County Court of Brooke County v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.

121 S.E. 422, 95 W. Va. 439, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 20
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 121 S.E. 422 (County Court of Brooke County v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County Court of Brooke County v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 121 S.E. 422, 95 W. Va. 439, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 20 (W. Va. 1924).

Opinion

MilleR, Judge:

Plaintiff’s action was covenant against the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company alone, upon the bond of the Mack Manufacturing Company as principal and the defendant as surety in the penalty of twenty thousand two hundred and forty-nine dollars and thirty-one cents ($20,-249.31), to the payment whereof well and truly to be made they bound themselves, their successors and assigns jóintly and severally firmly bound by those presents.

The bond recited the fact that the Mack Manufacturing Company, principal, had been awarded by plaintiff the contract to furnish brick block for the permanent improvement of two certain roads in said county, known respectively as the River Road, lying between Steubenvillel Bridge and the Hancock County line, and the Wellsburg and Bethany Pike Road, lying between the city of Wellsburg and the town of Bethany, and that plaintiff and said Mack Manufacturing Company had on November 1, 1916, entered into a contract respecting the furnishing of said brick block; and the condition annexed thereto was that if the said Mack Manufacturing Company should well and truly perform in all its parts the contract aforesaid entered into and thereto prefixed, and all the covenants, agreements and stipulations therein contained upon Its part to be performed and fulfilled, and should at all time fully and completely keep, perform and comply with and carry out in accordance with the above men *442 tioned. contract and tlie true intent and meaning thereof, and should save harmless from any and all damages that might accrue to any person, persons or property by reason of the carrying on of said work or any part thereof, or by reason of the negligence of the said Mack Manufacturing Company, or any person or persons under its employ and engaged in said work, then this obligation, should be void, otherwise to remain in full force and effect. And the said bond finally provided that the said defendant “shall not be released from any liability on this bond by any act or thing which would not equally release the said Mack Manufacturing Company.”

The contract prefixed to said bond, after reciting the publication of said county court inviting bids or proposals for furnishing brick paving block according to specifications made a part of the contract for improving said roads, and pursuant thereto the proposal of said Mack Manufacturing-Company to furnish said materials delivered f. o. b. cars at an available railroad siding nearest the location where said brick block were to be used for improving said roads, further stipulated that the said Mack Manufacturing Company would deliver said brick block according to the order of the contractor performing the work of improving said roads, and without unnecessary delay in the shipment thereof.

And on the part of the plaintiff it was stipulated that it would pay the said Mack Manufacturing Company the unit price bid, and thereinafter referred to in the follbwing manner: “Said engineer shall, between the first and tenth days of each month during the progress of the work, make up an estimate of the amount of brick block which has been delivered to the paving contractor who is performing the work of improving said roads, during the preceding month, and compute the value thereof, certifying the same to the county ■ court, who will, on or before thej 20th day of each month, pay to the party of the second part ninety per cent of the amount of such estimate, retaining ten per cent thereof until the work under this contract shall have been fully completed and approved by the said engineer and accepted by said county court.”

*443 The unit prices named, in the said proposal, referred to and made a part of the contract, was as follows:

“1. 74446 Sq. Td. No. 1 Block (42 to Sq. Yd.) per Sq. Yd. 66.8e.

“2. 74446 Sq. Yd. No. 2 Block (42 to Sq. Yd.) per Sq. Yd. 54.4c.”

One of the pertinent recitals in said contract is that it .was entered into pursuant to an order of the connty court duly entered of record,; the date of the order not being recited. The contract bears date November 1, 1916; the bond sued on purports to have been signed and sealed November 28, 1916. It is proven that the only order of the county court authorizing the execution of said contract was entered November 2, 1916; but it appears from the record that the bond was not actually executed on behalf of the county court until some time after December 5, 1916, by Geo. C. Wells, President, who on that day became president of the county court. These dates are somewhat pertinent to points made by counsel in reference thereto.

The case seems to have been tried before the court and jury on issues joined on special pleas numbers 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 filed by defendant, the court having on objection of plaintiff rejected special pleas numbers 1, 2, 8 and 9 tendered by the defendant to the declaration as amended. The result of the trial was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for the sum of $20,249.31, the exact amount of the penalty of the bond sued on.

In order of their precedence the first of the several points of error presented and relied on relates to the rejection of defendant’s special pleas numbers 1 and 2. In the first of these pleas, after setting; out in full the bond sued on, of which oyer was granted, it is alleged (a) that “there was not nor is there any negative or disjunctive covenant or agreement contained or specified in the said contract in the said condition of the said writing obligatory mentioned on the part or behalf of the said Mack Manufacturing Company to be omitted, done, observed, performed, fulfilled or kept, and that the said Mack Manufacturing Company hath well and truly performed, fulfilled and kept the said last mentioned contract, and all things therein contained, on its part and be *444 half to be observed, performed, fulfilled and kept, according to tbe true intent and meaning thereof;’3 (b) “that tbe said plaintiff batb not at any time since tbe making of tbe said writing obligatory, and tbe condition thereto annexed, hitherto, been in any wise damnified by reason or by means of anything in tbe said writing obligatory contained:” all of which, the plea continues, “the said defendant isi ready to verify. ’ ’

Plea number 2, directed specially to the second and third counts of the declaration, but omitting recital in full of the covenants and conditions of the bond sued on, avers, as does plea number 1; first, “that there was not nor is there any negative or disjunctive covenant or agreement contained or specified in the said contract in the said condition of the said writing obligatory mentioned on the part of the said Mack Manufacturing Company, to be omitted, done, observed, performed, fulfilled or kept, and that the said Mack Manufacturing Company hath well and truly performed, fulfilled and kept the last said mentioned contract, and all things therein contained, on its part and behalf to be observed, performed, fulfilled and kept, according to the true intent and meaning thereof;” second, as did also plea number 1, “that the said plaintiff hath not at any time since the making of the said writing obligatory, and the condition thereto annexed, hitherto, been in any wise damnified by reason or by means of anything in the said condition of the said writing obligatory contained. ’ ’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 S.E. 422, 95 W. Va. 439, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-court-of-brooke-county-v-united-states-fidelity-guaranty-co-wva-1924.