Alfred Richards Brick Co. v. Rothwell

18 App. D.C. 516
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedOctober 3, 1901
DocketNo. 1081; No. 1082; No. 1083; No. 1084
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 18 App. D.C. 516 (Alfred Richards Brick Co. v. Rothwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alfred Richards Brick Co. v. Rothwell, 18 App. D.C. 516 (D.C. Cir. 1901).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Alvet

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Though the testimony taken was quite voluminous, a very small part of it is contained in the record before us. We have only a few extracts from the testimony of the many witnesses that were examined, but such parts- as have been incorporated are supposed to be sufficient to enable us to pass' upon the questions raised by the exceptions. It is manifest, however, that we cannot review the auditor’s findings, so far as they depend upon conclusions deducible from, the evidence produced before him, and not contained in the record before us. We can, however, seeing the general nature and character of the claims, and the relation of the several parties to the funds for distribution, determine and declare the principles that must control in making distribution of the funds in controversy.

1. Of the several questions presented, the first and most leading of them is that which relates to the claims of the parties who furnished labor and materials in the construction of the life-saving stations, and, consequently, the rights of the sureties on the bonds given the government to secure the faithful performance of the contracts by the contractors for the work. This question is dependent upon the terms of the act of Congress of August 13, 18-94 (28 Stat. 218), and the bonds of the contractors taken in pursuance thereof.

By the act of Congress just referred to, it is provided that all persons entering into any formal contract with the United States for the construction of any public building, or the prosecution and completion of any public work, or for repairs thereof, shall be required before commencing such work to execute the usual penal bond, with good and sufficient sureties, with the additional obligations that such contractor or contractors shall promptly m’ake payments to all persons supplying him or them labor and materials in the prosecution of the work provided for in such contract; ” and the statute further provides, that any person so furnishing labor and materials, and having an unpaid claim therefor, shall, upon application, as the statute directs, be furnished [536]*536with, copies of suck contract and bond, and kave a right to sue and recover tkereon, in tke name of tke United States, for kis or tkeir use, against suck contractor and sureties. Tke bonds of tke contractors in this case, given for tke faithful execution of tke work on tke life-saving stations, contain tke condition prescribed by tke statute. And tke question is, what is tke effect of tke provision of tke statute and tke condition of tke bonds executed as tke statute requires, in respect to claims for labor and materials ?

There is no mechanic’s lien law tkat applies to or tkat can be enforced against buildings erected for tke government. But tke statute just recited makes provision tkat is intended practically to serve tke same beneficent purpose of a mechanic’s lien law. It creates no lien, it is true, against tke building erected, but it makes provision for securing tke payment of tke contractors of all claims for labor and materials furnished in tke erection of tke buildings, or, in default of payment by tke contractors, tkat tke bond and sureties tkereon shall be liable to suck claimants. As was said by tke Circuit Court of Appeals of tke United States, in tke case of United States, to the use of Foundry Company v. National Surety Company, 92 Fed. Rep. 549, “ Tke bond which is provided for by tke act, was intended to perform a double function; in tke first place to secure tke government for tke faithful performance of all obligations which tke contractor might assume towards it, and, in tke second place, to protect third persons from whom tke contractor obtains materials and labor. Viewed in its latter aspect., tke bond, by virtue of tke operation of tke statute, contains an agreement between tke obligors therein and suck third parties, tkat they shall be paid for whatever labor and materials they may supply, and enable tke principal in tke bond to execute kis contract with tke United States. Tke two agreements which tke bond contains, one for tke benefit of tke government, aud tke one for tke benefit of third persons, are as distinct as if they were contained in separate instruments. * * * Tke act bears every evidence tkat it was intended to provide a security for laborers and material-[537]*537men on which they could rely confidently for protection, unless they see fit by their own dealings with the contractor, to relinquish the benefit of the security.” There is, therefore, by necessary implication, an equitable lien and preference secured in favor of the parties who furnish labor and materials in the execution of the contract, in the application or distribution of the contract price remaining to be paid; and where the government, as in the present instance, holds in its hands any part of the money contracted to be paid for the work, and there remain unpaid claims for labor and materials supplied, it holds such fund as quasi trustee for the benefit of those entitled to receive it under the condition in the bond; that is to say, the laborers and materialmen remaining unpaid. This right to preference being the result of the operation of the statute and the condition of the bond, it is the clear right, upon the plainest principles of justice, of the sureties in the bond to invoke a court of equity to enforce the preference and equitable lien for their protection. In construing this act of Congress of 13th August, 1894, this 'court said, in the case of Marble Company v. Burgdorf, 13 App. D. C. 506, 519: “ The practical effect of the statute is to confer a special lien in favor of such persons (parties furnishing labor and materials) and to substitute the bond, in the place of the public building, as the thing upon which that lien is charged.” That is to say, the bond is liable rather than the bnilding upon which labor and materials are used in construction; and if the sureties should pay claims for such labor and materials for which they may be responsible on the bond, they have a right, upon well-settled principles, of substitution to such claims as against the contract price of the work remaining due to the contractor. And having such right of substitution, the sureties have a right to interpose to prevent the diversion or misapplication of the fund, and to require it to be paid out to the parties entitled to receive it in the first instance by virtue of the lien and preference given by operation of the statute.”

The principle we have stated seems to have been applied by the auditor in the distribution of the funds arising from [538]*538the life-saving stations, though, as it appears, with a departure in some particulars. The rights of the claimants for labor and materials, and the consequent rights of the sureties on the bonds of the contractors being fixed, those rights could not be displaced or derogated from by the power of attorney to Eiley, or the subsequent agreement by creditors, to which the claimants for labor and materials supplied to the lifesaving stations were not parties, either in favor of Eiley himself, or other creditors than those signing the agreement, or those represented by those who did sign it. The power of attorney to Eiley was wholly inoperative as against such creditors of Baldwin & Peake.

2. The creditors of the firm of Baldwin & Peake, who furnished labor and materials for the construction of the sehoolhouses erected in the District of Columbia, stand on quite a different footing from those furnishing labor and materials for the life-saving stations.

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18 App. D.C. 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alfred-richards-brick-co-v-rothwell-cadc-1901.