Eureka Sandstone Co. v. Long

39 P. 446, 11 Wash. 161, 1895 Wash. LEXIS 273
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1895
DocketNo. 1491
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 39 P. 446 (Eureka Sandstone Co. v. Long) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eureka Sandstone Co. v. Long, 39 P. 446, 11 Wash. 161, 1895 Wash. LEXIS 273 (Wash. 1895).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dunbar, J.

Respondent Long built a court house for Pierce county; which building was accepted June 21, 1893. The county took from Long and his co-defendants a bond under § 2415 of the General Statutes. The bond was not signed by Long, hut was signed by all the other defendants, and was delivered to the county by Long and by the county accepted. Appellant, the Eureka Sandstone Company, furnished Long something over $16,000 worth of material, which was used in the construction of this courthouse, and only a part of which has been paid for, and brought this action against Long and his sureties to recover the balance due. Defendants demurred, and the demurrers were sustained. Plaintiff stood upon its complaint, and judgment for defendants was entered on the demurrers. This appeal is taken from the orders sustaining the demurrers, and from the judgment entered.

[163]*163The main fact upon which the demurrers were based and upon which the court decided the case below, and which is argued here by both respondents and appellant, is that the name of the defendant John T. Long, the contractor, was not signed to the bond. From this fact it was contended that the complaint did not state a cause of action, and that there was a misjoinder of causes and a defect of parties defendant.

After a somewhat extended investigation of the authorities governing the principles involved in this case, we are of the opinion that the court committed error in sustaining the demurrers to this complaint. After stating all the facts, the complaint alleges that said bond was delivered to the county commisioners of said county with the knowledge and consent of the sureties. It also alleges that Long procured and caused it to be executed, and at the time of the execution of the bond provided for by the statute, it was delivered by the defendants herein to said board of county commissioners as part and parcel of said contract. It is also alleged in the complaint that the bond was duly filed by the board of county commissioners on the 19th day of September, 1890, and that on the 7th day of January, 1892, before the sale and delivery of the stone mentioned in the complaint, for the payment of which this action is brought, the defendants and each of them, together with the county commissioners of Pierce county, for the purpose of modifying and changing the terms and conditions of the original contract and said bond, entered into and delivered to the said county commissioners a certain other contract in writing, a copy of which is attached to and made a part of the complaint; and that thereafter, with the knowledge and consent of the commissioners and these sureties, Long proceeded to complete and carry out his contract [164]*164with the said county as modified by this second contract.

There is a direct conflict of authority on this question, as indeed there is on almost every question concerning the liability of sureties on a bond. The older cases, it seems, have held closely to the rule that bonds are to be construed strictly in favor of the sureties; while this rule has been modified by later decisions. This modification, it seems to us, is in accordance with common sense and the spirit of the age. A bond is nothing more nor less than a contract, and the sureties to a bond are simply parties to a contract; and we know of no reason why the same rules of construction should not be applied to a bond as to any other contract. It is true that the sureties may not be beneficiaries in any respect, and that it may be purely a matter of accommodation with them; but the bond was made to effect a certain purpose; that purpose was to secure the obligees from loss in case of its violation; and there is no reason why the law should make it more difficult for the obligee to obtain redress in case of a violation of a bond than a party to any other contract.

The true inquiry should be, what was the meaning and intent of the contract; and when that meaning and intent can be ascertained, the contract ought to be enforced. While, as insisted by respondents, courts should not presume to make contracts for individuals, neither should they allow them to escape responsibilities which they have voluntarily assumed, by too strained a construction of technical law.

The allegation in this complaint is a broad one, viz., that this bond was delivered with the knowledge and consent of the sureties. If this be true, and for the purposes of this case it must be taken to be true, [165]*165then the sureties waived any formal or other objection that there might be to this bond; for, under the plain terms of the allegation, they must have had knowledge of the bond as it was delivered,»and consented to its delivery in that condition.

It seems to us that the principle embodied in this case was decided by this court in the case of Ihrig v. Scott, 5 Wash. 584 (32 Pac. 466), where it was held that where a bond, executed by a contractor for the erection of a school house, by mistake named the board of school directors instead of the State of Washington as obligee, such defect was not fatal, if from the terms of the bond it appeared that its object was to secure laborers and material inen as provided for by the law making provision for such bond. In that case this court said:

“The simple fact, then, of the want of the proper obligee in this bond is not fatal to it, if from its terms the object for which it is executed appears. Even a superficial examination will show such to be the fact. No one can read the bond in the light of the statute above referred to without at once coming to the conclusion that in executing it by the principal and sureties and the acceptance thereof by the proper officers of the school district, there was an intention on the part of all to provide the security required by said statute, in the interests of such as might thereafter by virtue thereof become entitled to protection. This would be the rule without the aid of any curative statute. For while it is true that under the old rules existing at common law much technical accuracy was required in regard to instruments of this nature, yet even in the absence of any statute, such rule has been by the decisions of the courts very much modified, and at this time courts look more to the substance than to the form in determining as to whether or not such instruments shall have force.”

[166]*166And the court then proceeds to cite our statute (Code Proc., §800) which provides that —

“No bond required bylaw, and intended as such bond, shall be void *for want of form or substance, recital, or condition; nor shall the principal or surety on such account be discharged, but all the parties thereto shall be held and bound to the full extent contemplated by the law requiring the same, to the amount specified in such bond.”

Certainly the reasoning of the court in this case is applicable to the one at bar. In the case discussed there was no obligee mentioned, for the naming of Ihe board of school directors, who could not under the law be obligees to the bond, amounted to no mention at all. In the case at bar there is no signing by one of the obligors.

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Bluebook (online)
39 P. 446, 11 Wash. 161, 1895 Wash. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eureka-sandstone-co-v-long-wash-1895.