Court Opinion

ID: 8302418
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-17 11:14:29.748865+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T10:04:52.166981
License: Public Domain

Mr. Chief Justice Green
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought by a materialman against the surety of a contractor for supplies used and furnished in the erection of a municipal auditorium in Chattanooga. The contractor’s bond was executed in accordance with the provisions of chapter 182 of the Acts of *1051899 (Thompson’s-Shannon’s Code, section 1135a et seq.), conditioned “to pay for materials and labor used in said contract.”
There was a decree in favor of the complainant below, from which the defendant surety has appealed to this court.
The contractor became insolvent, quit the job, and the job was completed by the surety. Within thirty days after the contractor abandoned the work, the material-man served notice of his claim as the statute requires. The surety insists that this notice was premature and ineffectual. Inasmuch as the surety took over the work and finished it, it is argued that the contract was completed within the meaning’ of chapter 182 of the Acts of 1899, when the surety turned over the building, and notice should have been given within thirty days after this event.
In Bristol v. Bostwick, 139 Tenn., 304, 202 S. W., 61, and Id., 146 Tenn., 205, 240 S. W., 744, and Cass v. Smith, 146 Tenn., 218, 240 S. W., 778, it was held that the contract was completed so as to permit notice of claims, when the principal contractor abandoned the work. The circumstance that the surety took over the work does not remove this case from the authority of those cited, in our opinion, nor does it defer the liability of the surety, nor postpone the time for filing claims, for materials already furnished. The principal contractor, to cover whose default the bond was required, has none the less abandoned the job, although the job is completed by the suréty, instead of by the city,
*106The surety further contends that the materialman diverted payments of money by the contractor, which money the contractor had in turn received from the city, to the discharge of debts due from the contractor to the materialman for supplies furnished for another job on which the contractor was engaged. The surety therefore insists that any recovery against it should be credited by such diversions.
If the principle upon which this argument is based be conceded, its application is not apparent on the facts before us. The proof indicates that the materialman likewise applied payments made to it by the contractor of money received from another job in satisfaction.of material furnished for the city job. Perhaps there was as much diversion one way as the other. That the surety was at all damaged by the practices complained of is not clear, and the case is therefore not one for administering the trust fund doctrine which is invoked.
Besides a decree for the value of material furnished and not paid for, an additional recovery was allowed on the idea that the insurance penalty statute covered 'this case.
We think this was a mistake. The statute referred to, chapter 141, of the Acts of 1901 (Thompson’s-Shannon’s Code, section 3340a), provides'as follows:
“The several insurance companies of this State, and foreign insurance companies and other corporations, firms or persons doing an insurance business' in this State, .in all cases when a loss occurs and they refuse to *107pay the same within sixty days after a demand shall have been made by the holder of said policy on which said loss occurred, shall be liable to pay the holder of said policy, in addition to the loss and interest thereon, a sum not exceeding twenty-five per cent, on the liability for said loss; provided, that it shall be made to appear to the court or jury trying the case that the refusal to pay said loss was not in good faith] and that such failure to pay inflicted additional expense, loss or injury upon the holder of said policy; and, provided, further, that such additional liability within the limit prescribed shall, in the discretion of the court or jury trying the case, be measured by the additional expense, loss and injury thus entailed.”
As heretofore stated, the instrument upon which suit was brought is a simple bond of tenor prescribed by chapter 182 of the Acts of 1899, conditioned to pay for all materials and labor used in said contract.
Chapter 141 of the Acts of 1901 has been held to apply to fidelity insurance. Grain Co. v. Weaver, 128 Tenn., 609, 163 S. W., 814. It would, however, be quite a perversion of terms to say that this builder’s bond was an insurance policy, or that this materialman was the holder of an insurance policy, or that the contract upon which this suit rests is an insurance contract.
Chapter 141 of the Acts of 1901 has been frequently declared by this court to be a penal statute, and therefore to be strictly construed. The most latitudinarian construction of the statute could sqarcely stretch its provisions so as to make it applicable here.
Modified as indicated, the decree of the chancellor will be affirmed.