Bayes v. Isenberg
Decision Date | 29 December 1981 |
Docket Number | No. 1-981A269,1-981A269 |
Citation | 429 N.E.2d 654 |
Parties | Duane BAYES and Sandra Bayes, Defendants-Appellants, v. Harry William ISENBERG, d/b/a Isenberg Concrete Walls, Plaintiffs-Appellees, and Gibson Company, Inc.; James Bottorff, Treasurer of Clark County, Indiana; and John Gellhaus, Auditor of Clark County, Indiana, Defendants-Appellees. |
Court | Indiana Appellate Court |
Virgil E. Bolly, Sellersburg, for defendants-appellants.
Robert W. Lanum, Fifer, Vogt & Lanum, Jeffersonville, for plaintiffs-appellees.
Following a bench trial, defendants-appellants Duane Bayes and Sandra Bayes (Bayes) appeal from a judgment entered in the Clark Circuit Court in favor of plaintiff-appellee Harry William Isenberg, d/b/a Isenberg Concrete Walls (Isenberg) upon an action to foreclose on his mechanic's lien against real estate of Bayes in the amount of.$4,879.00.
We reverse.
The facts most favorable to the judgment show the Bayes, husband and wife, owned real estate in Marysville, Indiana, as tenants by the entireties. On July 17, 1979, they entered into a construction contract with defendant-appellee Gibson Company, Inc. 1 (Gibson) to build their home; the contract with Gibson was signed by Duane Bayes alone. Concomitantly, Gibson, the contractor, entered into an oral contract with Isenberg, a subcontractor, to construct the concrete basement floor and walls of the Bayes' residence.
On November 5, 1979, Isenberg began work on the Bayes' residence. He experienced difficulty hauling crushed rock from the road to the Bayes' residence site due to muddy conditions. Volunteering, Duane Bayes and his son assisted Isenberg in hauling stone to the building site. Duane Bayes used his own dump truck and tractor to pull the concrete trucks in and out of his property for Isenberg.
On January 3, 1980, Isenberg, accompanied by his wife, drove to Bayes' property and unsuccessfully attempted to deliver written notice upon Bayes at a trailer which was unoccupied. Observing two people standing outside of a hog barn behind the trailer, Isenberg drove down to the barn to see if the Bayes were there. Entering the barn, Isenberg saw Duane Bayes and after some difficulty in getting Mr. Bayes to accept the notice, he hand-delivered to him the following written notice of his intention to hold a mechanic's lien against the Bayes' real estate for the value of his work:
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that Harry William Isenberg d/b/a Isenberg Concrete Walls whose address is 550 Spicewood Drive, Jeffersonville, IN 47130, first provided labor and material upon property owned by you on November 5, 1979, the legal description of said property being the same as is attached hereto and made a part of this notice.
Please be further advised that Harry William Isenberg intends to hold a lien thereon for labor and materials delivered.
Dated: January 3, 1980.
/s/ Harry William Isenberg
Harry William Isenberg."
Appearing beneath a copy of the aforementioned notice which was introduced at trial was the following written item:
Bayes assign as error a single issue which we restate as follows:
Does the written notice addressed to Duane Bayes and Sandra Bayes, but delivered only to Duane Bayes, satisfy the notice requirement of Ind.Code 32-8-3-1 (Supp.1981)?
Principally, the Bayes argue that Isenberg failed to furnish written notice to both owners, Duane and Sandra Bayes, having instead served written notice personally upon Duane Bayes alone. Having not furnished written notice upon Sandra Bayes, the Bayes contend Isenberg did not comply with the statutory notice as provided under Ind.Code 32-8-3-1. As a result, they assert that Isenberg cannot enjoy the benefits of foreclosure on his lien, citing as authority Mid American Homes, Inc. v. Horn, (1979) Ind., 396 N.E.2d 879; Beneficial Finance Company v. Wegmiller Bender Lumber Company, Inc., (1980) Ind.App., 403 N.E.2d 1150.
The Court of Appeals may not set aside the judgment of the trial court unless it is clearly erroneous; furthermore, we will affirm the judgment of the trial court if it can be sustained by any legal theory supported by the evidence. Torres v. Meyer Paving Company, (1981) Ind.App., 423 N.E.2d 692; English Coal Co., Inc. v. Durcholz, (1981) Ind.App., 422 N.E.2d 302.
Ind.Code 32-8-3-1 provides in relevant part as follows:
The lien claimant must furnish written notice to the owners of his intention to hold a lien when, as here, the materialman contracts with the contractor for his materials and services rather than with the owners of the real estate.
In Horn, supra, the buyers contracted with the materialman for the construction of a personal residence. The sellers of the real estate receipted for the written notice of the materialman's intention to hold a lien against the real estate. A few days later the sellers conveyed title to the real estate to buyers who then recorded the deed. Sellers thereafter notified the materialman that buyers were now the titleholders of record. The materialman recorded his notice of an intention to hold a mechanic's lien against the buyers' real estate and sent such notice to the buyers, but only after they had recorded the deed. The Indiana Supreme Court, in reversing the Court of Appeals, held:
(Citations omitted.)
We need not discuss Beneficial Finance Company, supra, for it is a case construing a different issue and involves another section of the mechanic's lien statute, Ind.Code 32-8-3-3. Therefore it has no bearing on the matter before us.
In his appellee's brief, Isenberg asserts the following proposition in support of the notice he furnished to Bayes. Duane and Sandra Bayes own the property as tenants by the entireties, and, as such, own the real estate in question as one unit, a single ownership. Therefore, the notice furnished to the husband is notice to the owner, and the lien filed under Ind.Code 32-8-3-3 is valid and enforceable.
Property held in tenancy by entireties creates an estate owned by husband and wife as one unit. State Department of State Revenue v. Union Bank and Trust Company, (1978) Ind.App., 380 N.E.2d 1279; Anuszkiewicz v. Anuszkiewicz, (1977) 172 Ind.App. 279, 360 N.E.2d 230; Wallace v. Wallace, (1953) 123 Ind.App. 454, 110 N.E.2d 514. It is true that property owned as an estate by entireties is immune to seizure and satisfaction of the individual debts of either husband or wife. Union Bank and Trust, supra; Myler v. Myler, (1965) 137 Ind.App. 605, 210 N.E.2d 446; Eilts v. Moore, (1946) 117 Ind.App. 27, 68 N.E.2d 795. However, we are not faced with the individual debts of one spouse or one spouse encumbering entireties property without the consent of the other spouse. Here, Duane and Sandra Bayes contracted to have their home built. Both Duane and Sandra were owners of the real estate. The Bayes are the only owners of "that interest which may be subjected to the lien anticipated by the notice...." Horn, supra, at 883.
"The purpose of the required notice to the property owner is to inform the owner of the nature and amount of the claim in order that he may protect himself in his future dealings with the person with whom the claimant contracted, and particularly to enable him to retain whatever money may be due the contractor and to apply it to the payment of the lien claimed." (Footnotes omitted.)
53 Am.Jur.2d Mechanics' Liens § 170 (1970). In Annot., "Who is the 'Owner' within Mechanic's Lien Statute Requiring Notice of Claim," 76 A.L.R.3d 605 (1977), is the following discussion regarding entireties' owners and prelien notice:
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