City of Centralia v. D. W. Norton & Co.

140 Ill. App. 46, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 793
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 18, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 140 Ill. App. 46 (City of Centralia v. D. W. Norton & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Centralia v. D. W. Norton & Co., 140 Ill. App. 46, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 793 (Ill. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Higbee

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a bill of interpleader filed in the Circuit Court of Marion county by the city of Centralia against D. W. Norton & Co., a contracting company, and certain other persons, creditors of said Norton & Company, who claimed to have furnished labor and material to said Norton & Company in the construction of an outlet sewer for said city óf Centraba, in the year 1904. There seems to be practically no controversy as to the facts in the case which are substantially as follows:

On October 12, 1904, appellees, D. W. Norton & (-ompany, as the lowest bidders for the work, entered into a contract with appellant for the construction of an outlet sewer system for the city. The contractors entered upon their work and continued in the construction of the sewer system until the 22nd day of February following, when they abandoned the contract, leaving it only partially completed and soon afterwards went in bankruptcy. The city thereupon undertook the work and completed it by day labor without calling for bids and letting it to the lowest bidder, appropriating for this work all the material which had been furnished Norton & Company and remaining unused. The contract price to be paid to Norton & Company for the completed work was $16,649.20 of which amount $10,966.66 was paid to them before the work was abandoned, leaving $5,682.54 still unpaid. In completing the work appellant extended the sum of $2,831.35. Norton & Company had given a bond to appellant in the sum of $8,000 for the performance of its contract with the National Surety Company as surety. Before proceeding with the work of completing the sewer system, appellant settled or compromised with the Surety Company for its liability on the bond covering the contract in this case and also in what is known as the service sewer case, for the sum of $3,000 and of this amount they credited Norton & Company with $1,000 on the contract involved here, known as the outlet sewer contract. After deducting the amount received from the Surety Company from the total amount expended by appellant in completing the work there remained the sum of $1,831.35 which appellant paid out of its general fund. The defendants in the court below were the contractors and a number of firms and individuals who had furnished material or labor or both to the contractors. Twelve of these firms and individuals, having aggregate claims amounting to $4,770.66, are represented as appellees here. These creditors of the contractors served notice of lien on the city, of their respective claims under the mechanics’ lien law prior to the settlement of the city with the Surety Company, but after the city had paid Norton & Company the $10,966.66 above referred to. The contractors were not to be paid by the city in money but in special improvement bonds issued by the city for that purpose and in its bill of interpleader the city offers to deliver said creditors of the contractors an amount of said bonds equal to the balance unpaid on the original contract, less the sum of $1,831.35, taken by the city from the general fund in its treasury to complete the contract, that is the sum of $3,851.19, which was less than the amount claimed by said appellees to be due them by $919.47. Appellees filed their several answers to the bill of inter-pleader alleging among other things that appellant had no right to cancel the bond given by the National Surety Company for a less sum than was necessary to complete the contract; that it had no authority to go ahead and complete the contract, but should have let it to the lowest bidder and either compelled the National Surety Company to complete it or to stand the entire cost of the work of completion; that appellant unlawfully expended said sum of $1,831.35 and should be compelled to bring the whole of said sum of $5,682.54 in bonds into court. A decree was entered by the court in favor of appellees and finding that there was in the hands of the mayor of the city of Centralia improvement bonds of said outlet sewer system, subject to the lien of said appellees, of the value of $5,682.54, and that said city was not entitled to any liens or deductions against the same and it was ordered and decreed that the city by its mayor turn over said bonds to the master in chancery of said court; that said master after obtaining possession of said bonds proceed to advertise and sell the same, or so much thereof as might be necessary to pay the costs of this suit and the claims of appellees.

Appellant here insists that the court erred in entering a decree against it for any amount above that which it offered to bring into court, that is the sum of $3,851.19, claiming that Norton & Co. could only have been entitled to what was left of the contract price after deducting the amount paid to them, and the additional amount necessarily paid for the completion of the contract after they had abandoned it; that appellees had no greater rights than Norton & Co.; that the bond of the National Surety Company was not given for the benefit of subcontractors or lien claimants but solely for the protection and benefit of the city of Centraba, which had a perfect right to deal with it as it saw fit and make such settlements as it thought best.

The bill in this case is called a bill of interpleader and is in the usual form of such bills. It states that the complainant is not colluding with any of said defendants, touching the matters in controversy and has not exhibited the bill at the request of any of them, but merely of its own free will to avoid being molested and harassed touching said matters. It states that the complainant is willing to deliver said bonds of the city to the amount of $3,851.19 to such person or persons as shall be lawfully entitled to recover the same, and offers to bring the same into court if so directed; and asks that the defendants may be required to inter-plead and settle and adjust their said claims among themselves and that complainant may be permitted to bring into court the special assessment bonds of the city to the amount above named, for the benefit of such defendants as shall appear to the court to be entitled thereto.

A bill of interpleader presupposes that the stakeholder or fundholder has in his possession a certain definite amount in money or funds, concerning the ownership of or right to which, there is a controversy among other persons; that he, the fundholder, is impartial as between the parties and desires to dispose of the fund without trouble or expense to himself and that he therefore files his bill offering to bring the fund into court, and asking that the parties who are claiming the same as against each other, be required to litigate their claims at their own expense, and relieve him from further care or trouble in reference to the matter. That however is not the case presented here. In this case there is no conflict or dispute whatever between the subcontractors who are the claimants of the fund, as to the amount due them respectively. The only contention whatever is between appellant on the one side and appellees on the other as to the amount appellant should be required to pay in bonds. When the amount of appellant’s liability shall have been determined, the controversy is disposed of and distribution can be made according to the admitted and uncontroverted claims of the respective appellees. As however no question is raised here by either party as to the right of the court to determine the question arising between appellant and appellees, we are not disposed to question that right here.

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71 N.E. 834 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 Ill. App. 46, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-centralia-v-d-w-norton-co-illappct-1908.