American Fidelity Company, a Corporation, and New Hampshire Fire Insurance Company, a Corporation v. National City Bank of Evansville, a Corporation

266 F.2d 910, 105 U.S. App. D.C. 312, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5018
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMay 12, 1959
Docket14831, 14832
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 266 F.2d 910 (American Fidelity Company, a Corporation, and New Hampshire Fire Insurance Company, a Corporation v. National City Bank of Evansville, a Corporation) 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
American Fidelity Company, a Corporation, and New Hampshire Fire Insurance Company, a Corporation v. National City Bank of Evansville, a Corporation, 266 F.2d 910, 105 U.S. App. D.C. 312, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5018 (D.C. Cir. 1959).

Opinion

WILBUR K. MILLER, Circuit Judge.

The principal question presented here may be stated thus: When a contractor borrows money from a bank and as security therefor legally assigns the proceeds of its Government construction contract and the bank as assignee receives progress payments thereunder, may the sureties on the contractor’s performance and payment bonds recover such payments from the bank to reimburse them for sums paid by them because the contractor defaulted after the bank had collected the progress payments ?

Other questions are whether the proceeds of the bank loans of the contractor in this case .were diverted from the performance of the contract and, if so, whether the diversion caused the bank to lose its right, if any, to retain the payments which as assignee it received from the Government. These and additional minor questions arise from the facts now stated.

The Regent Contracting Company, a corporation, entered into a contract with the United States January 15, 1954, 1 to construct a steam generating plant at Oceana, Virginia, for a consideration finally fixed at $350,423. 2 Pursuant to 40 U.S.C.A. § 270a, it executed performance and payment bonds in the penal sums of $338,000 and $169,000 respectively. American Fidelity Company and New Hampshire Fire Insurance Company became sureties on these obligations.

On February 12 the corporation, joined by its three stockholders, executed a loan agreement to The National City Bank of Evansville. It represented that it would use the proceeds of loans in the performance of the Government contract mentioned above, that it was ready, willing and able to assign to the bank as security all payments to become due under the contract, and that it would obtain a subordination agreement from the sureties. 3 On the same day, the bank lent the corporation $75,000 and took from it an assignment of the payments on the contract as authorized by the Assignment of Claims Act, 31 U.S.C.A. § 203 and 41 U.S.C.A. § 15. Notice of the assignment was given by the bank March 16 to the Government and the sureties. The latter acknowledged receipt of notice “without prejudice to any and all rights and with reservation thereof.” On April 27 the bank made the corporation an additional loan of $84,000.

The United States made three progress payments to the assignee bank: $34,461.90 on March 31; $23,022.54 on May 21; and $37,854.90 on July 2. Of these payments the first two were by agreement credited to the Regent partnership, and the third was applied to the corporation’s notes. There was also credited on the corporation’s notes, by agreement of the partnership, the sum of $31,614.48 paid by the Government *913 on account of a construction contract being performed by the partnership. 4

On April 27, the same day the bank made the $84,000 loan, American Fidelity’s Washington attorney addressed a letter to the bank, advising that indebtedness had accrued for labor and material which it expected to be called on to pay, and claiming “equitable rights in the contract proceeds superior to the assignment which has been given to you by the contractor.” 5

The United States, because of the corporation’s default, terminated the contract July 22. At that time the Government had already made the three progress payments to the appellee bank mentioned above, and had retained $10,593.-26 pending satisfactory completion; and the corporation had performed work worth $13,520 for which no payment had been made. Following default, the United States had the work completed by another at a cost, which, after the application of the retained percentages and the value of the work not theretofore paid for, amounted to $5,916.34 more than the contract price, which the sureties paid. They also paid under the payment bond $109,529.81 to suppliers of labor and material whom the contractor left unpaid; these payments were made by the sureties some time after the Government had paid to the assignee bank the three sums which are in controversy here.

May 11, 1954, the sureties sued in the United States District Court for Maryland, asking exoneration, the appointment of a receiver for the Regent corporation, and other equitable relief. Some months later they filed a supplemental complaint seeking judgment for the amounts they had paid to suppliers of labor and material. On October 18, 1955, they were awarded judgment on that score in the sum of $109,529.81 against the Regent corporation.

In April, 1955, the bank sued the sureties in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia demanding an accounting and seeking to recover the amounts due the corporation at termination, because the Government’s retention of those sums had relieved the sureties of liability therefor. On July 1, 3955, the sureties counterclaimed against the bank, praying that (a) an equitable lien in the amount of $109,529.81 be declared in their favor against all proceeds of the contract received by the bank; (b) the bank be ordered to make an accounting; and (c) they have judgment against the bank for $95,319.34, with interest and costs. 6

The sureties had sued the bank in May, 1955, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana seeking to recover the three progress payments it had collected. This action was transferred to the District of Columbia and was consolidated with the action by the bank in which the sureties had filed a counterclaim, the parties agreeing that the issues in the counterclaim were the same as those in the Indiana action.

Finally in the consolidated cases, the bank’s complaint against the sureties and their counterclaim against the bank were dismissed by the District Court. Judgment for $89,530.52 with interest accrued to December 18, 1957, in the sum of $17,-218.85, was awarded to the bank against the Regent Contracting Company, Inc. The sureties appeal. They say the District Court erred in concluding as a matter of law that they could not recover from the bank the three progress payments made to it by the Government under the assignment. They say further the District Court erred in failing to hold that the three progress payments were *914 received by the bank impressed with an equitable lien or trust in their favor to the extent they had been forced to pay under the bonds.

When a surety on a Government contractor’s performance bond makes a payment thereunder to or for the United States, he is subrogated to the rights of the Government as to any funds due or to become due under the contract. This subrogation, sometimes called an “equitable, lien,” 7 relates back to the date of the bond, and is therefore superior to any conflicting claim thereafter asserted by another. In like manner when a Government contractor’s surety on a payment bond makes a payment thereunder to suppliers of labor or material, he is subrogated to the rights and preferences of such suppliers as to sums due or to become due under the contract; and again the subrogation relates back to the date of the bond.

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Bluebook (online)
266 F.2d 910, 105 U.S. App. D.C. 312, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-fidelity-company-a-corporation-and-new-hampshire-fire-insurance-cadc-1959.