American Fidelity Co. v. Metropolitan Paving Brick Co.

35 Ohio C.C. Dec. 662, 30 Ohio C.A. 209
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 15, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 35 Ohio C.C. Dec. 662 (American Fidelity Co. v. Metropolitan Paving Brick Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Fidelity Co. v. Metropolitan Paving Brick Co., 35 Ohio C.C. Dec. 662, 30 Ohio C.A. 209 (Ohio Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

SHIELDS, J.

This was an action on a certain bond executed by the plaintiff in error as surety and others named therein as principals to the board of commissioners of Stark county, Ohio, to secure the faithful performance of a certain written contract entered into between said board of commissioners and said parties named therein as principals, for the improvement of what is [663]*663known as the Canton-Cairo road by grading and paving said road and otherwise improving the same.

Said bond contained the following provision:

“Now, if the said party of the second part in the said foregoing agreement, shall well and truly execute all and singular the stipulations in said agreement by him to be executed, and shall pay all just and legal claims for labor performed upon and material furnished for the work specified in said agreement, then this obligation is to be void, otherwise to remain in full force and virtue in law, we agreeing and hereby consenting that this undertaking shall be for the use of any laborer or any person furnishing material, for a just claim, as aforesaid, as well as for the said county.”

That for the purpose of carrying out said contract said named principals in said bond purchased for the Metropolitan Paving Brick Co. certain brick, used in making said improvement, amounting to the sum of $10,798.55, for which said sum with interest from February 1, 1916, judgment was prayed for.

After certain preliminary questions raised by motions and demurrer to said petition by the several defendants were disposed of, the American Fidelity Co. filed its separate answer setting up two principal defenses:

First, that said surety company signed said bond as surety only; that long before the completion of said improvement, the purchase price of the brick furnished by said brick company became due and payable, and that if any default by said contractors in the payment of said brick existed, such default existed long prior to' the payment by said board of commissioners of the several amounts thereafter accruing under the several estimates made to said contractors, and that said amounts were largely in excess of said brick company’s claim, all of which was known to said board of commissioners,and its engineer, but unknown to the said surety company, and that notwithstanding the provisions of said contract and bond, neither said board of commissioners, nor its engineer, nor said brick company gave any notice to the said surety company of any default of the principals in said bond in the payment of said brick company’s said claim, but wholly failed to do so, and that by reason thereof said American Fidelity Co. is and was thereby released and dis[664]*664charged as surety from auy and all liability to the said brick company.

Secondly, that after the purchase price of said brick became due,■'without the knowledge or consent of the said surety company, said brick company agreed with the principals in said bond to extend the time of payment for the purchase price of said brick, and that on February 1, 1916, in consideration of the execution and delivery to said brick company of certain notes by the said J. B. Smith and J. C. Krabill did so extend the time for the payment of said brick for a definite time, which said notes were accepted by said brick company in full settlement of its said claim; that said Smith and Krabill afterward executed a chattel mortgage on certain property to secure the payment of said wrongful extension of time the rights of said surety company. Further, that at the time the payment of said brick company’s said claim was so extended, said principals in said bond were each financially responsible and then had property available on execution sufficient to satisfy said brick company’s said claim, but that since said time their financial condition has materially changed and their property has become so encumbered as to render the same less available to execution, and that by reason of said wrongful extension of time the rights of said surety company have thereby been prejudiced and that said surety company became and was thereby discharged from all liability to said brick company under the conditions of said bond.

In an amendment to its said answer, said surety company set up that said brick company did not bring its action within one year from the time of furnishing said brick pursuant to the provisions of Sec. 6974 G. C. which became effective September, 1915.

Separate answers were filed by the defendants, Wise and Garaux, and a joint answer by the defendants Smith and Krabill in each of which the execution of notes of said Smith and Krabill to said brick company in. settlement of said company’s said claim was averred, and the subsequent execution of a chattel mortgage by them to secure the payment of said notes.

A separate reply was filed to each of said answers by said brick company, denying in substance the allegations therein, in[665]*665consistent with the allegations of the petition, and in reply to the second defense of said surety company, said brick company admitted that at the time of the filing of said answer an action was pending in said Stark county common .pleas court on the part of said brick company to recover upon said promissory notes in cause known as No. 28264 therein, but that since the filing of said answer said cause has been dismissed.

With the issues thus made, a jury was waived and said cause was submitted to the court below, resulting in a judgment in favor of the brick company. By a petition in error filed in this court a reversal of said judgment is sought principally upon the specifications of error in grounds designated as Nos. 6 and 7, and which in substance are as follows:

“No. 6. Because said court erred in failing to find that the provisions contained in said bond requiring immediate written notice of any known default on the part of the principals in said bond was applicable to said brick company, and was a condition precedent to the right of said brick company to recover against the said surety company as surety on said bond; and that said court failed to find that the failure of said brick company to give such notice and to perform such precedent condition operated to release said surety company from all liability to said brick company, and was and is a bar to the right of said brick company to recover on said bond.
“No. 7. Because said court erred in failing to find that under the terms and conditions of said bond rendering the same available to material men, the duty devolved on said brick company to notify said surety company of any default known to it on the part of the principals in said bond within a reasonable time; and also erred in failing to find that said surety company was released from any and all liability to said brick company on account of the latter named company’s failure to give such notice.”

It is fundamental that a surety ordinarily is held liable to the strict letter of his contract and that such contracts receive a strict construction by courts. While that is true of individual sureties, courts of equity recognize a distinction between a surety signing for another gratuitously as a mere accommodation and a surety company engaged in the business of furnishing bonds for profit, the latter not being accorded the same degree of pro[666]*666tection as the former. This distinction is recognized by both the United States and state courts generally and, among others, the case of Topeka v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 Ohio C.C. Dec. 662, 30 Ohio C.A. 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-fidelity-co-v-metropolitan-paving-brick-co-ohioctapp-1919.