Showing posts with label Garageman's Lien. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Garageman's Lien. Show all posts

Monday, January 10, 2011

Garageman's Lien Lifted -- Collision Shop Failed to Establish that It Had Obtained Owner's Consent

AUTO – TOWING & STORAGE CHARGES – LIEN LAW § 184 – GARAGEMAN'S LIEN CHALLENGING LIEN VALIDITY
Wood v. First Class Collision

(Sup. Ct., Nassau Co., decided 12/10/2010)

The world of liens, pronounced with two syllables -- "lee-uhns" -- south of the Mason-Dixon Line, can be murky and misunderstood.  Indeed, my very own kind -- lawyers -- are prone to using the term recklessly, often mistakenly referring to disputed obligations, claims and debts as liens.  As our state's Court of Appeals has noted, however, "[t]he creation of a lien requires agreement or statute[.]" Teichman v. Community Hosp., 87 N.Y.2d 514, 521 (1996).

New York's Lien Law is both arcane and archaic.  Here in New York we have statutorily created liens on vessels, liens on monuments, gravestones and cemetery structures, liens for labor on stone, mold liens, liens for the "services" of stallions or bulls, artisans' liens on personal property, self-service storage facility liens, liens of bailees of animals, liens of bailees of motor vehicles, motor boats or aircraft, liens of manufacturers and throwsters of silk goods, liens of bailees for hire, liens of truckmen and draymen, liens of motion picture film laboratories, liens of hospitals, and corporate mortgage liens against real and personal property.

This case pertains to the purported lien of a bailee of a motor vehicle, existing under New York Lien Law § 184 and otherwise known as a garageman's lien.

After hitting a parked car on April 24, 2010, petitioner's husband arranged for respondent First Class Collision to tow petitioner's 2005 Chevy Equinox to respondent's body shop for an estimate.  According to petitioner, the respondent body shop provided her husband with a $7,000 verbal repair estimate that was later reduced to $5,000.  Lacking collision coverage on the Equinox, petitioner told one of the respondent LLC's members, Greg Sbrocchi, that she could not afford pay $5,000 to repair the vehicle and asked him to get "used" parts to reduce the cost.  Petitioner contended that the respondent offered to buy the vehicle for $500 although it was valued at $9,000, and when she refused, respondent sent her a notice of lien.

The body shop's version of the parties' interaction was starkly different, of course.  Sbrocchi averred in an affidavit that petitioner's husband came to his office on or about April 24, 2010 and requested that he pick up the car and tow it to Sbrocchi's shop for an estimate. Sbrocchi stated that petitioner's husband came back to his shop the next day, April 25 , 2010, and signed a written authorization for repairs.  Sbrocchi further claimed that on May 1, 2010, petitioner's husband again returned to his shop and was given a written repair estimate.  Sbrocchi alleged that on May 8, 2010, the petitioner herself came to his shop and told him that she did not have insurance coverage and would not pay for the repairs and asked that the car be towed to her house. In response, Sbrocchi told her that she would have to pay for the towing and storage charges that already had accrued and, when petitioner eventually refused to pay those towing and storage charges, he served petitioner with a notice of lien and sale.

Petitioner then commenced this special proceeding by order to show cause pursuant to New York Lien Law § 201-a to lift respondent's notice of lien and sale.  Respondent cross-moved to dismiss petitioner's application and for summary judgment compelling petitioner to pay the respondents the towing and storage charges it sought.

In granting petitioner's application and lifting the notice of lien and sale, Nassau County Supreme Court Justice Randy Sue Marber found respondent's version of the parties' interaction to be incredible and concluded that respondent had failed to establish that it had performed garage services or stored the vehicle with the owner's consent:
Pursuant to Lien Law § 184 (1), a garage keeper who tows, stores, repairs maintains or otherwise furnishes services or supplies to a motor vehicle, at the request or with the consent of the owner, has a lien upon such vehicle to the extent of the sum due for the services performed. A garage keeper may maintain a lien against a vehicle where the garage keeper performed garage services or stored the vehicle with the owner's consent for an agreed upon price or, in the absence of an agreement, for a reasonable price.  General Motors Acceptance Corp.  v.  Anthony J. Minervini, Inc.,  301 A.D.2d 940 (3d Dept. 2003).  Under Article l2-A of the Vehicle and Traffic Law, the garage must be a duly registered motor vehicle shop.

[Section] 184 of the Lien Law, which is in derogation of common law, must be strictly construed.  Phillips  v.  Catania, 155 A.D.2d 866 (4th Dept. 1989). It is the garage keeper's burden to establish that it has performed garage services or stored the vehicle with the owner's consent.  National Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburg, Pa. v. Eland Motor Car Co., Inc., 85 N.Y.2d (1995), clarification denied 87 N.Y.2d 1002 (1996).

A lien is specific to the vehicle upon which repairs were made (National Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburg, Pa.  v.  Eland Motor Car Co., Inc., supra at p. 730) and an estimate of repairs does not create a lien  (Mercedes-Benz Credit Corp.  v.  One Stop Auto Truck Ctrs., 170 Misc2d 354, 650 N.Y.S.2d 913 (Supreme Nassau Co.1996)).  Moreover, storage fees must specifically be authorized in order to be included as par of a lien on the vehicle.  Where a garage keeper claims more than is actually due, he or she is guilty of conversion and liable to the owner in damages.  BMW Bank of N Am. v. G & B Collsion Ctr., Inc.,  46 A.D.3d 875 (2d Dept. 2007);  F&N Corvette Classics v. Corvette Repairs, Inc., 206 A.D.2d 349 (2d Dept.1994 ).
*  *  *  *  *
It is the Court' s responsibility, therefore, to determine the reasonableness of the amount claimed in the lien.  Munro v. Autosports Designs, Inc., 185 Misc.2d 821 , 714 N.Y.S.2d 415 (Supreme Nassau Co. 2000).  Refusal to release property based on the improper assertion of a lien can give rise to a cause of action for conversion.  Grant Street Canst., Inc. v. Cortland Paving Company, Inc., 55 A.D.3d 1106 (3d Dept. 2008).  

Reviewing the Respondent, Greg Sbrocchi' s Affidavit and examining the exhibits attached to the Respondents' Cross-motion lead the Court to conclude that the Petitioner never received the authorization (Exhibit A) or estimate (Exhibit B). Specifically, the Respondent claims to have obtained the Petitioner's husband's signature on the authorization on April 25, 2010.  However, Exhibit A contains storage charges from April, 2010 to June 9, 2010.  Mr. Sbrocchi's statement and the Exhibit are inconsistent.  Additionally, the Estimate (Exhibit B) is dated July 12 2010. As such, it could not have been provided to the Petitioner's husband on May 1 , 2010.  These exhibits establish that the statements made by Mr. Sbrocchi in his Affidavit are not credible.  As such, the Court finds that the Respondents have not established that the storage charges were authorized and the Lien is improper.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Auto Body Shop's Failure to Send 5-Day Notice Precludes Recovery of Storage Charges

AUTO – PHYSICAL DAMAGE COVERAGE – GARAGEMAN'S LIEN – TOWING & STORAGE CHARGES
Matter of Vaul Trust v. Brothers II Auto Body Shop, Inc.
(Sup. Ct., Albany Co., decided 8/12/2009)

Practicing insurance coverage law can be fun for the new discoveries it occasions.  Like this morning.  I did not know there was an entire statutory article devoted to mold liens (the tool and die variety, not fungi) in New York's Lien Law. Or one for the "service" of stallions or bulls.

I headed over to the Lien Law this morning for a link to the garageman's lien section, Lien Law § 184, because, believe it or not, auto insurers and vehicle owners and lessors occasionally become embroiled in disputes with auto body shops over the amount and validity of their asserted liens on vehicles towed to and stored at their facilities.  Article 9 of the Lien Law provides for the enforcement of liens on personal property, or "chattel", and section 201-A enables a vehicle's owner or lienholder to commence a special proceeding to determine the validity and amount of the asserted garageman's lien. 

Petitioners in this case were the lienholders of a 2007 Cadillac that respondent Brothers II Auto Body Shop of South Fallsburg, New York (near Monticello) intended to sell to satisfy its claimed $3,602 garageman's lien. Brothers II had originally submitted an invoice to petitioners for $6,323.40, which included towing charges and storage fees at $75 per day.  On May 8, 2009, Brothers II served petitioners with a Notice of Lien and Sale pursuant to Lien Law § 201, and petitioners then commenced this special proceeding to determine the validity of the claimed garageman's lien. As is often the case, the petitioners did not dispute an obligation to pay the towing charges, but rather contested the amount of the claimed storage fees.  

Petitioners venued the special proceeding in Albany Supreme Court and had the good fortune of pulling Justice Joseph Teresi, who has previously decided garageman's lien issues and proceedings, as the assigned judge.  Judge Teresi began his decision with the fundamental principles governing this  type of special proceeding:
Lien Law §184, which authorizes a garageman's lien for the towing and storage of motor vehicles, "is in derogation of common law and thus is strictly construed." (Grant Street Const., Inc. v. Cortland Paving Co., Inc., 55 AD3d 1106, 1107 [3d Dept. 2008]; Slank v. Sam Dell's Dodge Corp., 46 AD2d 445 [3d Dept. 1975]). "In response to a challenge to [a garageman's) lien pursuant to Lien Law §201-a, the lienor must make a prima facie showing ofthe validity of the lien and entitlement to the amount claimed." (BMW Bank of North America v. G&B Collision Center, Inc., 46 AD3d 875, 876 [2d Dept. 2007]).
Lien Law § 184(2) provides that:
A person who tows and stores a motor vehicle at the request of a law enforcement officer authorized to remove such motor vehicle shall be entitled to a lien for the reasonable costs of such towing and storage, provided that such person, within five working days from the initial towing, mails to the owner of said motor vehicle a notice by certified mail return receipt requested that contains the name of the person who towed and is storing said motor vehicle, the amount that is being claimed for such towing and storage, and the address and times at which said motor vehicle may be recovered. Such notice shall further state that the person mailing said notice claims a lien on said motor vehicle and that said motor vehicle shall be released to the owner thereof or his or her lawfully designated representative upon full payment of all charges accrued to the date that said motor vehicle is released. A person who mails the foregoing notice within said five day period shall be entitled to a lien for storage from and after the date of initial towing, but a person who fails to mail such notice within said five day period shall only be entitled to a lien for storage from and after the date that the notice was mailed. A failure to mail such notice in a timely fashion shall not affect a lien for towing.  (Emphasis added.)
Because Brothers II had not mailed a Lien Law § 184(2) notice to the vehicle's owner and lienholder either within five days of the vehicle's initial towing or at all, the court held that it had no valid lien for and was not entitled to recover storage fees.  Nor did Brother II's May 8th notice of lien and sale constitute sufficient notice under § 184(2). 

On petitioners' concession that the proper towing charge was $232, the court held that Brothers II's valid lien on the vehicle was limited to that amount.