RANDOLPH J. HAINES, Bankruptcy Judge.
The issue here is whether various mechanics' lien claimants, who claim priority dating from the commencement of construction in October, 2005, have priority over a construction deed of trust that was recorded in May of 2007. The lender, Mortgages, Ltd., maintains that even if there is but a single project or "work," a mechanics' lien has priority only dating from the general contract for which the work was performed (the "separate contracts doctrine"), and that in any event Mortgages is entitled to be equitably subrogated to a prior deed of trust that was paid off and released by some of the proceeds of Mortgages' loan.
The construction project at issue is the remodeling or refurbishment of an existing building commonly known as the Hotel Monroe. Its owner, Central and Monroe, LLC, first obtained a loan from First Commonwealth Mortgage Trust in the amount of $3.2 million, secured by a deed of trust recorded in May, 2002. In July, 2005, that loan was refinanced by an $8.5 million dollar loan provided by Mortgages Ltd., secured by a deed of trust recorded that same month. Almost $3 million of the proceeds of that loan were used to satisfy the First Commonwealth debt and obtain a release of the First Commonwealth deed of trust.
In December, 2006, the owner obtained a new loan from Choice Bank in the amount of $9.3 million. It was secured by a deed of trust recorded that same month. Approximately $7.3 million of the proceeds of the Choice loan were used to satisfy the debt to Mortgages Ltd. and obtain a release of its 2005 deed of trust.
By the time the Choice Bank deed of trust was recorded in December, 2006, however, work was already underway on the remodeling. The first general contract for this remodeling project was an October 18, 2005 contract with Contractors Abatement
In the meantime, while the CASI and KGM demolition and abatement work was going on, the Choice Bank debt was refinanced by another loan from Mortgages Ltd. in the amount of $75.6 million, in May, 2007. The deed of trust securing that debt was recorded on May 16, 2007. From the proceeds of this second Mortgages Ltd. loan more than $8.9 million was used to satisfy the Choice Bank debt and obtain a release of its 2006 deed of trust.
When it made its construction loan and recorded its deed of trust, Mortgages understood that it was making a "broken priority loan" because the construction work was already underway. Consequently it obtained from the owner's principals a general Indemnity Agreement and Indemnification Agreement for Mechanics' and Materialman's Liens, and it required an assignment from the owner of the owner's rights in the general contract with Summit, even though it had not yet been finalized and signed. Mortgages did not, however, require or obtain any subordination agreements from any of the general or subcontractors performing the work.
Mortgages did not have the $75.6 million necessary to fund the loan that it made to Central and Monroe. Mortgages' business plan had been to raise the necessary funds from its investors, but by May, 2007, it was already having difficulty raising as much funds as it had committed to lend. When the loan closed on May 16, 2007, Mortgages paid itself in excess of $5.4 million for a "Loan Discount," "Construction Admin. Fees," "Rev Op Fees," and a "Processing Fee." It agreed with the owner to a "delayed funding" arrangement, purportedly to reduce the owner's interest accrual but more likely because it did not have the funds to advance. That arrangement called for about $44.7 million to be funded to a "Construction Impound" account by October, 2008, and an additional $9.4 million for interest reserves by the month after that. The initial delayed funding was funded on July 13, 2007.
But by November, 2007, just as the form of contract was being finalized and Summit took over as general contractor, Mortgages already needed to withdraw funds that it had previously paid into the Construction Impound account. Mortgages agreed with the owner to "borrow" back $2.5 million that had been funded, promising to replace $1 million of those funds on 10 days' notice, another $1 million on 20 days' notice, and the full balance within 30 days of the owner's demand. Seven days after the parties agreed upon the form of the general contract with Summit, and while
By the spring of 2008 the construction impound account was insufficient to pay the accruing construction costs. Summit's first two draws were paid by the owner itself because there was insufficient money in the impound account. About $1.6 million was deposited in May, sufficient to pay Summit's third draw. By June the account was empty, although Mortgages had approved draws in excess of $10 million. Mortgages' principal Scott Coles committed suicide on June 2, and Mortgages was placed into involuntary bankruptcy on June 23.
This litigation was originally filed in Maricopa County Superior Court and was removed to this Court, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441, in connection with the pending bankruptcy case of Mortgages, Ltd. Rexel Phoenix Electric and some of the other subcontractors of general contractor Summit moved to remand the adversary proceeding to state court. All parties who had appeared in the action agreed that the adversary proceeding should be remanded but only after this Court ruled on the threshold "issue of lien priority," and on September 10, 2009, the Court entered an order to that effect.
After extensive discovery, pretrial motions, joint pretrial statements and trial memoranda, the priority issue was tried to the Court on August 6, 7, 8, and 9, 2012. After the filing of post-trial memoranda on August 20, the matter was taken under advisement.
Summit claims that although it had a separate contract with the owner dating from December, 2007, the work it contracted to do was the same "work" or construction project that CASI and KGM had begun working on as early as October, 2005 and October, 2006, prior to the recordation of the second Mortgages' deed of trust in May, 2007. Indeed, Summit even entered into a subcontract with CASI for CASI to continue with the demolition and abatement work that it had begun under its own general contract and continued under its first subcontract with KGM. But Mortgages contends that even if it was the same "work" within the meaning of Arizona's mechanics' lien priority statute, Arizona Revised Statutes ("A.R.S.") § 33-992(A), a mechanics' lien cannot have a priority earlier than the general contract, so when there are successive general contracts as there are here, each of them establishes a new, later priority date for all of the subsequent work of both that general contractor and all its subcontractors.
The statutory language defining the priority of a mechanics' lien has remained virtually unchanged since it was first adopted in 1901. Currently, the statute reads, in pertinent part: "The liens provided for in this article ... are preferred to all liens, mortgages or other encumbrances upon the property attaching subsequent to
But we must begin with the statute. Prior to 1998, Arizona's statutes contained a single provision governing the date of priority of mechanics' and materialman's liens, A.R.S. § 33-992(A). It provides that the priority date is "the time the labor was commenced or the materials were commenced to be furnished." That language does not suggest that there may be different dates depending on the contract under which the labor was performed. Indeed, the court in Wooldridge held that "A.R.S. § 33-992 establishes priority for all of the liens provided for in the article on mechanics' liens."
The seminal case in Arizona is Wylie, where the Arizona Supreme Court held that "when the building, structure, or improvement has been made under a general contract," then all liens arising from work done under that contract "are upon an equal footing."
There was also extensive dictum in Wylie indicating that labor performed under
And the Wylie Court was very explicit that it was not deciding whether the same priority date applies to work done under a direct contract with the owner. That opinion recognized that on the facts before the court, "all of the lien claimants have become such through the general contractor."
Wahl
Wooldridge applied the relation-back principle to earthwork "when it has been performed as a part of the work required under a general contract for the construction of a building."
In the absence of statutory language that "divided liens into two classes, those arising under a valid contract between the owner and the contractor, and those where the labor done and materials furnished were deemed to have been done and furnished at the personal instance of the owner,"
And in its post-trial memorandum, Mortgages admits that California eliminated its separate contracts doctrine by
As noted, Mortgages now argues that two other Arizona cases adopt its "separate contracts doctrine." But neither case construes the language of A.R.S. § 33-992(A) or explains how or why it requires different priority dates depending on the nature of the contractual relationship with the owner. In Allied Contract, the lienholder claimed a priority from the commencement of construction of "four duplexes on the property," even though its work was for "installation of water mains on the subject property," which it did not begin until three months later, after recordation of the mortgage.
If dictum were controlling, then perhaps the most definitive dictum from Arizona courts on mechanics' lien priority in the broken priority context is the Court of Appeals' explanation in its extensive opinion in the United California Bank
But while there is no definitive authority expressly adopting the "separate contracts" theory after it was repealed by California in 1931, the Arizona Legislature conclusively indicated it did not generally apply by adopting that rule only for the special circumstance of site preparation work that is not governed by a general contract. The mechanics' lien statute was amended in 1998 to add new paragraph E. The new provision applies only to defined site preparation work and provides that when such work is not included in a general contract for the construction of a building or other structure, then the site improvement "is a separate work" and the mechanics' liens arising from such work have their own priority.
All parties here agreed that the demolition, abatement and renovation of the Hotel Monroe was not such site preparation and is not governed by A.R.S. § 33-992(E). But for three reasons that paragraph making a special rule for separate site preparation general contracts confirms that for vertical construction contracts, there is no "separate contracts doctrine."
First, the new paragraph specifically defines such site preparation, when not included in a construction contract, to be a "separate work." If Mortgages' separate contract theory were the rule, the separate general contract for the site preparation would be sufficient in itself to give it its own priority. The care taken by the legislature also to define such work as a "separate work" confirms that the general rule is that the nature and identity of the "work," not the nature or singleness of the contract, governs priority. There would have been no reason for the legislature to define such site preparation work as a "separate work" if that were not otherwise determinative of priority.
Second, and even more importantly, there would have been no need to create a special paragraph, and a special priority rule, for such site preparation work if the law had always already embodied a "separate contracts doctrine." Paragraph E only applies when the site preparation is done pursuant to a contract that is separate from the general contract for the construction of the building. Under Mortgage's theory, the priority for that work would always have dated from the commencement of the labor pursuant to that separate site preparation contract. Paragraph E would have been entirely redundant of the general rule under paragraph A. Because the Court should not assume the legislature adopted a useless law, it must conclude that paragraph E adopts a special rule for some, particularly defined separate general contracts, those dealings only with site preparation. Such a special rule for separate site preparation contracts necessarily implies that that rule does not apply to separate vertical renovation contracts such as the work on the Hotel Monroe. These are ordinary applications of the cannons of statutory interpretation of expressio unius est exclusio alterius
Third, the new paragraph E also confirms that priority is based on the commencement of the "improvement," not on the contract under which it is performed. The paragraph specifies that even for such site preparation work that is not included in a general construction contract, the liens "arising from work and labor ... for each improvement at the site shall have a separate priority.... A lien arising from work or labor done ... for each improvement at the site attaches to the property for priority purposes at the time labor was commenced ... pursuant to the contract between the owner and the original contractor for that improvement to the site."
This same project concept is also found elsewhere in Arizona's mechanics' lien statutes. The Arizona Supreme Court decision in S.K. Drywall
There is no basis in the statute, as there was in California at the time of the Wylie dictum, to apply different priority dates for work under different contracts with the owner. Nor is there any reason to conclude that Arizona would have adopted California's interpretation after it specifically repealed that interpretation in 1932. To the contrary, the language and structure of A.R.S. § 33-992(A) all imply there is a single priority date, which is the commencement of "the labor," with the sole exception under A.R.S. § 33-992(E) for liens arising under a site preparation contact that is separate from a contract for the construction of a building.
Of course, as noted above, it is entirely possible, on the facts, that multiple general contracts exist because they define different works or improvements. But now that there has been a trial of those facts, and much of the evidence related to the nature of the work and improvement on the Hotel Monroe, those facts conclusively establish that there was but one improvement underway from October, 2005, until Mortgages ceased funding and work stopped in the summer of 2008. All of the general contractors — CASI, KGM and Summit — were working on the same, single renovation project. Although it significantly evolved over time, there was never more than a single species — the owner did not originally set out to develop a Neanderthal and only later abandon that project to create a Homo Sapiens instead. And CASI's initial asbestos abatement work was part of that same, single renovation project. The facts are clear there was no need for asbestos abatement, and none would have been undertaken, except because of and as part of the renovation.
Thus for purposes of A.R.S. § 33-992(A), the Court finds that there was only one date on which "the labor" commenced, when CASI started work in October, 2005.
Because Mortgages' deed of trust was not recorded until May, 2007, it is junior and subordinate to the mechanics' liens whose priority date from October, 2005. To have priority over those liens, Mortgages asks the Court to apply the equitable doctrine of equitable subrogation, to give it the priority of the deed of trust that was paid and released by a portion of Mortgages' May, 2007 loan. That was the Choice Bank deed of trust that was recorded in December, 2006. But even that would not provide priority over mechanics' liens arising from labor that commenced in October, 2005. So Mortgages asserts that it can also claim equitable subrogation on behalf of Choice Bank, to be subrogated to the deed of trust that some of its loan proceeds paid off and released, the July, 2005, deed of trust in favor of Mortgages itself.
The law of equitable subrogation in Arizona has changed since this Court denied a motion for summary judgment in this case.
Most of the trial was devoted to evidence as to whether it would be equitable to subrogate Mortgages to the prior deeds of trust, whether Mortgages had acted equitably, and whether the contractors and subcontractors would be unjustly enriched if equitable subrogation were not permitted.
The evidence conclusively established several respects in which Mortgages did not act equitably and was significantly responsible for both the financial losses and for the priority conflict with the contractors. The facts also establish that Mortgages could have provided notice sufficient to avoid the contractors from being taken advantage of, while at the same time the facts establish there was nothing the contractors could have done to avoid the losses, the priority conflict, or to give better public notice of their claimed interests. And the facts established that Mortgages would be unjustly enriched if equitable subrogation were applied, rather than the remedy being necessary for Mortgages' benefit to avoid the unjust enrichment of the contractors.
First, Mortgages knew and understood that it was making a "broken priority" loan in May, 2007. It then knew that "the labor" on the renovation of the Hotel Monroe had already begun, so it knew that all of the contractors and subcontractors had lien rights with a priority senior to the Mortgages deed of trust that was granted and recorded when the May, 2007 loan was made. While it attempted to protect itself with both title insurance and indemnity agreements, Mortgages did absolutely nothing to give any notice to the subcontractors that it would assert a priority ahead of them, based on a theory of subrogation.
Mortgages' only defense of this inequitable conduct is that the Arizona courts have held that the mere obtaining of insurance
Similarly, Mortgages did not give any public notice, when it recorded its own mortgage or when it released the prior Choice Bank deed of trust, that it would assert a priority based on that same deed of trust that it caused to be released of public record. The Restatement specifically authorizes the giving of such notice,
More significantly, Mortgages gave no notice when it foreclosed its deed of trust that was effectively also foreclosing its belatedly-claimed rights under one or two prior deeds of trust.
On these facts there is unique significance to the lender's failure to give notice of its claims and intentions. In most cases of equitable subrogation, all of the money that has been lent is already out the door. Neither of the contending parties could have done anything to mitigate their losses. Here, however, the contractors continued to incur more debt, and continued to improve Mortgages' collateral, while the public record led them to believe they had priority over the Mortgages
The Restatement, which is now the law in Arizona, specifically recognizes that this kind of delay in asserting subrogation is the primary cause for courts to find that injustice would result and therefore deny subrogation.
But most significantly of all, the loss to the contractors was, on all the facts established by the evidence, occasioned entirely by Mortgages' failure to fund the loan to which it had committed. There is no reason to conclude or even assume, on the facts and evidence, that the subcontractors would not have been fully paid if Mortgages had fully funded the loan to which it committed. There was, for example, no evidence that the construction was turning out to be more expensive that predicted, or would cost more than the loan amount to which Mortgages had committed. Consequently on these facts the court must conclude that the subcontractors would have been fully paid if Mortgages had fully funded its loan. Denying equitable subrogation would permit the subcontractors to recover some, but not all, that they are owed. They will still suffer substantial losses. But they certainly will not be enriched, unjustly or otherwise, compared to what they would and should have been paid if Mortgages had not breached its loan commitment and withdrawn funds from the construction loan account. They would only be paid what they were owed, but not enriched.
Mortgages has cited no case, and the Court has not located any authority, that would extend equitable subrogation to a breaching lender, and certainly not to a lender whose promised but unfulfilled loan was instrumental in inducing the investment of labor and materials by the party with the superior record lien.
Moreover, the facts are undisputed that Mortgages' benefitted itself at the expense of the contractors. First, it paid itself
Mortgages also attempts to defend against this analysis by arguing that its investors — those who advanced money to fund the small portion of the loan that was funded, most of which came back to Mortgages' pockets — had no obligation to the contractors, or indeed to anyone, to fund the balance. While that may be true, it is entirely irrelevant. Mortgages' investors can claim no greater rights than Mortgages,
On these facts, equitable subrogation is not necessary to prevent unjust enrichment of the contractors and subcontractors. To the contrary, even without equitable subrogation, the contractors will be paid far less than they are justly entitled to receive for their work, and it is entirely just and proper that Mortgages should bear a substantial portion of their loss, for which it is largely responsible in at least an equitable sense. The contractors and subcontractors are therefore entitled to a lien priority dating from October, 2005, and Mortgages is entitled only to the priority dating from the recordation of its deed of trust on May 16, 2007.
Because that concludes the lien priority dispute, this adversary proceeding is remanded to Maricopa County Superior Court pursuant to this Court's order of September 10, 2009.