Abell-Howe Co. v. INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT BD., ETC.
Abell-Howe Co. v. INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT BD., ETC.
Opinion
This is an appeal from the denial of judgment for Abell-Howe Company (hereinafter Abell-Howe) under the materialman's lien law, §§
We affirm the trial court's denial of judgment for Abell-Howe on the lien claim and reverse its judgment for Vulcan Metal on the malicious prosecution claim.
Viewing the record with all due presumptions, the following is revealed: Abell-Howe instituted its action to enforce a materialman's lien against the defendants, The Industrial Development Board of The City of Irondale (hereinafter the Board) and Vulcan Metal.
Prior to the institution of this action, Vulcan Metal owned several adjacent parcels of land at the same address. Vulcan Metal later conveyed one parcel to the Board, which promptly leased it back to Vulcan Metal, with an option to buy for a nominal fee at the end of the lease.
R G Engineering Company (hereinafter R G), which is not a party to this action, contracted with the Board to provide the Board with four jib cranes, which were to be attached to a concrete foundation or a concrete column. R G then contracted with Abell-Howe to provide the cranes. R G requested that Abell-Howe deliver the cranes to the Board in care of Vulcan Metal at the street address of Vulcan Metal.
Abell-Howe delivered the cranes, but R G went bankrupt before paying for them. *Page 223 There was evidence introduced at trial that the Board had paid R G for the cranes before R G went bankrupt.
In an attempt to recover payment for the cranes, counsel for Abell-Howe began proceedings to establish a materialman's lien under §
The lien created by the statute attaches to the land to which the materials are affixed. Abell-Howe was unable to determine whether the cranes had been attached to the property owned by the Board or that owned by Vulcan Metal. Abell-Howe therefore notified both the Board and Vulcan Metal of its intention to claim a lien on the property to which the cranes had been affixed. In reply, Vulcan Metal denied that Vulcan Metal was indebted to Abell-Howe and refused to inform Abell-Howe whether the cranes had been attached to Vulcan Metal's property.
In order to protect the rights granted it by the materialman's lien statute, Abell-Howe filed verified statements of lien as to both parcels of property. Abell-Howe then filed a complaint to enforce the liens. In its complaint, Abell-Howe noted that one parcel was owned by the Board and one was owned by Vulcan Metal but that Abell-Howe only claimed a lien on the property to which the cranes had been affixed.
Vulcan Metal filed a counterclaim, contending that the suit instituted by Abell-Howe constituted malicious prosecution. Vulcan Metal alleged that Abell-Howe was aware that the cranes had not been affixed to Vulcan Metal's property and that Vulcan Metal was not indebted to Abell-Howe. It was further alleged that Abell-Howe wrongfully and maliciously filed a lien on Vulcan Metal's property and that its reputation in the business community was damaged as a result of such action.
There are three issues on appeal. First, is property owned by an industrial development board subject to the establishment of a materialman's lien under §
The first issue on appeal is whether a materialman's lien may attach to property owned by an industrial development board.
Counsel for Abell-Howe contends such property is subject to the materialman's lien statute, §
It is a well established rule of law that a materialman's lien will not attach to the public property of a municipal corporation. Scruggs Echols v. Decatur,
We also note an industrial development board under §
In addition to the above, we note that it is the policy the Alabama legislature to provide some form of protection for materialmen. This policy is evidenced by the materialman's *Page 224
lien statute, §
As indicated above, a materialman's lien will not attach to property owned by the state, a county, or a municipal corporation. Scruggs Echols v. Decatur, supra; Nunnally v.Dorand, supra. Under the public works bonding statute, a contractor who is to perform work upon the property of the state, a county, or a municipal corporation must first execute a performance bond to insure the satisfaction of materialman's claims. §
In George A. Fuller Co., Inc. v. Vulcan Materials Co., S.E.Div., supra, the Supreme Court of Alabama, after finding industrial development boards to be separate and independent corporate entities, held the public works bonding statute to be inapplicable to contractors performing work on industrial development board property. Put another way, materialmen supplying goods to these contractors are not protected by the public works bonding statute.
If §
For the above indicated reasons, we find that the materialman's lien created by §
The next issue is whether the trial court erred as a matter of law in denying judgment for Abell-Howe on its claim for a statutory lien under §
The purpose of §
Section
The full price lien can arise by virtue of either an express or implied contract between the supplier and the owner. Clearly, in this case there was no express contract between Abell-Howe and the Board.
For an implied contract to arise, the supplier must send written notice to the owner of the land prior to delivery of the materials that he plans to supply specified materials at specified prices. A lien will then arise as specified in the notice unless the owner objects. §
The notice requirement of §
In the instant case the evidence supports a finding that Abell-Howe did not strictly comply with the notice requirement for a full price lien. In fact, Abell-Howe sent no notice to either defendant until long *Page 225 after the cranes had been delivered. Regardless of whether the defendants had actual knowledge that the cranes supplied were in fact from Abell-Howe, the statutory notice requirements were not met. Consequently, the trial judge did not err in denying Abell-Howe's claim for a full price lien.
As for the unpaid balance1 lien, which is also included in §
In the instant case, there is evidence to support a finding that there was no unpaid balance due R G from the Board. Therefore, the trial judge did not err in denying Abell-Howe's claim for an unpaid balance lien.
The third and final issue on appeal is whether the trial judge erred as a matter of law in granting judgment for the defendants on the malicious prosecution claim.
As stated above, this suit arose from actions taken by Abell-Howe to obtain and enforce a lien on the property to which the Abell-Howe cranes had been affixed. Because Abell-Howe was unable to determine upon which parcel the cranes were attached, it filed verified statements of lien as to both the property owned by the Board and that owned by Vulcan Metal. An action was then filed to enforce the liens.
In response, Vulcan Metal counterclaimed, denying that it owed Abell-Howe and alleging that Abell-Howe's actions in seeking to obtain and enforce a lien on Vulcan Metal's property constituted malicious prosecution. Abell-Howe moved to dismiss the counterclaim on the ground that there had been no final determination in favor of Vulcan Metal on Abell-Howe's lien action. The trial court denied Abell-Howe's motion to dismiss. Both actions were then tried simultaneously.
Because termination of a prior proceeding in favor of the plaintiff in the malicious prosecution action is a prerequisite for recovery in that action, Wilson v. Brooks, Ala.,
Because of the trial court's failure to grant Abell-Howe's motion to dismiss the counterclaim, we have no alternative but to reverse that portion of the trial court's decree relating to the malicious prosecution counterclaim.
In view of the above, other issues raised by Abell-Howe relating to the malicious prosecution claim are pretermitted.
We therefore reverse and remand for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART; AND REMANDED.
WRIGHT, P.J., and BRADLEY, J., concur.
However, a hearing on both claims was held on March 24, 1980. As Vulcan Metal itself points out in its application for rehearing and as the record clearly reflects at pages 484-488, when Abell-Howe rested *Page 226 its "lien action", Vulcan Metal, without the benefit of a final determination on the lien action, immediately presented evidence on its malicious prosecution counterclaim. Consequently, for the reason stated in our original opinion, the trial court erred to reversal.
OPINION EXTENDED. APPLICATION FOR REHEARING OVERRULED.
WRIGHT, P.J., and BRADLEY, J., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Abell-Howe Company v. the Industrial Development Board of the City of Irondale and Vulcan Metal Products Company, Inc.
- Cited By
- 12 cases
- Status
- Published