DocketNumber: No. 3388
Citation Numbers: 9 F.2d 749, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2369
Judges: Buffington
Filed Date: 1/7/1926
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
By writing of December 29, 1919, the Halfhill Construction Company, hereafter called “Contractor,” contracted with the commissioners of waterworks of Erie, Pa., here styled “Commissioners,” to build a reservoir. By such contract, Contractor agreed that “the
Thereafter Contractor began the work and continued it until October 6, 1920, when it defaulted, leaving it about one-half' done, and owing laborers and materialmen $20,-369.60. Thereupon Commissioners called upon Surety to finish the work, which Surety did, and turned over the completed reservoir to Commissioners. Thereupon Surety, without itself paying the foregoing stated claims of labor and material men, or allowing Commissioners, as provided in the contract, “to retain from any money due or which shall become due to the said Contractor, under this agreement, sufficient money to pay for any labor or materials furnished in the construction of the work,” claimed, and thereafter brought suit against Commissioners for, the entire unpaid contract price. Jury was waived and the casé tried by the judge, who found that “unpaid claims have been pre? sented for labor and material furnished to the Contractor in' the performance of the work under the contract and specifications before the time of default, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $20,369.60. Of the amount in the hands of the Commissioners the sum of $333.85 is admitted to be duetto the plaintiff. The balance, amounting to $20,369.60, the Commissioners have withheld and refused to pay to the plaintiff as surety, because they claim the right to apply the same in payment of outstanding claims for labor and material furnished to the Contractor before its default, which claims are admitted to be due from the Halfhill Construction Company to such claimants.” In an opinion, the judge upheld the right of Commissioners to retain sufficient funds to pay the labor and material men and entered judgment for Surety for a small overplus balance, saying: “The plaintiff as surety is entitled (to judgment against the Commissioners for the sum of. $333.85, the amount found to be remaining in the hands of the Commissioners in excess of all amounts which the Commissioners had the right to pay upon unpaid claims for labor and material furnished to the Contractor in the construction of said reservoir.” He further denied the right of the plaintiff' to recover the additional sum of $5,526.90, under circumstances later set forth. Thereupon Surety sued out this writ.
Addressing ourselves to the retention of money to meet the labor and material claims, we think much confusion is caused by injecting subrogation into the case. The question was not onq of subrogation, but of a contract and bond given by a contractor, conditioned that the contractor “do and perform all and singular the obligations and things contained in said contract,” one of which things was that Commissioners were given authority “to retain from -any money due or which may become due to the said Contractor, under this agreement, sufficient money to pay for any labor or materials,” etc. When Contractor stopped, Surety simply took its place, and went on to finish the work. What its rights may have been if it, too, had declined to finish and Commissioners had completed, are matters and questions not before us. What did happen was that Surety stepped into Contractor’s shoes and finished the work, and neither Surety nor Commissioners were in any different .position than if Contractor had itself finished the work -and called on Commissioners to settle. In either case, fulfillment of contract obligations by Contractor, or by its Surety for it, was a preliminary to a demand for settlement, and as Contractor, if it had completed the reservoir, could not have taken the unpaid money out of the hands of Commissioners without paying the labor and material men, no more can Surety, who completed the work. The question is one of the completion of Contractor’s contract, and until that is done no question of subrogation arises. It follows, therefore, the judge committed no error in holding Surety to the contract and bond obligation of Contractor, and that “the surety .has this right of subrogation, however, only after it has fully satisfied the claims of the person for whose benefit the bond was given.”
Turning to the remaining questions, they arise by virtue of the court’s refusal to increase the verdict found for the plaintiff by an additonal amount of $5,526.90. In that connection, we note we are here dealing with a writ of error to review a verdict, for the waiver of a jury and, trial by judge
As to the remaining sum of $4,726.90, with which Surety seeks to surcharge Commissioners as improvidently paid Contractor or the labor and material men, we shall not attempt to discuss the matter in detail. It suffices l.o say it grew out of certain extra work which Contractor undertook, Commissioners furnishing the money to pay labor and materia] men and agreeing to pay Contractor 15 per cent, extra thereon as its profit, when the reservoir was completed. Contractor not only failed to pay the labor and material men all the money advanced .by Commissioners, but had not finished the extra work when Surety took on its completion. Thereafter Surety and Commissioners agreed to certain payments being made to some, but not all, of these labor and material men. Evidence of all these dealings was given at the trial and accountants were called on both sides, who differed in view as to proper ways of accounting and settling, and the judge, after discussing the different contentions, finally held that “in paying these creditors and keeping the work moving thereby, the water commissioners were acting within the powers conferred by their agreement, both with the Contractor and with the Surety.” In this determination of the trial judge, which, as we have said, stands on the same basis as the verdict of a jury, Surety has not satisfied us there is any error of law, misconstruclion of agreement or unwarranted finding of fact. Like the verdict of a jury, this verdict must therefore stand.
Accordingly we affirm the judgment entered thereon.