Paine v. City of New York

Smith, J.:

The Hallowell Granite Company furnished the granite for the imposing entrance at the Manhattan end of the Manhattan bridge. The contract with the city was made by William P. Seaver who, after the work was partly finished, became financially embarrassed, and an arrangement was made by him with some of his creditors, including the Sherman National Bank and Max Radt, vice-president of that bank, by which Seaver should assign the balance due from the city to Radt and a committee of three creditors should complete the work, the money so received by Radt from the city to be used first in payment to the Hallowell Company of the entire amount for granite furnished; second, to pay for the work and material necessary to finish the job and then to pay the creditors signing the above agreement, including the Sherman National Bank, pro rata. There was also a provision that any surplus should be paid to Seaver.

In carrying out this creditors’ agreement, Seaver and Radt entered into a new contract with the Hallowell Company by which Seaver and Radt agreed to pay the Hallowell Company $197,427 for granite to be delivered. There is some question as to whether this contract was delivered before the execution of the creditors’ agreement, but it is sufficient to say the creditors’ agreement recites that the Radt-Hallowell agreement had been made.

The creditors’ agreement was executed by about one-half of the creditors and the assignment by Seaver to Radt of the balance due on the city contract was executed and duly filed in the proper offices, in accordance with the Lien Law, July 17, 1915.

The. work was thereafter continued by the committee until all of the granite had been delivered by the Hallowell Company and the contract with the city practically completed, when the Hallowell Company filed a mechanic's lien September 21, 1916, for $44,854.24, the balance due for granite delivered, and other liens were thereafter filed, including an assignment by Radt to the Sherman National Bank of $25,000 of the moneys due Radt from the Seaver assignment which arose as follows: The Sherman National Bank had advanced money to Seaver, Radt having as vice-president made the loans. Radt *684claiming to have obtained additional money from the bank, for the purpose of securing it, made the assignment of $25,000 (Badt’s Exhibit D), dated and filed September 25, 1916. By reason of this assignment the bank is making a claim on the contract money.

After the filing of the Hallowell lien the committee ceased acting under the agreement, but as there was some work to be done in completing small matters and cleaning up the job Badt did that work, paid some $10,000 for it personally, and so made available for all the parties interested the balance of $56,092.06 in the city’s hands applicable to the Seaver contract.

Under the terms of the creditors’ agreement, Badt was to receive payments from the city as the work progressed and pay it out on orders of the committee for the work and he was to lend his aid and assistance when requested.” Badt received from the city at different times $264,423.35 and paid out on orders of the committee $291,885.48 before the Hallowell lien was filed. These figures exclude from both sides of Badt’s accounts the payment of three notes of $7,500 each at the Sherman National.Bank, and the receipt of the proceeds of three notes discounted at said bank, but they show that Badt paid out under the creditors’ agreement $27,462.13 more than he received. This excess Badt claims to have paid under the clause of lending “ aid and assistance when requested,” and also that that payment was necessary and that the committee and Badt were under obligation to complete the work under the Seaver contract.

The parties in interest not being able to agree on a distribution of the $56,000 balance due on the city contract, the plaintiff, who had been appointed receiver of the Hallowell Company, commenced this action to foreclose its mechanic’s hen, making all lienors parties defendant and Badt commenced an action to establish his hen by virtue of the assignment to him and to adjudicate the amount due him thereunder. These two actions were consolidated and continued under the title of the first action, Badt’s complaint in his action being treated as his answer in this action.

The trial court has found that the Badt assignment was regularly filed, but it has held that Badt can take nothing *685by reason of any payment in excess of the amount received by bim from the city and, therefore, has no claim against the balance in the city’s hands.

The trial court has disposed of the claims of the different parties, and their adverse interests will be considered as far as necessary. Defendant Radt’s rights and claims in the matter rest on his assignment from Seaver, taken together with the so-called creditors’ agreement. This assignment was executed on July 16, 1915, and filed on the following day, a year and more before any other claim was filed. The creditors’ agreement was not filed with the assignment, but there is no statutory requirement that it should be so filed. Section 16 of the Lien Law (as added by Laws of 1911, chap. 873) * requires only the filing of the assignment which gives all the notice required to put an;^ one interested on inquiry. Furthermore the trial court has found that the assignment was duly and regularly filed and no exception has been taken to such ruling by any of the parties and no one is in position to raise the point.

Radt claims to have paid out upwards of $27,000 more than he received under the creditors’ agreement, and the proofs show that he did so- pay at least that sum in excess of the amounts received. The position is taken by the plaintiff and certain defendants that any excess payments made by Radt were voluntary on his part and not even authorized by the creditors’ agreement. This would not seem to be the intent of the parties to the creditors’ agreement. The agreement required Radt to give his aid and assistance ” when requested. Radt was a banker and the natural “ aid and assistance ” he could give and that the parties contemplated he would give was counsel and money. As no amount of money was mentioned, probably Radt could not be compelled to advance any given sum, but when he should be “ requested ” by the committee to make advances he would be authorized by the agreement to do so, and should be protected to the extent of the advances made in carrying out the provisions of the contract.

The trial court has held that “ Radt’s sole connection *686with the plan outlined in the agreement was to perform the duty of collecting and paying out, under the direction of the trustees, the moneys received from the City.” It would seem that this conclusion ignores the feature referred to in the preceding paragraph and also the fact that the trustees were under the obligation to complete the Seaver contract and so were interested in the fund assigned to Radt to furnish the means of finishing the work and that when in the process of so doing the trustees requested Radt to advance moneys and Radt did advance moneys in excess of amounts received from the city, they would both be protected by the assignment. There is the further fact to be considered that both the trustees and Radt were acting under an assignment that. gave them all the money coming to Seaver from the contract, and should they at any time, in the furtherance of the contract, pay out more than they had received at that time, they were doing so in reliance on the assignment and for the benefit of all interested.

It should, therefore, be held that Radt was justified in making the advances in excess of the amount received by him and that he should be reimbursed out of the balance in the hands of the city in so far as not prevented by other considerations. Radt further claims that he should be reimbursed for the excess paid by him before the plaintiff should receive anything on its claim. He is met at the outset by the terms of the creditors’ agreement. He would support his claim by certain clauses of that agreement, but he. ignores other paramount clauses of the same agreement. The whole tenor of the agreement shows that the plaintiff’s claim was to be paid in full before any other claims were paid, even before other work necessary to complete the Seaver contract and certainly before any advances Radt might make. This is a primary and direct reason why plaintiff’s hen should be given preference. A secondary and indirect reason also exists. Should Radt individually receive anything on account of his advances, he would still be hable to pay all of the plaintiff’s claim by reason of his personal contract to pay the plaintiff, so that the same result would be attained in the end.

The trial court having found that the plaintiff’s hen was *687regular in all particulars and that there was due on its contract the sum of $44,854.24, in this regard the judgment appealed from is affirmed.

In view of the conclusion we have reached that the defendant Radt is entitled to enforce his claim for $27,000 against the amount in the hands of the city after the payment of the plaintiff’s claim, and in view of the fact that there will be in the hands of the city after the payment of the plaintiff’s claim only about $11,000 or $12,000, it is unnecessary to discuss the claims of the other defendants.

The judgment should, therefore, be modified by allowing the claim of the defendant Radt to the balance after the payment of the plaintiff’s claim.

Clarke, P. J., and Dowling, J., concur.

Since amd. by Laws of 1916, chap. 507.— [Rep.