Canton Exchange Bank v. Yazoo County

109 So. 1, 144 Miss. 579, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 337
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1926
DocketNo. 25395.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 109 So. 1 (Canton Exchange Bank v. Yazoo County) 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
Canton Exchange Bank v. Yazoo County, 109 So. 1, 144 Miss. 579, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 337 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from the chancery court of Yazoo county, wherein the board of supervisors of said county filed its bill of interpleader wherein it is alleged that on account of its contract with J. B. Parker for the construction of the Benton and Moore ferry road there was due and owing on such contract from said county the sum of seven thousand seven hundred eighty-five dollars and eighteen cents, and the laborers, materialmen, and their assignees, on the one hand, and the Canton Exchange Bank, another defendant, were each claiming said fund.

It further set up that the guaranty company was surety on the bond executed with the contract by Parker, and that the surety company claimed that in the application for the- bond Parker assigned and set over to the said surety company all the money due him or to become due him under said contract, and, further, that the surety company claimed that laborers and materialmen were *595 undertaking to hold it liable for labor and material and were claiming that said balance due under the contract should be turned over to it by reason of such assignment. There was set forth a list of claims for material and labor furnished on account of said contract to the amount of more than seven thousand dollars. Other claims were set up in the bill which it is unnecessary to detail here.

The county further stated that it had no personal interest in the subject-matter of the controversy and was indifferent to the contention between the claimants, and paid the seven thousand seven hundred eighty-five dollars and eighteen cents balance due under said contract, into court, prayed process, prayed that the respective claims be adjudicated and that the rights of the several claimants be adjudicated by the court.

It appears that after the filing of the bill and other steps had been taken therein the case was removed to the Jackson division of the United States district court for the Southern district of Mississippi, and was by that court, on June 3, 1924, .remanded to the chancery court of Yazoo county.

Briefly stated, the Canton Exchange Bank in its answer and cross-bill admitted that the several laborers and materialmen were claiming the money, but set up that it Avas entitled to the funds by Adrtue of an assignment to it made by J. R. Parker, the contractor; that said assignment of the amount due under the contract was made for advances' to said Parker Avith which to construct the road; and that at the March meeting, 1922, notice of said assignment was served on the board of supervisors, accepted by them, spread upon their minutes, and recorded.

The assignment in form was an assignment of all the retainage on that date in the hands of Yazoo county or that “hereafter may accrue to me to be held by the board of supervisors of Yazoo county on my contract for roads, or part of the road from Moore’s ferry towards Yazoo City of which I am contractor.” And the *596 assignment further directed the hoard of supervisors to pay all such funds to the assignee of the bank, and was dated February 18, 1922.

The bank claimed that there was due on account of said assignment of said retainage fund to the bank by Parker the sum of five thousand three hundred thirty-five dollars and sixty-nine cents, including attorney’s fees, it being alleged that the notes for advances made to Parker by virtue of the assignment provided for ten per cent, attorney’s fees, and that the notes had been placed with an attorney for collection. Copies of the notes were attached. The bank further alleged that it relied upon the law as announced by the court allowing contractors to assign the money to be earned under such contract, on the acceptance by the board of supervisors, in making these loans.

The respondent further denied that Parker made an assignment to the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, denied that under the bond and contract of Parker the guaranty company as surety had any rights either by assignment or otherwise as against it which could be lawfully maintained as to the fund in controversy, but alleged that, in so far as the assignment in the application of Parker to the guaranty company is concerned, there was no notice to it of such assignment, and that same was not served on the board, or notice given the board, until the work of constructing the road was practically completed, and that the guaranty company had no claim on the fund which was superior to the claim of said bank, and that, as a matter of law and of equity, the bank would be entitled to preference as to said fund; and the cross-bill sought to enforce the assignment hitherto referred to, and prayed that a decree be entered awarding it priority of payment out of the retainage funds. The contract was made an exhibit to the answer and cross-bill, together with the copy of the assignment and copy of the notes.

*597 Parker, the contractor, filed a separate answer admitting substantially the facts set up in the answer and cross-bill, and prayed that the bank be awarded payment of its claim and that he was entitled to some additional sum. He made a copy of the bank’s assignment an exhibit to his answer.

The United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company filed its answer admitting the contract, admitted that Parker performed and completed the work under such contract, admitted that payments were made on monthly estimates to Parker, admitted that laborers and materialmen were claiming an interest in the fund, admitted that the Canton Exchange Bank was claiming the fund by virtue of the assignment heretofore mentioned, but denied that the bank had any assignment valid or binding in so far as it sought priority over the right and claim of the surety company, set up that the bond was executed by virtue of chapter 217 of the Laws of Mississippi of 1918, and was conditioned for the performance of said contract and payment of all persons furnishing said Parker with material or labor in the course of the performance of such work, as provided by said statute. A copy of the complete bond and complete contract was filed as exhibit to its answer.

The guaranty company further averred that the contract contemplated and required the retention of fifteen per cent, of the monthly estimates; that the said fifteen per cent., to which we shall refer hereafter as “retain-age,” was for its security and protection against default under said contract with reference to any of its principal duties and obligations thereunder.

The guaranty company averred that the amount paid in by the county with its bill of interpleader alleged to be due to Parker was a part of said final estimate and retainage, and alleged that there was some five thousand three hundred dollars due by the county on the estimate of engineers to Parker, that it was the duty of the county to retain fifteen per cent, of the amount due Parker, that *598

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Bluebook (online)
109 So. 1, 144 Miss. 579, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/canton-exchange-bank-v-yazoo-county-miss-1926.