American Olean Tile Co. v. Morton

157 So. 2d 788, 247 Miss. 886, 1963 Miss. LEXIS 366
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1963
Docket42790
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 157 So. 2d 788 (American Olean Tile Co. v. Morton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Olean Tile Co. v. Morton, 157 So. 2d 788, 247 Miss. 886, 1963 Miss. LEXIS 366 (Mich. 1963).

Opinion

*890 McGehee, C. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Hinds County, Mississippi, rendered on November 28,1962, awarding the appellant, American Olean *891 Tile Company of Lansdale, Pennsylvania* the sum of only $1,500, the amount admitted -by the prime contractor to be due to-the subcontractor • and tendered into court, instead of the amount sued, for, $7,115.09, for material furnished by- the appellant in the construction of a women’s-residence hall at Mississippi College, Clinton, Mississippi. . . .

The judgment was against the ■ Frazier-Morton Construction Company, a partnership composed of. C. E. Frazier and A. ~W: Morton,' the prime contractor, and the Fidelity and Deposit Company, of Maryland, their surety on a private construction job on-the campus of Mississippi College, for a total contract price of $253,000. The material for the tile, marble and terrazo work was sold by the appellant American. Olean Tile; Company to the subcontractor Stokes Interiors Inc., for the said sum of $7,115.09, and the proof is .undisputed that the said material was used in the job op was reasonably required for use. in the performance of the contract between the Frazier-Morton Construction Company and Mississippi College, and.that no part of the said purchase price had been paid.

The appellees, Frazier-Morton Construction Company and its surety, took the position that .‘the prime contractor and its surety were not liable for unpaid material consumed in the job, since the same was furnished by: and through a subcontractor Stokes Interiors Inc., basing this defense upon the fact that Section 374, Code of 1942, providing the terms for a bond on a private job, does not provide for any liability to a materialman of a subcontractor. • ■ ' ‘

However, we think that the record in this case clearly-discloses that the bond sued oh herein-' was, ahd'was intended to be, broader than the: requirements of. this-statute as formerly written. This:statute as it now reads,provides for a bond “containing such provisions and penalties as the parties thereto may insert therein, (and *892 that) such bond shall also be subject to the additional obligations that such contractor or subcontractor, shall promptly make payments to all persons furnishing labor or material under said contract; * (Italics ours).

The original bond named Mississippi College as the obligee therein and was dated March 3, 1961. A supplemental bond was entered into on May 9, 1962, between the prime contractor, Frazier-Morton Construction Company, and the appellant American Olean Tile Company, in which the said tile company was named as the obligee. This bond was for the full contract price of $253,000, as a “performance bond” and another bond of the same date, May 9, 1962, and with the same surety, is referred to in the record as the “payment bond”, for 50% of the contract price.

The bond of May 9, 1962, provided for the protection of all materialmen of the subcontractor, and promised payment to all “claimants” as defined therein, and a claimant was defined therein as one “having a direct contract with the principal or with a subcontractor of the principal for * * * material * * * used or reasonably required for use in the performance of the contract.” The original bond of March 3, 1961, wherein Mississippi College was named as the obligee provided that “within ninety days after such claimant * * # furnished the last of the materials” for which a claim is made, he should give written notice to the owner (of the building) of such claim, and a claimant was specifically defined in the G-eneral Construction Specifications referred to in a printed booklet separately sent up on this appeal, and being Exhibit D ,to the testimony of Mr. Morton, as follows: “A claimant is defined as one having a direct contract with the principal or with a subcontractor of the principal for labor, material, or. both, used or reasonably required for use in the performance of the contract * *

*893 All the provisions of the bond of March 3, 1961, were incorporated in the bond of May 9, 1962, by reference, and the appellees Frazier-Morton Construction Company and its surety Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland directly obligated themselves to the appellant American Olean Tile Company in the same terms that they had obligated themselves to Mississippi College in the former bond, and it was provided that “all rights of American Olean Tile Company thereto are preserved therein.” It was in consideration of the execution of this bond of May 9, 1962, that the appellant wrote to Mississippi College on the same date that it had no objection to the College releasing any funds owing by it to Frazier-Morton Construction Company or making-final payment to said company. The amount then being withheld, as shown by the record, was slightly in excess of $34,000, and the Frazier-Morton Construction Company immediately received in cash these funds theretofore retained by Mississippi College.

All that is needed to constitute a valid consideration to support an agreement or contract is that there must be either a benefit to the promisor or a detriment to the promisee. If either of these requirements exist, there is a sufficient consideration.

In order to get an immediate release of this money to them, Frazier-Morton Construction Company on May 9, 1962, entered into the compromise settlement agreement in the form of a supplemental bond wherein the appellant was named as the obligee instead of Mississippi College, the obligee named in the bond of March 3, 1961, and which subsequent bond recited therein that the College “ * * * is withholding final payment for said construction job from Frazier-Morton Construction Company, and said Frazier-Morton Construction Company desires the release of this money without admission on its part of any liability to American Olean Tile Company whatsoever.” And Mr. Morton testified that this *894 bond of May 9, 1962, to the American ‘ Olean Tile Company was given in Order that they (Frazier-Morton Construction Company) could get their" money from Mis-, sissippi College. He testified “We executed that to get all of our money due us from the college.” NO' performance or payment bond was required -by the - prime contractor to he executed by the subcontractor for the protection of the appellant. • ••

In the compromise and settlement agreement, or bond, of May 9, 1962, it was specifically agreed that ‘ ‘ all prerequisites to the bringing of a suit had been complied with or were fully met and fulfilled”. Of course,- the giving of the ninety day notice under the first bond was one of the prerequisites to the suit,' and the appellees are now estopped from denying that this prerequisite had not been met.

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Bluebook (online)
157 So. 2d 788, 247 Miss. 886, 1963 Miss. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-olean-tile-co-v-morton-miss-1963.