Court Opinion

ID: 9637828
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-22 15:22:36.184693+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:10:00.972639
License: Public Domain

FARIS, District Judge.
Plaintiff bank, herein appellant, as assignee of the Sam Ward Paving Company, a copartnership, sued the members of the Oklahoma highway commission, the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, R. L. Davis, and one Melone, as the administrator of Ward, deceased, and being east below, has brought the case here for review.
The facts are few and fairly simple: The Sam Ward Paving Company, a partnership, composed of Sam Ward (now deceased) and defendant Davis, had a contract with the Oklahoma highway commission for the construction of certain public highways in Okla*420boma. Under apposite state statutes, the Sam Ward Paving Company was required to make and execute, and did on the 4th day of April, 1925, make and execute, a bond to the state of Oklahoma, with the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company as surety, conditioned that said obligors should “pay all indebtedness incurred for all labor and material furnished in the construction of the above described project,” which project was definitely described in the contract. This contract was made and executed on the same day as was the above bond. Also on the same day the Sain Ward Paving Company executed another bond to the same obligee, with the same surety, which bond was conditioned for the completion of the work in accordance with the contract and specifications. The latter bond cuts a figure here which is incidental and a matter of argument only, since it is conceded that the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company caused full completion of the work embraced in the contract, or at least such work was fully completed.
Under this contract, payment was made to the contractors, the Sam Ward Paving Company, upon monthly estimates, less perhaps 10 per cent, withheld pursuant to the contract. As a result of withholding such percentages, there remained in the hands of the Oklahoma highway commission, when the' project was fully finished, the sum of $12,-428.10. This sum is the money here in controversy. Upon the institution of this action, this money was tendered into court by the Oklahoma highway commission, which agreed to pay such money in accordance with such judgment as might be rendered by the court.' At least so the agreed facts recite, though no such affirmative tender is printed in the record.
The claim of appellee United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company to this money is bottomed on assignments to it of certain claims of materialmen aggregating more than the sum in dispute. The claim of appellant, Riverview State Bank, is bottomed on certain notes made to it by the Sam Ward Paving Company, also aggregating more than the sum in dispute, which notes were secured by an assignment, dated April 17, 1925, whereby the Sam Ward Paving Company assigned to plaintiff bank the “proceeds from estimates to become due said contractor under the terms and provisions of said contract.” This assignment also directed the Oklahoma state highway commission to issue all cheeks and vouchers to plaintiff bank. The Oklahoma highway commission acknowledged receipt of this assignment oh the 21st day of April, 1925. The consideration, for the notes made by the Sam Ward Paving Company to plaintiff bank, was for moneys advanced or loaned by it to the paving company for use in the prosecution of the project, and such moneys were so used.
The sole question in controversy here is whether the equity of the surety, the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company (hereinafter called simply the guaranty company), is or is not, upon the facts and the applicable law, superior to that of the River-view State Bank, hereinafter called simply the bank. Many errors are assigned, but all of them resolve themselves, in the last analysis, into the above query. Stated still another way, Is the claim of the bank under the assignment to it superior in equity to the claim of the guaranty company, the surety on the materialmen’s bond, and as assignee of such materialmen, whose claims it paid in an amount exceeding that here in dispute? The appellant bank contends that it is, and the appellee guaranty company, very naturally and as was to be expected, contends contra.
As forecast, apposite statutes of the state of Oklahoma require that a contractor, such as was the Ward Paving Company, shall execute two bonds; one to secure to the state the completion of the work in accordance with the contract, and the other to secure laborers and materialmen in the payment to them of money due for labor and materials used in doing the work. Section 12, State Highway Commission Act of March 14, 1924, S. L. of Okl. 1923-24, p. 51, c. 48; section 7486, C. O. S. 1921. Obviously, the state of Oklahoma is directly and financially interested in the bond first mentioned. But, while under the statute the state is named as obligee therein, it has no financial interest in the bond last mentioned. It merely requires such bond in order that the laborers and materialmen, having no enforceable lien against the work itself, may yet have protection and be enabled to collect the money due them for their labor and materials. Neither of the two statutes above cited, and which constitute the legal reasons for the making of these two bonds, deals with any question of subrogation, or with the comparative superiority of the equities existing between a lender of money used in the work and a materialman who furnished materials likewise used in the work. The claim of the bank is bottomed here wholly upon an assignment. The claim of the guaranty company is bottomed upon an assignment from certain materialmen, and also upon the well-known doctrine of subro*421gation. The existing diversity of opinion touching whether an actual assignment is a condition precedent to the invocation of the doctrine of subrogation need not therefore be considered, for upon either view the guaranty company is subrogated in both the ordinary and legal senses; that is, it is substituted for, or stands in the shoes of, the materialmen.
A few cases from states other than Oklahoma are called to our attention which hold, as. appellant contends, that under similar statutes the bank has a superior equity. But we need not, we are of opinion, consider whether this is or is not a correct construction of the rulings cited. Obviously there is nothing contained in the local statutes above cited bearing upon the question of the comparative equities as between the bank here and the guaranty company. All that these statutes say that is relevant here is that the two bonds which were here made must be made. The question of comparative superiority of opposed equities is left to and is relegable to the general law.
The provision in the contract which permits, if the Oklahoma highway commission shall so elect, the holding of any balance due the contractor for the payment of labor and materialmen, clearly aids the bank here in no wise. All inferences to be deduced from this provision of the contract militate .against the contention of the bank and not in its favor, since the Oklahoma highway commission has tendered the money in controversy into court to abide the judicial event. Lanstrum v. Zumwalt, 73 Mont. 502, 237 P. 205.
Absent a statute, and none has been called to our attention by the diligence of counsel, the decisive question before us is, we repeat, one of general law. The ease of Henningsen v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 208 U. S. 404, 28 S. Ct. 389, 52 L. Ed. 547, seems to us to be decisive of this question of general law above propounded.
Upon the categorical question whether a surety, which pays the claims of materialmen, has a superior equity in money in the hands of the owner of the work, as against a bank which lends money and secures it by an assignment of the moneys to be earned in performing the contract, the Supreme Court of the United States said: “Whatever equity, if any, the bank had to the fund in question, arose solely by reason of the loans it made to Henningsen. Henningsen’s surety was,, upon elementary principles, entitled to assert the equitable doctrine of subrogation, but it is equally clear that the bank was not, for it was a mere, volunteer, and under no legal obligation to loan its money. Prairie State Bank v. United States, 164 U. S. 227 [17 S. Ct. 142, 41 L. Ed. 412]; Insurance Company v. Middleport, 124 U. S. 534 [8 S. Ct. 625, 31 L. Ed. 537]; Sheldon on Subrogation, § 240. See, also, United States Fidelity Co. v. [United States use of] Kenyon, 204 U. S. 349, 356, 357 [27 S. Ct. 381, 51 L. Ed. 516].” Henningsen v. Ü. S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 208 U. S. loc. cit. 411, 28 S. Ct. 389, 52 L. Ed. 547.
The Henningsen Case, supra, arose upon facts apparently (and at least on principle) on all fours with the situation before us in the instant case. There a single statute (Act August 13, 1894, c. 280, 28 Stats. 278 [40 USCA § 270]) required a single bond to be given to the United States by a contractor for the doing of any public work, but with two conditions written therein; one condition whereof, was for the completion of the work in accordance with the contract, and the other condition was for the prompt payment to all persons supplying labor and materials in the prosecution of the work. The contract in question was for the construction of certain buildings at Ft. Lawton. The buildings were constructed in accordance with the terms of the contract; but the contractors failed to pay certain just and lawful claims for labor and materials. The liability to the materialmen of the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, there, as here, a party, having been established, it brought an action to restrain one Spencer, as trustee for the National Bank of Commerce, from collecting or receiving the balance due on' said contract, which balance was then in the hands of the quartermaster. Judgment went below for the guaranty company and, in affirming the ease, the Supreme Court ruled that the equity of a surety who pays the claims of materialmen, or the right to be subrogated to the claims of the materialmen in such ease, is superior to the equity of a bank which lends money to the contractor and secures such loan by an assignment of money due and to become due for work done on the contract. See, also, State ex rel. Surety Co. V. Schlesinger, 114 Ohio St. 323, 151 N. E. 177, 45 A. L. R. 371, and note; Lacy v. Maryland Casualty Co. (C. C. A.) 32 F.(2d) 48; Prairie State Bank v. United States, 164 U. S. 227, 17 S. Ct. 142, 41 L. Ed. 412.
Obviously, it makes no difference in the law that there was but one statute, one bond and one surety, in the Henningsen Case; while here there are two statutes, two bonds, and but a single surety. The bond here for completion of the work is nowise directly in *422question or in issue. The case would be the same if the latter bond never had been executed. Nothing seems more obvious or plainer than that the mere adventitious fact that the guaranty company happens to be the surety on both of the bonds made in this ease cuts no earthly figure in 'the law of the ease.
Without more, and without deeming it necessary further to discuss the effect of the action of the Oklahoma highway commission in paying the fund in controversy into court, as evincing an election to hold this money for the materialmen, as by the contract was permitted, we are of opinion that the rights of the bank, which it got by assignment, were inferior to the rights of the guaranty company, which it got by subrogation and by assignment, and that the latter should prevail.
It results that the case was correctly ruled below, and should, with costs, be affirmed, which accordingly we order.