Erath & Flynn v. R. K. Allen & Son

55 Mo. App. 107, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 260
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 20, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 55 Mo. App. 107 (Erath & Flynn v. R. K. Allen & Son) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Erath & Flynn v. R. K. Allen & Son, 55 Mo. App. 107, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 260 (Mo. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.

This is an action to recover a penalty in a bond. It seems from the record before us that R. K. Allen & Son entered into a written contract with the board of county commissioners of the county of Jefferson, in the state of Nebraska, to do all the work and furnish all the material for the proper construction and completion of a court house and jail building for said county, in accordance with the plans, elevation, sections and detail drawings, and in the manner specified in'the specifications, for which the commissioners were to pay Allen & Son $54,800, etc.

The statute of the state of Nebraska, 1891, section 2172, provides: “It shall be the duty of the board of public lands and buildings, boards of county commissioners, the contracting board of officers of all cities and villages and all public boards now or hereafter in [110]*110power by law, to enter into a contract for the erecting and finishing, or the repairing of any public building, bridge or other public structure to which the general provisions of the mechanics’ lien laws do not apply, and where mechanics and laborers have no lien to secure the payment of their wages, to take from the person or corporation, to whom the contract is awarded, a bond with at least two good and sufficient sureties, conditioned for the payment of all laborers and mechanics for labor that shall be performed in the erecting, furnishing or repairing of the buildings or in performing the contract; said bond shall be to the board awarding the contract; and no contract shall be entered into by such board until the bond herein provided for has been filed with, and, approved by, said board. The said bond shall be safely kept by the board making the contract, and may be sued on by any person entitled to the benefit of this act. The action shall be in the name of the party claiming the benefit of the act.”

Accordingly, Allen & Son entered into a bond with the other defendants, Wyeth and Uhlman, as sureties thereon in the sum of $15,000, conditioned as required by the above recited statute.

Afterwards the plaintiffs entered into a written contract under Allen & Son, by which the former agreed to do all the work and furnish all the material for the proper construction and completion of the cut stone and rubble work in said building, in accordance with the plans, elevations, sections and detail drawings of the architect thereof, for $20,100, ninety per cent, of the material furnished and labor performed and permanently put in place to be paid for'from time to time as the work progressed on the estimates of the architect, etc.

It appears further that the plaintiffs proceeded to furnish the materials and do the work as they had con[111]*111tracted to do, and received of Allen & Son therefor from time to time payments which in the aggregate amounted to the contract price, less the sum of $1,143, which the plaintiffs claim remained unpaid at the time the said buildings were paid for and accepted by the commissioners. There is some claim made by the defendants that the building was left by plaintiffs in an unfinished condition and that the defendants, Allen & Son, were compelled to finish the same at their own expense. However this may be, the amount of such expense was small and, in the view we shall take of the of the case, is unimportant. The suit is brought on the bond given to the commissioners to recover the amount which Allen & Son were behind with plaintiffs on their subcontract.

In this connection it may be proper to state that during the time the plaintiffs were performing their part of said contract with Allen & Son, they employed themselves in superintending the getting out of the stone and the placing of the same in the buildings, taking sometimes the part of a hand in both getting out and preparing the material and doing the work on the building. The plaintiffs, it appears, paid the laborers and mechanics the wages due on account of the work done by them on the buildings.

The court, against the objections of the defendants, gave for plaintiff an instruction telling the jury that by the terms of the contract read in evidence between Allen & Son and the commissioners in charge of the construction of. the court house at Fairbury, Nebraska, it was the duty of said Allen & Son to pay the laborers and mechanics employed on said building for labor performed and services rendered in the construction thereof; that by the terms of the bond read in evidence, the defendants, Uhlman and Wyeth, upon default of Allen & Son to pay laborers and mechanics engaged in [112]*112constructing said building, became, and are, liable for all sums due laborers and mechanics engaged in the construction of said building, not exceeding the amount of the balance claimed by plaintiffs in the evidence as the agreed balance due to them; and if you find from the evidence that plaintiffs, as mechanics under their agreement with Allen & Son, necessarily employed laborers to work on the stone work of said building; that defendants, Allen & Son, have been paid in full for the construction of said building; that they have failed to pay the laborers and mechanics employed by plaintiffs in full for the work done by them and services rendered in constructing said building; that plaintiffs, as such mechanics, were compelled to, and did, advance money and pay said laborers the balance due on account of their labor and services rendered, then the jury will find for plaintiffs and against all the defendants for such sum as you find, from the evidence, remains due plaintiffs on account of such labor and services rendered not exceeding the sum of $1,143.58, the amount claimed by plaintiffs, together with six per cent, interest from the date the same was demanded from defendants, Allen & Son.

The court refused to instruct the jury that, under the pleadings and evidence, the jury should find for defendants, Uhlman and "Wyeth. The' verdict and judgment were against all of the defendants, who have brought the case here by appeal.

Several questions have been discussed in the briefs of counsel in this case, but we shall only consider that of them which we think is decisive of the case, namely, the liability of Wyeth and Uhlman, the sureties on the bond of Allen & Son to the commissioners.

The plain meaning of the statute of Nebraska, already quoted, is that the commissions shall, in cases where mechanics and laborers have no lien to secure the [113]*113payment of their toages, take from the person to whom the contract is awarded a bond with at least two good and sufficient sureties, conditioned for the payment of the wages of all laborers and mechanics for labor performed in erecting the building or performing the contract. The bond in question is not broader or more comprehensive in its scope than the statute provided it should be. The liability of the sureties depends upon the construction of the language of the statute authorizing the bond. The bond, it is seen, is one of indemnity provided by the statute for the benefit of laborers and mechanics. If the plaintiffs are persons falling within either or both of these statutory designations, then they are entitled to the benefit of the indemnity.

The obligations of sureties, it has long ago been decided in this state, are to be strictly construed, and their liabilities are not to be extended by implications. Blair v. Ins. Co., 10 Mo. 566; Harrisonville v. Porter, 76 Mo. 358.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 Mo. App. 107, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erath-flynn-v-r-k-allen-son-moctapp-1893.