Opinion
March, 1906.
Lynn Brothers, for plaintiff.
Fowler, Crouch Vann, for defendant Fowler, as receiver.
Levy Barrett, for defendant McGuire Co.
H.P. Coates, for defendant Trombley and others.
Julius M. Mayer, Attorney-General (James G. Graham, deputy Attorney-General), for defendant State of New York.
This action was brought to foreclose a lien for the amount due, under a contract for a public improvement, for materials and labor furnished by the plaintiff to the defendants, The E.H. Denniston Company, who were contractors employed in the erection of a hospital for the defendant, The Board of Trustees of the New York State Hospital for the Treatment of Incipient Pulmonary Tuberculosis, at Ray Brook in the county of Essex in this State.
By the provisions of chapter 416 of the Laws of 1900, the defendant, The Board of Trustees of the New York State Hospital for the Treatment of Incipient Pulmonary Tuberculosis, was created a body corporate, the object of the enactment being the establishment and maintenance by the State of a hospital in the Adirondacks for the treatment of incipient pulmonary tuberculosis.
By the provisions of that act, the board of trustees was authorized to purchase land and to erect buildings thereon for the purposes contemplated by that act and was given power to make and award contracts for the erection of said buildings and equipment of the same.
By the act in question, the sum of $50,000 was appropriated for the purchase of a site and the erection and equipment of the buildings rendered necessary by its provisions; and the treasurer of the State was authorized, on the warrant of the comptroller and the certificate of the State architect, to pay to the treasurer of the trustees of said hospital the above named sum, in such amounts as might from time to time in their judgment be necessary.
Pursuant to the power conferred by said act, the board of trustees entered into a contract with the E.H. Denniston Company for the erection of certain hospital buildings at Ray Brook in the county of Essex and State of New York and the same are now completed.
The contractor made various assignments of amounts to become due to it under the contract and there were also filed with the State comptroller and State architect and with the president and treasurer of said board of trustees, notices of liens, claimed on behalf of the plaintiff and others, against the funds held by the State to the credit of this work or to the credit of the board of trustees. The notice of lien of the plaintiff herein was filed on the 19th day of May, 1904, at which time certain moneys appropriated to the board of trustees for the purpose of the erection of the buildings was in the hands of the State Treasurer or board of trustees and had not been paid out for the work performed under the contract awarded to The E.H. Denniston Company.
Plaintiff claims that, by virtue of the provisions of chapter 418 of the Laws of 1897 as amended by chapter 37 of the Laws of 1902, he has acquired a lien on said fund and is entitled to enforce it against the State and against said fund to the extent of any amount that may be found due to him for labor done or material furnished under the contract in question.
The defendant, the State of New York, has interposed a demurrer to the complaint on the ground that it appears, on the face thereof, that the court has not jurisdiction of the person of said defendant.
It is the contention of the defendant, that the State has not conferred jurisdiction on the court to enforce a lien against the fund in question.
The State being sovereign can be sued only by its own consent. Sander v. State of New York, 182 N.Y. 400.
Under the Lien Law as originally enacted, chapter 418 of the Laws of 1897, there was no provision of law by which a lien could be enforced against the State or upon money due from the State to a contractor. Tice v. Atlantic Construction Co., 52 A.D. 284.
In that case the court held, that chapter 418 of the Laws of 1897, which was apparently designed to permit the filing, by a person furnishing labor or materials to a contractor with the State, of a lien for the value of such labor or materials, against moneys of the State applicable to the contract, is so defectively drawn that it fails to accomplish its purpose, the provisions for the filing of the lien, for its discharge, and for its enforcement relating solely to municipal corporations.
The case of Tice v. Atlantic Construction Co., was decided by the first department in June, 1900.
Subsequently, and for the apparent purpose of curing the defects then existing in the Lien Law and to provide for the acquiring of a lien upon moneys in the hands of the State appropriated for public improvements, the Legislature amended sections 5 and 12 of that act. Laws of 1902, chap. 37.
As so amended, section 5 reads as follows: "Section 5. Liens under contracts for public improvements. — A person performing labor for or furnishing materials to a contractor, his sub-contractor or legal representative, for the contraction of a public improvement pursuant to a contract by such contractor with the state or a municipal corporation, shall have a lien for the principal interest of the value or agreed price of such labor or materials upon the moneys of the state or of such corporation applicable to the construction of such improvement, to the extent of the amount due or to become due on such contract, upon filing a notice of lien as prescribed in this article."
So, under the Lien Law as now amended, it is possible to acquire, under circumstances warranting the same, a lien upon the funds in the hands of the State appropriated for a public improvement, upon performance of the work with reference to which the appropriation has been made.
By section 23 of the Lien Law, the method and manner for the enforcing of the lien created by that act are regulated and prescribed, by sections 3398 to 3419, inclusive, of the Code of Civil Procedure, the sections particularly applicable thereto being sections 3400 and 3418.
Section 3400 reads as follows: "Section 3400. Enforcement of a lien under contract for a public improvement. — A lien for labor done or materials furnished for a public improvement may be enforced against the funds of the municipal corporation for which such public improvement is constructed, to the extent prescribed in article one of the lien law, and against the contractor or sub-contractor liable for the debt, by a civil action, in the same court and in the same manner as a mechanic's lien on real property."
Section 3418 reads as follows: "Section 3418. Judgments in actions to foreclose liens on account of public improvements. — If, in an action to enforce a lien on account of a public improvement, the court finds that the lien is established, it shall render judgment directing the municipal corporation to pay over to the lienors entitled thereto for work done or material furnished for such public improvement, and in such order of priority as the courts may determine, to the extent of the sums found due the lienors from the contractors, so much of the funds or money which may be due from the state or municipal corporation to the contractor, as will satisfy such liens, with interest and costs, not exceeding the amount due to the contractor."
After the decision of the Appellate Division in Tice v. Atlantic Construction Co., above referred to, while the Legislature amended the Lien Law permitting the acquiring of a lien under the circumstances detailed in the complaint herein, it did not amend the sections of the Code regulating and providing for its enforcement.
The question now to be determined, is, has the Supreme Court under these circumstances jurisdiction over the sovereign, the State of New York.
The lien sought to be enforced in this action was acquired as prescribed by law, but the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, enacted for the enforcement of liens relative to public improvements, do not confer upon the Supreme Court power or authority to enforce the same against the sovereign, the State of New York. The reasoning of Judge Van Brunt, in stating the opinion of the court in Tice v. Atlantic Construction Co., seems to be particularly applicable to the facts in this case. At page 286, referring to the provisions of the Code applicable to the enforcement of liens, he stated: "Then the Code of Civil Procedure, by section 3400 provides that a lien may be enforced against the funds of the municipal corporation for which such public improvement is constructed, to the extent prescribed in article one of the lien law.
"And section 3418 provides that, in an action to enforce a lien on account of a public improvement the court shall render judgment directing the municipal corporation to pay over to the lienors so much of the funds or money which may be due from the State or municipal corporation to the contractor as will satisfy such liens.
"It is clear from this survey of the enactment in respect to liens against funds coming from the State, that there are no provisions whatever contained in the law which authorize any proceedings to which the State can be made a party or in which any judgment can be entered affecting the State.
"The vital provisions of the statute are expressly restricted to municipal corporations, and throughout the act it is apparent that moneys due from such corporations only are to be reached.
"Where the term `corporation' is used it cannot possibly have any applicability to the State, because the State is not a corporation, but a sovereign which creates corporations and by whose permission alone corporations are allowed to exist. It would be a great stretch of construction for the court to bring a sovereign State within its jurisdiction, where the Legislature has only conferred the right to act as against corporations."
The conclusion reached by the court in that case was, that there was no provision of law authorizing the foreclosure of liens against moneys due from the State to the contractor for public improvements.
Therefore, I am constrained to hold, upon the authority of Tice v. Atlantic Construction Company above cited, that this court has not jurisdiction in this action of the defendant, the State of New York.
The demurrer is, therefore, sustained, with costs.
Demurrer sustained, with costs.