DocketNumber: File No. 6676
Judges: Brown, Burch, Campbell, Poeley, Sherwood
Filed Date: 11/19/1929
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
One Arp entered into a written contract with the defendant independent school district of Brookings, for the sale and installation of certain steel lockers. He then made a contract with the appellant, Berger Manufacturing Company, to furnish and deliver said lockers. Appellant furnished the lockers and delivered them to the school district on or about the ist day of December, 1926. Arp failed to pay appellant for the lockers. On the 21st day of January, 1927, he filed a petition in bankruptcy and on the same day was adjudged a bankrupt. On this date there was an unpaid balance due from the school district on said lockers of $1,742.50 and on the 28th day of January, 1927, appellant filed with the clerk of the school board a notice of the amount unpaid for the said lockers and claimed a lien on the said $1,742.50.
The plaintiff, 'Sholselh, was appointed trustee in bankruptcy of the estate of the 'bankrupt Arp on the 7th day of February, 1927, and brought this action against the school district joining the Berger Manufacturing Company as a defendant for the recovery of said $1,742.50. The case was tried on an agreed statement of fact.
In its answer, the school district admitted there was a balance of $1,742.50 due on the said lockers which it was ready and willing to pay to such person or persons as the court might direct and determine to be entitled thereto, and in its prayer asked: “That the court may determine who is entitled to the balance owing by this defendant under and by virtue of said contract with the said Arp, and direct to whom this defendant shall pay the said amount or to issue its warrants in payment thereof; and direct this defendant to deposit its warrant or warrants as may be determined by this court, with the clerk of said court for the delivery to the person or persons entitled thereto.”
The court found for the plaintiff and entered judgment for him and against the school district and appellant, and decreed that
At the outset we are met with a question of practice. In taking the appeal herein the appellant addressed its notice of appeal to the plaintiff only, and no notice of appeal was served upon the school district. Plaintiff claims that the school district is a necessary party to the appeal, and that because of the failure to serve the notice of appeal on the-school district this court has not acquired jurisdiction of the case and now moves the court to dismiss the appeal.
Under the provisions of section 3146, Rev. Code 1919, “An appeal must be taken by serving on the adverse party * * * a notice * * In this case it, is the contention of appellant that the school district is not an “adverse party” and that it was not necessary to serve the notice of appeal upon it. In Crouch v. Railway Company et al., 22 S. D. 263, 117 N. W. 145, 146, this court said: “Every party whose interest in the subj ect-matter of the appeal is adverse to or will be affected by a reversal or modification of the judgment or order appealed from is ,an ‘adverse party.’” But the school district is not interested in the subject-matter of this appeal, and will not be affected by a reversal or modification of the judgment. It admitted in its answer that it was indebted in the amount specified in the judgment, to either appellant or respondent, and in its prayer asked that it might deposit the amount due with the clerk of the court to be paid to whoever the court might find was entitled thereto. The contest between appellant and respondent is: Who is entitled to the money ? It is not a matter of concern to the school district who is entitled to it; therefore it will not be affected by a reversal or modification of the judgment, and is not an “adverse party.”
In Sutton et al. v. Consolidated Apex Mining Company et al., 12 S. D. 576, 82 N. W. 188, 190, the mining company occupied the same position that the school district does in this case. In deciding whether the mining company was an adverse party, this court said: “The amount, however, which the corporation would foe required to pay would neither be increased nor diminished by the reversal or modification of the decree in this case. It would seem, therefore, to be a matter of no interest to the Apex
■ The appellant contends that it has a lien on the unpaid balance due to the bankrupt from the school district for the said lockers, and that because of such lien its right to the said fund is superior to the right of the trustee in bankruptcy.
■Section 1660, 'Rev. Code 1919, as amended, provides that every person who has furnished labor or material for the construction or repair work for any person who shall have made a contract for such work with a county, or municipal corporation, or school corporation shall have a lien upon all moneys in the control of such county or corporation due or to become due under such contract. In order to protect such lien the labor or material man may within 20 days from the time the labor has been performed or the material furnished file with the officer of such corporation, who is by law made the custodian of its official records a just and true account of the demand due or to become due him. But a failure to file same within the time aforesaid shall not defeat the lien upon the amount remaining due to the contractor at the time of filing. Section 16Ó1, Rev. Code 1919. In this case the account involved was not filed until the 28th day of January, 1927, more than 20 days after the material had been furnished, and1 after the contractor had filed his petition in bankruptcy; and it is the contention of the plaintiff- that upon his appointment as trustee he succeeded to all the rights of the bankrupt; that the unpaid balance due for the lockers at once became due him (plaintiff) ; and that there was nothing due the contractor (the bankrupt) when appellant filed his account on the 28th day of January. This contention on the part of the trustee is based on the provisions of section 47a of the Bankruptcy Act as amended by Act Cong. June 25, 1910, §8(11 USCA § 73(a), which reads as follows: “And such trustees, as to all property in the custody or coming into the custody of the bankruptcy court, shall be deemed vested with all the rights, remedies, and powers of a creditor holding a lien by legal or equitable proceedings thereon; and also, as to all property not in the custody of the bankruptcy court, shall be deemed vested with all the rights,
While under the provisions of this statute the rights of the trustee are superior to the rights of the contractor, it is the plain intent of our statute (sections 1660 and 1661) that the rights of creditors and the rights of the contractor himself are subject to the lien of the labor or material man upon any money remaining in the hands of the debtor corporation due under the contract, at the time of the filing of the lien of the subcontractor; therefore in this case the right of the subcontractor to the money involved is superior .to right of the trustee in bankruptcy.
The statute gives the materialman a lien superior to the claims of other creditors, for a period of 20 days without any act on his part. If the corporation pays money to the contractor during this period it does so at its peril. After the expiration of this period and until the filing of the lien, the corporation may pay the contractor without risk; but if money due on the contract is still in the hand's of the corporation when the lien statement is filed, though after the expiration of the 20-day period, the lien is effectual as to the sum of money still in the hands of the corporation, and the right of the materialman superior to that of the trustee in bankruptcy.
Upon the facts as they appear from this record the Berger Manufacturing Company is entitled to judgment for the $1,742.50 still due on the lockers.
The judgment appealed from is reversed.