436 A.2d 271
Supreme Court of Connecticut
COTTER, C.J., BOGDANSKI, PETERS, HEALEY and PARSKEY, Js.
The plaintiff S sought to discharge two mechanic’s liens filed by the defendants B Co. and C Co. on certain of S’s realty. S had contracted with S Co. to construct elderly housing on the property and S Co. had hired M Co. to install plumbing and related equipment. M Co. had purchased supplies and materials from B Co. and services from C Co. in connection with its subcontract. At the time the liens were filed, M Co. had been paid but S Co. was still owed some $89,000, which exceeded the amount claimed under both liens. On S’s appeal from the trial court’s judgment for B Co. and C Co., held that, since under the mechanic’s lien statute (49-33) a second-tier subcontractor can be subrogated to a general contractor’s claims against the owner even where, as here, the first-tier subcontractor has been fully paid, and since B Co. and C Co. had complied with the other requirements of 49-33, the trial court did not err in refusing to discharge the liens.
Argued May 8, 1980
Decision released July 29, 1980
Application by the plaintiff in each case for the discharge or reduction in amount of certain mechanic’s liens, brought to the Superior Court in the judicial district of Fairfield at Stamford and tried to the court, Berdon, J.; judgment in the first case denying the application and, in the second case, denying the application for discharge but reducing in amount the lien, from which the plaintiff appealed to this court. No error.
Jerome D. Elbaum, with whom was Martha J Friar, for the appellant (plaintiff in each case).
Charles A. Sherwood, for the appellees (defendant in each case).
William J. Egan and Clifford J. Grandjean filed a brief as amici curiae.
Robert F. McWeeny and Karl Fleischmann filed a brief as amici curiae.
Page 593
PETERS, J.
The sole issue on this appeal is whether a second tier subcontractor has a right to a mechanic’s lien against the owner’s property when the owner owes money to the general contractor, but the first tier subcontractor has been fully paid by the general contractor. The plaintiff, Elmer Seaman (hereinafter Seaman), brought an application in Superior Court, pursuant to General Statutes 49-35a, to discharge two mechanic’s liens filed by the defendants Climate Control Corporation (hereinafter Climate Control) and Branford N. O. Nelson Co., d/b/a Branford Plumbing and Heating Supply Co. (hereinafter Branford) on certain real property owned by Seaman in Norwalk. The trial court, Berdon, J., rendered judgment for the defendants and the plaintiff has appealed.
The trial court’s findings of fact are largely derived from a stipulation of the parties.[1] The findings establish the following: The plaintiff, Seaman, as owner, contracted with Seaman Construction Co., Inc., as general contractor, to construct apartment housing for the elderly on the Seaman property. Seaman is president of Seaman Construction Co. The general contractor thereafter entered into a subcontract with Miami Plumbing and Heating Contractors, Inc. (hereinafter Miami) for the installation of plumbing and related equipment at a contract price of $140,000. In performance of its subcontract, Miami purchased supplies and materials from Branford and services from
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Climate Control. Branford and Climate Control dealt solely with Miami, a first tier subcontractor. The defendants had no contractual relationship with either Seaman or Seaman Construction Co. nor was their performance in any way directed by Seaman or Seaman Construction Co. Neither Seaman nor Seaman Construction Co. ever had any control or charge over Miami’s purchasing of supplies, materials and services from the defendants.
When Branford and Climate Control notified Seaman of their intentions to file mechanic’s liens pursuant to General Statutes 49-33;[2]
see General Statutes 49-34 and 49-35; Seaman Construction Co. had substantially paid Miami the full subcontract price of $140,000.[3] At that time the owner still owed the general contractor $89,157 pursuant to their contract. The money expended to complete the work left unfinished when Miami voluntarily abandoned its subcontract was $8005.91.
Page 595
Having met the requirements of notice to the owner under General Statutes 49-34 and 49-35, Branford filed a mechanic’s lien in the amount of $40,697.66 for the balance due for materials furnished for the construction project under its contract with Miami. Climate Control filed its lien in the amount of $7702 for services rendered in connection with the same project under its contract with Miami. The parties have stipulated, and the trial court found, that the amount owed Climate Control is $6526. The total amount claimed pursuant to the Branford and the Climate Control liens is thus substantially less than the amount remaining due from the owner, Seaman, to the general contractor, Seaman Construction Co.
Before we reach the specific question on this appeal, it is well to put into context the relationships between owners, contractors and subcontractors under our mechanic’s lien law. Those who provide services or materials in connection with the construction of a building are entitled to claim a lien on the land that they have improved if they fall into one of two categories. Lienors are protected if they have a claim either (1) by virtue of an agreement with or the consent of the owner of the land, or (2) by the consent of some person having authority from or rightfully acting for such owner in procuring labor or materials. General Statutes 49-33.[4]
Lienors in the second category must give timely notice of their intent to claim a lien in order to perfect their lien, while those in the first category need not give such notice. General Statutes 49-35. Lienors in the second category
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include subcontractors and persons who furnish materials or services by virtue of a contract with the original contractor or with any subcontractor, that is to say at least first and second tier subcontractors. General Statutes 49-35. No mechanic’s lien may exceed the price which the owner has agreed to pay for the building being erected or improved, and the owner is entitled, furthermore, to credit for payments made in good faith to the original contractor before receipt of notice of such a lien or liens. General Statutes 49-33 and 49-36. If the contract price which the owner agreed to pay the original contractor is insufficient to cover all the liens, claimants other than the original contractor are to be paid first, and, if necessary, on a pro rata basis. General Statutes 49-36.
These general observations help to clarify what is not at issue in this case. The subcontractors, even though they are second tier rather than first tier subcontractors, are prima facie within the ambit of the mechanic’s lien law. It is not necessary to their lien status that they have any direct contractual relationship either with the owner or with the general contractor (denominated the original contractor in the statutes). They have concededly given timely notice to the owner, in proper form, of their liens. There is an identifiable fund which appropriate claims for mechanic’s liens may reach, since the owner has retained an unpaid balance due under his contract with the general contractor that exceeds in amount the totality of the mechanic’s lien claims.
The sole question on this appeal, as in the trial court, is whether the defendants, second tier subcontractors, are to be denied their liens because the first tier subcontractor with whom they contracted
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has been paid in full by the general contractor. The trial court held that, in light of the statute governing mechanic’s liens, this fact should not bar their recovery, and we agree.
The parties are agreed that resolution of the rights of the plaintiff depends primarily upon the meaning of General Statutes 49-33. In interpreting this section, the complexity of which should not be underestimated; see Stone v. Moomjian, 92 Conn. 476, 484, 103 A. 635 (1918); we are guided by well-settled principles of construction. Although the mechanic’s lien law creates a statutory lien in derogation of the common law, its remedial purpose to furnish security for a contractor’s labor and materials requires a generous construction. Camputaro v. Stuart Hardwood Corporation, 180 Conn. 545, 550, 429 A.2d 796
(1980); Stone v. Rosenfield, 141 Conn. 188, 191, 104 A.2d 545 (1954); City Lumber Co. v. Borsuk, 131 Conn. 640, 645, 41 A.2d 775 (1945). Even bearing in mind the statute’s beneficent purpose, we are, however, constrained by the language of the statute as we find it, and cannot rewrite the statute or adopt the reasoning of precedents in other jurisdictions with different statutes. Camputaro v. Stuart Hardwood Corporation, supra; New Haven Orphan Asylum v. Haggerty Co., 108 Conn. 232, 236, 142 A. 847, (1928); Hartford Builders Finish Co. v. Anderson, 99 Conn. 343, 345, 122 A. 76 (1923).
Two sentences in 49-33[5] are central to the arguments of the parties. “No mechanic’s lien shall
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attach to any . . . building . . . in favor of any subcontractor to a greater extent in the whole than the amount which the owner has agreed to pay to any person through whom such subcontractor claims . . . . Any such subcontractor shall be subrogated to the rights of the person through whom such subcontractor claims . . . .” The plaintiff urges that the second sentence subrogates the second tier subcontractor to the rights of the first tier subcontractor while the defendants claim to be subrogated to the rights of the general contractor.
Page 599
These disparate interpretations are crucial to this appeal, since the first tier subcontractor, having been fully paid, has no right to which anyone could be subrogated, while the general contractor, as yet partially unpaid, remains a suitable candidate for subrogation. The parties are at odds both about the significance of the exact wording of 49-33 and about its relationship to our existing case law.
This court has had only one occasion to rule upon the rights of a second tier subcontractor after full payment to the first tier subcontractor. In Barlow
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Brothers Co. v. Gaffney, 76 Conn. 107, 55 A. 582
(1903), we sustained the claimant’s mechanic’s lien.[6] “The plaintiff’s right to a lien is given solely by statute, and is not made to depend in any way upon the act of the original contractor in paying or not paying his immediate subcontractor. The legislative conditions upon which the plaintiff’s right to a lien is made to depend do not include such an act, and if the court should make such an act one of these conditions, that would be an act of judicial legislation rather than one of construction and interpretation. If the original contractor is, under the present
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law, unprotected, in that he may be compelled to pay twice for the same work and materials, the fault is not with the plaintiff, and the remedy must be sought in the legislature and not in the courts.” Id., 112.
The plaintiff mounts a two-fold attack on Barlow Brothers. One prong of this attack relies on the language in cases decided both before and after Barlow Brothers in which this court used the theory of subrogation to describe our mechanic’s lien statute. The other prong relies on the amendment to the mechanic’s lien statute in 1925, twenty-two years after Barlow Brothers was decided, to incorporate expressly the subrogation language of the intervening cases. Examination of both of these lines of attack demonstrates that neither is persuasive.
It is true that in a series of cases beginning with Waterbury Lumber Coal Co. v. Coogan, 73 Conn. 519, 48 A. 204 (1901), and Tice v. Moore, 82 Conn. 244, 73 A. 133 (1909), this court elaborated a subrogation theory of lien claims for our mechanic’s lien law. Some statutes in other states justify mechanic’s liens on the owner’s property on the basis that the owner is otherwise unjustly enriched by the improvement of his property. Tice v. Moore, supra, 248; Waterbury Lumber Coal Co. v. Coogan, supra, 521; see note, “Mechanics’ Liens and Surety Bonds in the Building Trades,” 68 Yale L.J. 138, 142-45 (1958). That is not our law. In this state, a subcontractor’s right to a mechanic’s lien is said to flow from his equitable entitlement to the lien which would otherwise attach in favor of the general contractor. Tice v. Moore, supra, 248-49; Waterbury Lumber Coal Co. v. Coogan, supra, 521. Subrogation is consistent with, and an integral
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part of, our statutory provisions limiting the totality of mechanic’s liens to the unpaid contract debt owed by the owner to the general contractor.
The subrogation theory, per se, does not resolve the present controversy because it provides no answer to the question, subrogated to whom? In light of the obvious linkage, however, between the subrogation theory and the limitation of the lienable fund to the unpaid obligation to the general contractor, we see no reason to read the theory restrictively to bar these claimants. In all of the reported cases in which subrogation was used to defeat a mechanic’s lien claim, it was the general contractor who had no surviving right to which the claimant could be subrogated. Tice v. Moore, supra, 249; Waterbury Lumber Coal Co. v. Coogan, supra; see also Drazen Lumber Co. v. Jente, 113 Conn. 344, 347-48, 155 A. 505 (1931); Avery v. Smith, 96 Conn. 223, 228, 113 A. 313
(1921). In the only second tier subcontractor case, Barlow Brothers, the claimant prevailed. It is noteworthy that the subrogation cases were decided in close temporal proximity to Barlow Brothers; Waterbury Lumber in 1901, Barlow Brothers in 1903, and Tice v. Moore in 1909. This court then perceived no apparent inconsistency among them, and we see none now. In sum, our early case law, in order to protect the owner from double payment, adopted a subrogation theory limiting subcontractors to unpaid claims of general contractors. Default of, and prior payments to, intermediary first tier subcontractors did not bar the claims of second tier subcontractors.
Against this background of the reported cases, the legislative amendment of 49-33 in 1925 appears to be a clarification of existing law, rather than, as
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the plaintiff urges, a belated rejection of Barlow Brothers. The legislature is presumed to have been aware of the decision in Barlow Brothers Co. v. Gaffney, supra, and of the subrogation cases when it amended the mechanic’s lien statute. State v. Kyles, 169 Conn. 438, 442, 363 A.2d 97 (1975); Klapproth v. Turner, 156 Conn. 276, 279, 240 A.2d 886 (1968). “Furthermore, there is a presumption that an amendatory act does not change the existing law further than is expressly declared or necessarily implied.” Norwalk v. Daniele, 143 Conn. 85, 89, 119 A.2d 732 (1955); Klapproth v. Turner, supra.
The amendment to the mechanic’s lien law in 1925 added language subrogating the subcontractor seeking a mechanic’s lien to “the rights of the person through whom such subcontractor shall claim.”[7] This language contains the same latent ambiguity as to the referent of “the person through whom” such subcontractor shall claim as did the preceding case law, and must be read in the light of the understanding afforded by the prior case law. Had the legislature wished to limit further the rights of second tier subcontractors to obtain liens against the owner, it would have been easy enough to link the subcontractor’s claim to the person with whom such subcontractor “shall have contracted.” The use instead of “the person through whom such
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subcontractor claims” can be understood, consistently with the case law, to refer to the necessity for the consent of “some person having authority from or rightfully acting for such owner.” General Statutes 49-33. The statute thus requires that the work of subcontractors must be authorized by the general contractor, either directly or indirectly, in order to be lienable. Just as the determination of whether there remains a lienable fund depends upon the payments made under the contract between the owner and the general contractor, just as the determination of lienability depends upon authority derived from the general contractor, so too subrogation looks to the claims of the general contractor, under the 1925 revision as under the case law.
No different construction is compelled by the statute’s reference to “the person through whom such subcontractor claims.” (Emphasis added.) The plaintiff argues that the prefatory “the” is restrictive, and therefore subrogates the second tier subcontractor to the rights of the first tier subcontractor. It is true that the sentence immediately preceding the subrogation sentence speaks of “any person through whom,” the subcontractor claims. (Emphasis added.) The earlier sentence limits all mechanic’s lien claimants to the fund created by payments owed to the general contractor, a fund described as “the amount which the owner has agreed to pay to any person through whom such subcontractor claims.” Despite the plaintiff’s argument to the contrary, we conclude, as did the trial court, that “the person” means no more than a reference to the “any person” of the preceding sentence. This confirms our reading of the statute as looking to subrogation to the claims of the general contractor.
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Our construction is further supported by an examination of other provisions of the mechanic’s lien law which we must interpret so as to preserve a harmonious whole. Bahre v. Hogbloom, 162 Conn. 549, 554, 295 A.2d 547 (1972); Purcell, Inc. v. Libbey, 111 Conn. 132, 136, 149 A. 225
(1930); New Haven Orphan Asylum v. Haggerty Co., 108 Conn. 232, 239, 142 A. 847 (1928). Although the rights of subcontractors of the first and second tier are governed by a number of different strictures, none distinguishes between these two classes of claimants. When 49-33 was amended, in 1953, to correct the problem uncovered by Rowley v. Salladin, 139 Conn. 642, 96 A.2d 219 (1953),[8]
it extended the lienable fund for the benefit of all subcontractors. Under 49-36,[9] claims on the lienable fund are to be apportioned pro rata among all subcontractors without regard to their rank; significantly, all subcontractors are preferred to the general contractor if the lienable fund is inadequate to cover outstanding claims. See Stone v. Moomjian, 92 Conn. 476, 484, 103 A. 635 (1918).
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The plaintiff urges finally that the construction of 49-33 that we adopt is fundamentally inequitable to owners and general contractors, and results in the unjust enrichment of second tier subcontractors. The plaintiff takes umbrage at the trial court’s suggestions about the availability of contractual devices, such as surety bonds and lien waivers, to protect the owner or the general contractor from fiscally irresponsible first tier subcontractors. The trial court could not and did not determine that such contractual alternatives were legally mandated or practically advisable. It is therefore tilting at windmills to translate his remarks into a judicial invasion of legislative authority to determine when surety bonds should be statutorily required. That bonding may be feasible or even desirable does not make it mandatory. How the risk of defaulting first tier subcontractors should be allocated between the owner and the general contractor is not an issue presently before us, although we observe that contractors generally are deemed to make a number of implied warranties, including the warranty that there are no outstanding liens. Cf. Uniform Commercial Code 2-312 and 3-417, General Statutes 42a-2-312 and 42a-3-417. The spectre of unjust enrichment is raised by the possibility that a second tier claimant’s
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valuation of his claim for lien purposes might exceed the contract price to which he had previously agreed. The short answer to this argument is that it finds no support in the record, the parties having stipulated to the amounts justifiably claimed by the two defendants.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.