Bank of Yuma v. Arrow Construction Co.

480 P.2d 338, 106 Ariz. 582, 1971 Ariz. LEXIS 210
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1971
Docket10164-PR
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 480 P.2d 338 (Bank of Yuma v. Arrow Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Yuma v. Arrow Construction Co., 480 P.2d 338, 106 Ariz. 582, 1971 Ariz. LEXIS 210 (Ark. 1971).

Opinion

LOCKWOOD, Justice:

This case is before us on a petition to review a decision of the Court of Appeals, 12 Ariz.App. 466, 472 P.2d 77, reversing a superior court judgment in favor of the defendant, Arrow Construction Company. The decision of the Court of Appeals is vacated.

The facts appear as follows: Bemar Development Company decided to build a building in Yuma, Arizona to be known as “Crescent Center.” To obtain funds for the project, it borrowed $750,000 from Investors Diversified Services, Inc. To make *583 sure that the money loaned went into the building, and that the building, when completed, would be clear of mechanics’ liens, the mortgagee arranged for the funds to be placed in escrow with Phoenix Title and Trust Company.

The escrow instructions were executed January 6, 1965. They appear in the record as an exhibit attached to a deposition which was stipulated in evidence. The money in escrow was to be disbursed in stages (known as “draws”) as the work progressed and was accepted as satisfactory. The instructions provided that the title company might “issue checks jointly to the builder, the contractor, the subcontractors, and/or materialmen or others, when” in the title company’s sole discretion, it appeared necessary or advisable to do so.

The defendant Arrow Construction Company was the prime contractor; the subcontractor for the glass work was Edward Schnatzmeyer, d. b. a. Border Glass Company; the materialman who supplied the glass to the subcontractor was Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company. The plaintiff is the Bank of Yuma, hereinafter referred to as the bank.

From as early as 1963 the subcontractor was in debt to the bank, paying off some notes, renewing others, and borrowing more money, so that the balance owed to the bank throughout the events leading up to this lawsuit, fluctuated from $875 at its lowest point to over $24,000 at its highest point. On March 17, 1965 the subcontractor owed the bank slightly over $13,000. On that day the subcontractor secured his notes by assigning to the bank in writing, “all moneys now due * * * or which may hereafter become due * * * ” by virtue of the subcontractor’s contract to do the glass work for the prime contractor, at Crescent Center. The assignment stated that it was made as security for the payment of all indebtedness “now or hereafter owing from assignor to assignee.” The amount expected to be received under that contract was $18,800 but with changes made during construction, the amount was increased to nearly $24,000.

The assignment was presented to the prime contractor, who signed an “Acceptance” in the following words:

“The above and foregoing Assignment is hereby accepted, and the undersigned agrees to pay all moneys due under said contract, to the Bank of Yuma, located at Yuma, Arizona, with the understanding that acceptance of this assignment places no greater burden upon the undersigned than if this assignment had not been accepted, other than to pay such moneys due hereunder in the manner stated.”

The work was eventually completed, and payment was made by the title company in the form of four checks as follows:

1. July 23, 1965 $7,520.00

2. September 9, 1965 3,760.00

3. October 27, 1965 5,640.00

4. May 3, 1966 6,717.76

Each check was made payable to: “Arrow Construction Company, Inc. & Border Glass Company, & Pittsburgh Plate Glass.” Above the endorsements was written:

“By endorsement of this check the undersigned payees acknowledge payment in full, and waive all lien rights for labor or material furnished in erection of improvements on Crescent Central Project —Yuma for construction through *

followed by a specific construction date. Each check was endorsed by all three payees, and was deposited to the account of Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company.

In May of 1967 the bank made demand upon the prime contractor for the amount then owed to the bank by the subcontractor ($10,948.65 principal, plus accrued interest), and on November 8, 1967 the complaint was filed in this case. A trial was had before the court without a jury and judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant. No findings were requested or made.

*584 The principal issue is whether the method of payment was such as to support the defendant contractor’s position that it never received any funds for the use or benefit of the subcontractor and that on the contrary, the subcontractor was paid all sums due him under his subcontract from the construction money escrow by Phoenix Title & Trust Company.

The building was a $750,000 project of which approximately $24,000 represents the labor and material constituting the work set out in the glass subcontract. The vice president of the prime contractor testified that as each stage of the construction was . accepted, a request for payment was made and the title company “made all disbursements not only to the various subcontractors and their suppliers, but to ourselves as a separate check.” The checks to the subcontractor and Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company in the approximate amount of $24,000 also bore the prime contractor’s name as co-payee, thus requiring the endorsement of all three companies. Without the addition of the prime contractor as a co-payee of the $24,000 the title company would not have a lien release from the prime contractor for the full cost of the project— $750,000. Clearly, therefore, the owner needed the prime contractor’s receipt and lien waiver for the full amount.

The prime contractor’s vice president testified that the funds were not delivered to him, but that “The checks were signed by me in the office of the Phoenix Title Company here in Yuma and they took it from there. I didn’t handle the check in any way beyond that.”

In our opinion, it is immaterial whether that vice president intentionally failed to see that the bank received payment under the assignment or whether he merely forgot that the funds represented by the checks, had been assigned to the bank. It was his duty to honor the assignment. The prime contractor could have specially endorsed the checks, payable to the order of the bank so that they could not be cashed without the bank’s signature, or he could have made other arrangements to see that the bank received the money pursuant to the assignment. By endorsing the checks in blank the prime contractor gave up control over the payments, and, in effect, made payment to the subcontractor just as effectively as would be the case if it had received the cash and had asked the title company to deliver it to the subcontractor. The explanation that the prime contractor gives for not being liable to the bank — i. e., that it endorsed the checks in blank and didn’t handle them after that — is the ground on which his liability rests.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
480 P.2d 338, 106 Ariz. 582, 1971 Ariz. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-yuma-v-arrow-construction-co-ariz-1971.