Curtis Bros. Lumber Company, Appellant, v. Isaac Madansky and Others, Defendants, Impleaded with Mary Greenberg and Others, Respondents.
Second Department,
December 30, 1910.
Mechanic’s lien—failure to name true owner — evidence not establishing fraud.
to foreclose a mechanic’s lien. The notice of lien named one M. as owner, and the complaint alleged in substance that he was the actual owner, but that in order to defraud the plaintiff and other .creditors he took title in the name of his sister, who thereafter, pursuant to the scheme to defraud the plaintiff, conveyed to other parties, etc. Evidence examined, and held, insufficient, to establish fraud so that the lien was invalid in that it did not name the .true owner of the property. -
Appeal by the plaintiff, the Curtis Bros. Lumber Company, from portions of a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of certain of the defendants, entered in the office of the. cleric of the county of Kings on the 10th day of Hay, 1910, upon the decision of the court; rendered after a trial at the Kings County Special Term, dismissing the complaint as to such defendants.
Henry W. Budd and Dwight P. Dilworth, for the appellant,
Pranlclin Taylor [Samuel Seiderman, with him on the brief], for respondents Greenberg and Sachs.
Leon N.. Putter, for the respondent the Empire’ State Surety Company.
[MAJORITY — Woodward',-J.:]
Woodward',-J.:
The complaint in .this action, brought to foreclose a mechanic’s lien, alleges that the lien was filed on the ’25th day of January, 1908, within ninety days after the completion of the contract; that the notiqe contained the statutory statements; including the name of Isaac Madansky as owner and contractor. Having alleged ownership in the defendant Madansky in the notice of lien, the plaintiff alleges in its complaint, on information and belief, that Madansky was, at all the times mentioned, the actual owner of the premises on which the lien is sought to be impressed; that the defendant Madansky, “for the purpose of cheating and defrauding'the plaintiff and other creditors, and while being the actual owner of the premises above described, and while being tlié actual purchaser. from one Frederick Heugass, did take title to the said premises in the name of Mary Greenberg, one of the other defendants herein, who is a sister of the defendant Isaac Madansky,-and who acted as dummy of the said Isaac Madansky,. for the purposes aforesaid; ” that the said defendant, “ having so purchased and taken the premises above described in the name of said Mary Greenberg, and for the purpose of cheating and defrauding the plaintiff as heretofore mentioned, represented to the plaintiff in this action that he is the actual, legal and equitable owner in fee of the premises above described, and requested the plaintiff to sell and deliver to him, for the construction of the said five houses, certain goods, wares and merchandise, consisting of lumber, timber and other building materials; ” that the plaintiff, believing these representations, sold the goods and delivered the same to the amount of $812; that the said defendant, during the construction of said premises, entered into, all contracts with all the contractors and material men, and generally exercised all powers, rights and privileges as the owner of the premises; that no part of the indebtedness has been paid, though demanded ; that thereafter, and in order to complete the fraud upon the plaintiff, and with knowledge that the said plaintiff in its notice of lien did not mention Mary Greenberg as owner, without consideration and for the sole purpose of harassing and hindering the plaintiff and cheating and defrauding the said plaintiff out of $812.20, the said defendant Isaac Madansky did execute.a deed to said premises, or caused the said Mary Greenberg, his dummy, to execute said deed to said premises to one Morman Sachs, also a relative of the defendant Isaac Madansky, and one of the defendants herein, which deed purported to convey the said premises above described to the said Morman Sachs, and was duly recorded; that in accepting this deed the defendant Sachs had .full knowledge of the lien and claim of the plaintiff, and took such deed from it for the sole purpose of defrauding the plaintiff .of the moneys aforementioned; that subsequently Sachs filed with the clerk of Kings county a bond, with the Empire State Surety Company as surety, in the sum of $1,625, for the purpose of discharging the lien of the plaintiff, and that the premises were thereupon discharged of the lien; that there are others claiming some interest in the premises, and that no other action* or proceeding has been brought for the relief asked in the complaint. Judgment is demanded that the deed made by Mary Greenberg to Morman Sachs be declared a fraudulent conveyance, and that the same be set aside; that the plaintiff be adjudged to have a lien against the premises for the sum of $812.20 and interest thereon; that the equities of the parties to this action be adjudged and determined, and that it be adjudged that the plaintiff has a lien against the said premises prior to any other lien or claim of any one of the defendants,.and that the Empire State Surety Company' be declared liable, by virtue of its. suretyship, for any deficiency which may arise; that the interest of the defendant Isaac Madansky as such owner in the said premises be sold, and that from the. proceeds of such sale the plaintiff be paid the amount of the said lien, and interest thereon, together with the expenses of the sale and the costs and disbursements of this action, and in case of any deficiency, that the plaintiff have judgment therefor, which is to be paid by the surety aforementioned; that the defendants, be foreclosed, etc.
The defendant Madansky . denies absolutely every allegation of the complaint relating to his alleged ownership and fraudulent intentions ; admits-that the plaintiff furnished lumber for the buildings at the agreed price and to the amount alleged by the plaintiff» and that he made contracts with contractors and material men upon-the work, and denies the other allegations of. the complaint. The other defendants - deny the alleged fraud, and generally deny knowledge of the other matters alleged.
With the pleadings standing in this condition the plaintiff introduced testimony intended to support its allegations of fraud, but it is admitted by the plaintiff that this testimony was not direct, and that it was only by inference that the case could be made out, and we are clearly of the opinion that the learned court below properly held that the fact of fraud had not been' established. If there was no fraud; if the defendant Madansky did not in fact own the premises, then the notice of lien did not mention the name of the owner, and there was never any valid lien upon the premises.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Hirso'hberg, P. J., Jenks and Rich, JJ., concurred; Burr, J... not voting. ■
Judgment in so far as appealed from affirmed, with costs. *