A.E.I. Music Network v. Business Computers

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 22, 2002
Docket01-1650
StatusPublished

This text of A.E.I. Music Network v. Business Computers (A.E.I. Music Network v. Business Computers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A.E.I. Music Network v. Business Computers, (7th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 01-1650

A.E.I. Music Network, Inc.,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

Business Computers, Inc., et al.,

Defendants-Appellees.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 98 CV 6097--George M. Marovich, Judge.

Argued November 7, 2001--Decided May 22, 2002

Before Flaum, Chief Judge, and Posner and Kanne, Circuit Judges.

Posner, Circuit Judge. This appeal by A.E.I. Music Network, Inc., a subcontractor, from the dismissal of its diversity suit against the Chicago Board of Education (the other defendants having dropped out of the case) presents questions of Illinois contract and construction law. The Board had hired Business Computers, Inc. (BCI) to install an audio-visual system in a high school, and BCI had subcontracted a part of the job to A.E.I. A.E.I. did the work called for in the subcontract but was not paid by BCI, which is broke. The Illinois Bond Act requires a public entity such as the Chicago Board of Education to require its contractors to post bonds to assure the payment of any money owed by the contractors to their subcontractors. 30 ILCS 550/0.01 et seq.; MQ Construction Co. v. Intercargo Ins. Co., 742 N.E.2d 820, 825 (Ill. App. 2000); Shaw Industries, Inc. v. Community College Dist. No. 515, 741 N.E.2d 642, 645, 647 (Ill. App. 2000); Aluma Systems, Inc. v. Frederick Quinn Corp., 564 N.E.2d 1280, 1297 (Ill. App. 1990). The Board, in violation of the Act, failed to require BCI to post a bond; no bond was posted; and as a result A.E.I. could not turn to a surety when it was stiffed by BCI. Out $159,000, it brought this suit, charging that the statutory requirement of a bond was an implied-by-law term of the contract between the Board and BCI that it can enforce as a third-party beneficiary, and also seeking to impress a mechanic’s lien, 770 ILCS 60/23; R.W. Dunteman Co. v. C/G Enterprises, Inc., 692 N.E.2d 306, 313 (Ill. 1998); MQ Construction Co. v. Intercargo Ins. Co., supra, 742 N.E.2d at 825, on any funds that the Board has set aside to pay BCI on the contract. The district judge dismissed the breach of contract claim as barred by the 180-day statute of limitations in the Bond Act and dismissed the mechanic’s lien claim as barred by an admission by A.E.I. that the Board had paid BCI all that was owing it before A.E.I. filed the notice of lien.

The applicability of the 180-day statute of limitations to a suit by a subcontractor complaining about a public agency’s having failed to require the contractor to post a bond has divided Illinois’s intermediate appellate court. Shaw Industries, Inc. v. Community College Dist. No. 515, supra, 741 N.E.2d at 648, holds that the 180-day limitation, though found in the Bond Act rather than in the common law of contract, is applicable to such a suit because the suit however captioned is necessarily a suit to enforce the Act. Id. at 649. East Peoria Community High School Dist. No. 309 v. Grand Stage Lighting Co., 601 N.E.2d 972, 975 (Ill. App. 1992), implies that the 180-day period is inapplicable, because the court described the subcontractor’s suit against the agency as a third-party- beneficiary suit for breach of contract rather than as a suit under the Bond Act. We think this is clearly right and that the Supreme Court of Illinois would so hold if presented with the issue.

The requirement of posting a bond is found in section 1 of the Bond Act, 30 ILCS 550/1. The 180-day statute of limitations is found in section 2. Id., 550/2. That statute of limitations is applicable, however, by the very terms of section 2, only to "a claim for labor, and material[,] as aforesaid"--and the claim to which "aforesaid" refers, further up in the section, is "the right to sue on such bond," that is, the bond required by section 1. Section 2 couldn’t be clearer: "every person furnishing material or performing labor, either as an individual or as a sub-contractor for any contractor, with the State, or a political subdivision thereof where bond or letter of credit shall be executed as provided in this Act, shall have the right to sue on such bond or letter of credit in the name of the State." 30 ILCS 550/2 (emphasis added).

In short, the 180-day statute of limitations is applicable only to a suit on the bond. A.E.I.’s suit against the Board of Education is not a suit on the bond. There is no bond, and so the statute is inapplicable. Cf. Arvanis v. Noslo Engineering Consultants, Inc., 739 F.2d 1287, 1290 (7th Cir. 1984) (per curiam). It is doubly inapplicable, because section 2 requires suits under it to be brought in the name of the public entity that let the contract, so that if A.E.I. had to sue the Board under the Bond Act to obtain a remedy for the Board’s violation of the Act, it would be suing the Board in the name of the Board. The suit would be styled Chicago Board of Education ex rel. A.E.I. Music Network, Inc. v. Chicago Board of Education. Absurd.

The Board concedes that violations of section 1 of the Bond Act were not intended to be remediless. But it rightly insists that the remedy cannot be a suit on a nonexistent bond. Nor is there any indication of a statutory remedy except under the mechanic’s lien statute, and the remedy under that statute is unavailable if the public entity that should have required a bond for the protection of subcontractors has already paid the contractor, at least if the subcontractor failed, as A.E.I. did, to notify the public entity before it paid the contractor. See 770 ILCS 60/23(b); Walker Process Equipment v. Advance Mechanical Systems, Inc., 668 N.E.2d 132, 134 (Ill. App. 1996); Board of Library Trustees v. Cinco Construction, Inc., 658 N.E.2d 473, 477, 480-81 (Ill. App. 1995).

The natural remedy in such a case is a suit for breach of contract by the subcontractor against the public entity. The requirement of posting a bond found in section 1 of the Bond Act is read into every construction contract of a public entity, Shaw Industries, Inc. v. Community College Dist. No. 515, supra, 741 N.E.2d at 645; East Peoria Community High School Dist. No. 309 v. Grand Stage Lighting Co., supra, 601 N.E.2d at 975, precisely to give the subcontractor a remedy; and thus it became a term of the contract between the Chicago Board of Education and BCI. Because the term isintended for the benefit of the prime contractor’s subcontractors, the doctrine of third-party beneficiaries entitled A.E.I. to sue to enforce it in a suit for breach of contract. And as a suit for breach of a construction contract, A.E.I.’s suit against the Board was governed by a 4-year, not the 180-day, statute of limitations. 735 ILCS sec. 5/13-214(a); Litchfield Community Unit School Dist. No. 12 v. Speciality Waste Services, Inc., 757 N.E.2d 641, 643-44 (Ill. App. 2001); Blinderman Construction Co. v. Metropolitan Water Reclamation Dist. of Greater Chicago, 757 N.E.2d 931, 934 (Ill. App. 2001).

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A.E.I. Music Network v. Business Computers, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aei-music-network-v-business-computers-ca7-2002.