Concerning which decision we express no opinion ” (p. 261), but he quotes and approves the following in the opinion of that case, which, after speaking of coal used in portable engines, oil used for lubricating building machinery, and food eaten by laborers, said: “But all these things seem quite plainly distinguishable. They are at least one step further removed from the actual work of construction. They have neither physical contact nor immediate connection with the structure at any time. They are used only to facilitate and make possible the operation of tools, machinery, or men, which in their turn act upon the structure. The authorities are unanimous in holding that no lien accrues for such materials.” The burden of the appellant’s argument here is that no material is the subject of a lien which does not become a component part of the completed structure, *230although used in and about the work. It must physically enter into the work or be actually consumed, destroyed or annihilated in or about its physical connection with the work, to come under the statute.' It is true that there are words in both the dynamite case and the shovel case which, torn from their context, would appear to give support to this argument, but I think the broad principle to be gathered from the three cases referred to is, generally speaking, that although plant, tools and their adjuncts, which are but instruments for accomplishing the work, surviving its completion, and which are not used in the physical construction, are not within the statute, the case is different with materials which do come into physical use and contact, and which aré used in immediate connection with the work, although neither permanently entering into it nor actually annihilated in the course of their use,' but which, although remaining as physical substances after the work is completed, are, so far as their original form or condition is concerned, practically destroyed. Although Judge Collin was careful in the coal case not to commit the court to the decision that material used for a coffer dam would come under the statute, I think the principle to be drawn from the three cases sustains what Judge Werner said in the dynamite case when he used as an illustration lumber entering into a scaffold, and said that in his judgment lumber so used was the subject of a lien.

If a sound distinction can be drawn between scaffolds, which Judge Werner said were within the statute, and concrete moulds, which he said were not within the statute, it may be that presumably the former are a special form of construction adaptable only to the particular work in hand, whereas the latter not only survive the particular job, but may be used as part of the plant on other work. Applying the foregoing principles to the claims at issue, the following is the result:

Lumber claims — within the statute: lumber used in building derricks, temporary, trestle, fences, bracing, sheeting or sheathing, street flooring or decking, and the steel “I” beams used for supports. Hot within the statute: lumber used for building offices and other temporary buildings; for construct*231ing concrete moulds, repairing cars, or otherwise used in “plant.” Barnard claim, within the statute. Du Pont De Nemours Powder Company claim, all within the statute. Dienst & Co. claim, all within the statute except so much as was used for temporary buildings, repairs to plant, and for steam drills. Central Union Gas Company claim, all within the statute.

With respect to the claim of the American Bridge Company, the trustee argues that the statute is only applicable to materials furnished within the State and that it has no extraterritorial force, citing Birmingham Iron Foundry v. Glen Cove S. Mfg. Co. (78 N. Y. 30), and Campbell v. Coon (149 id. 556). In the former case a steam engine was sold and delivered in Connecticut and was by the purchaser transported to its works, in this State, where it was erected; and it was held, the engine not having been furnished in this State, that there could be no lien. In Campbell v. Coon, defendant had contracted with a New Jersey iron works company to furnish and erect iron work for a building in New York city. The iron works company subcontracted with plaintiffs, residents of New Jersey, for a certain portion of the work, and plaintiffs agreed to deliver “at and for the building ” in question. Distinguishing the Birmingham Iron Foundry case, the court held that the fact that plaintiffs were required to deliver on the job in New York gave them the right to a lien. The principle of that case sustains the lien of the bridge company.

Finally, the trustee, appellant, objects to all of the claims on the ground that the liens were not filed until after the filing of the petition in bankruptcy. This question was decided adversely to the appellant in Hildreth Granite Co. v. City of Watervliet (161 App. Div. 420). The decision was by a divided court, but I am inclined to concur with the reasoning of Smith, P. J., who wrote for the majority.

The judgment should be affirmed as to all the claims, except such lumber claims as embrace items not within the statute, and except as to the claim of Dienst & Co., as to which there should be a new trial. But if the parties can agree upon the allowable items and amounts, new findings will be made and the judgment modified accordingly, and as thus modified, *232affirmed, with costs to those parties who succeed, and without costs to those as to whom the judgment is modified.

Ingraham, P. J., and Scott, J., concurred; Clarke and Dowling, JJ., dissented in part.