Davis Co., Inc. v. Guaranty Bank

138 So. 802, 162 Miss. 829, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 112
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1932
DocketNo. 28794.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 138 So. 802 (Davis Co., Inc. v. Guaranty Bank) 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
Davis Co., Inc. v. Guaranty Bank, 138 So. 802, 162 Miss. 829, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 112 (Mich. 1932).

Opinions

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This cause was originally submitted to and decided by Division A of the court, but upon suggestion of error the opinion then delivered was withdrawn, the judgment entered was set aside, and the cause was remanded to the docket for hearing before the court in banc. Upon further consideration of the cause by the court in banc the following was adopted as the opinion of the court:

The Davis Company, Inc., entered into a contract with Hinds county, Mississippi, whereby it obligated itself to furnish the material and labor, ’and to perform all the work necessary to repair a certain bridge across Pearl river, for the sum of two thousand seven hundred fifty dollars, to be paid upon completion of the work in *837 accordance with plans and specifications made a part of the contract. It thereupon entered into bond, with the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company as surety, in the sum of three thousand one hundred fifty dollars, to guarantee the faithful performance of the contract, and the prompt payment of all persons supplying' labor and material therefor; this bond expressly providing that in case of default the surety should be subrogated to the rights of the principal in all deferred payments or retained percentages due the principal at the time of such default. The contract contained no provision for partial or progress payments, but provided for the payment of the entire contract price upon the satisfactory completion of the work.

Shortly after the execution of this contract with the county, the Davis Company, Inc., entered into a contract with M. B. Dabney, whereby it sublet the work which it had contracted for to the said Dabney, for ninety per cent of the amount to be received by it under its contract with the county; and Dabney, on his part, contracted and agreed to furnish all necessary labor and material-, and to do the work according to the plans and specifications made a part of the contract between the Davis Company, Inc., and the county. To guarantee the faithful performance of his contract with the Davis Company, Inc., Dabney entered into bond with G. M. Welch and J. B. Graves as sureties, in the penalty of three thousand one hundred fifty dollars, conditioned that he would faithfully perform all the terms and conditions of his contract with the Davis Company, Inc., and would promptly make payments to all persons furnishing labor and material under the contract, and would hold the Davis Company, Inc., harmless under its contract.

Upon the execution of the contract between Dabney and the Davis Company, Inc., Dabney executed an assignment to the D’Lo Guaranty Bank, whereby he undertook to assign and set over to the said bank the proceeds *838 of the contract between him and the Davis Company, Inc., and a copy of this assignment was delivered to the Davis Company, Inc., and it thereupon wrote the bank as follows: “I hereby acknowledge the order of M. B. Dabney to pay you all estimates, as agreed. The Davis Company, Inc., by T. it. Davis, Secretary.” .

Thereupon Dabney entered upon the performance of the contract, and having failed to make satisfactory progress, at the direction of the county engineer, the Davis company, Inc., placed an assistant on the work, and thereby incurred an additional expense of seventy-five dollars for the salary of this assistant. Dabney performed certain extra work to the value of twenty-five dollars, and the contract was finally completed, Dabney thereby earning two thousand two hundred seventy-five dollars and ten cents, and the county paid to the Davis Company, Inc., two thousand seven hundred seventy-five dollars, the amount of the original contract, pins the twenty-five dollars extra above mentioned.

In the meantime the Davis Company, Inc., and its surety, had received notice that Dabney had failed to pay certain persons who had furnished labor and material in and about the construction of the bridge, and the Davis Company, Inc., paid claims amounting to five hundred five dollars and forty-eight cents, and took assignments of these claims. Other small claims remained unpaid, and théreupon the D’Lo Guaranty Bank, under and by virtue of the assignment above referred to, demanded payment to it of the' entire proceeds of the Dabney subcontract. The Davis Company, Inc., offered to pay to the bank the net proceeds of the said contract after deducting disbursements made to materialmen, and the seventy-five dollars paid as salary to an assistant of Dabney, if the bank would indemnify it against any outstanding claims of laborers and materialmen. This the bank declined to do, and it thereupon filed suit in the chancery court of Simpson county against the Davis *839 Company, Inc., and the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, its shrety, M. B. Dabney and his sureties, Welch and Graves, and'certain laborers and materialmen, who were asserting claims against Dabney.

The bill of complaint set forth the above-stated facts in detail, including the various contracts, bonds, writings, the assignment of the Dabney contract to the bank, and the acknowledgment of notice thereof by the Davis Company, Inc. It was averred that the complainant bank had advanced to the Dabney the sum of two thousand three hundred forty-one dollars and ninety cents, and that it was entitled to the entire proceeds of the Dabney contract, in preference to all of the defendants, including laborers and materialmen, and prayed that the rights of all the parties to the controversy be adjudicated.

The Davis Company, Inc., and the United States Fidelity &■ Guaranty Company filed an answer and cross-bill, admitting the execution of the contract between the Davis Company, Inc., and the county, and the execution of the bond, and also admitting that the Davis Company, Inc., had sublet the contract to Dabney, and required of him the execution of a bond for the faithful performance of the contract, and averring" that if the bank claimed under its assignment of the contract, it assumed the obligations of Dabney in the contract, which included the payment of laborers and materialmen. They admitted that certain parties were asserting claims for labor and material, and averred the payment by the Davis Company, Inc., of certain specified claims and the assignment thereof to it. They set up all the contracts, bonds, writings, and the assignment; performance of the contract by Dabney; the employment of an assistant for Dabney at a cost of seventy-five dollars; that the contract between the Davis Company, Inc., and Hinds county, made no provision for progress payments, and that the amount of the contract price became due and payable onlv when the bridge was completed and accepted; that *840 no progress payments were made, and that the full amount of the contract price, plus extras, was allowed and paid after the bridge was completed. It was further averred that the amount of the payments accruing to Dabney under his contract with the Davis Company, Inc., stands in equity primarily charged with the payment of laborers and materialmen, and that the equities of the laborers and materialmen were superior to those of the bank, and claimed a superior equity in the funds under the theory of subrogation.

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Bluebook (online)
138 So. 802, 162 Miss. 829, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-co-inc-v-guaranty-bank-miss-1932.