Florida First National Bank v. Fryd Const. Corp.
This text of 245 So. 2d 883 (Florida First National Bank v. Fryd Const. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
FLORIDA FIRST NATIONAL BANK AT KEY WEST, Appellant,
v.
FRYD CONSTRUCTION CORPORATION, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
*884 H. James Catlin, Jr., Paige & Catlin, Miami, for appellant.
Cristol, Rose & Aldrich, Miami, for appellee.
Before PEARSON, C.J., and BARKDULL and SWANN, JJ.
PEARSON, Chief Judge.
The appellant, Florida First National Bank at Key West, was the plaintiff in the trial court. It brought an action upon a contract which provided for the payment of money. The right to collect the money due upon the contract was assigned to the Bank as security for a loan upon which the assignor defaulted. The appellee, Fryd Construction Corporation, had contracted to pay the money to a subcontractor, Key West Plastering Co., as consideration for a subcontract. The Bank appeals a summary final judgment for the appellee, Construction Corporation, sustaining the appellee's defense of payment even though some of the money due under the contract was not paid to the Bank.
The summary judgment was entered upon agreed facts as follows:
1. The appellee was engaged as the prime contractor for the construction of the Florida Keys Junior College.
2. On August 2, 1967, the contractor and the subcontractor entered into a subcontract for the plastering on the job.
3. On November 2, 1967, the subcontractor executed and delivered to the Bank a promissory note for $5,000 and a security agreement. The security agreement assigned to the Bank the right to collect all future payments as they came due.
4. The Bank notified the contractor that the subcontractor had assigned to it the right to receive payments under the contract.
5. The contractor proceeded to make payments to the Bank upon the contract by checks payable to the Bank and the subcontractor on the following dates:
December 6, 1967 $ 2,000.00
December 14, 1967 5,000.00
February 1, 1968 3,600.00
February 22, 1968 2,000.00
__________
$12,600.00
6. The contractor made two payments by checks made payable to materialmen and the subcontractor. These payments were for materials used in the performance of the subcontract.
November 17, 1967 $2,546.42
December 4, 1967 209.87
__________
$2,756.29
7. The contractor also made four payments directly to the subcontractor.
November 17, 1967 $ 477.56
January 24, 1968 400.00
February 28, 1968 1000.00
March 14, 1968 766.15
_________
$2,643.71
*885 8. The Bank did not deduct all of the money due on the loan from the four payments made to the Bank. The expiration date for the note to the Bank was January 31, 1968. There is due to the Bank upon the secured loan the amount of $3,500.00.
The trial judge has entered full and lucid rulings upon each separate defense presented by the appellee. This was done in an order granting summary judgment and was followed by a final summary judgment which carried into effect the rulings made.
This procedure greatly facilitated our work on this appeal and cross appeal and will make possible an expeditious disposition of the cause upon remand.
The position of the appellant Bank on this appeal is that it was the obligation of the contractor to disburse to the Bank all of the payments after notification of the assignment. It is thereupon argued that the sum of $5,400.00 (the total of the amounts paid by the contractor to the materialmen and the subcontractor) was improperly paid. The Bank claims that these improper payments constitute a fund from which the Bank is entitled to collect its damages, i.e., $3,500.00 still due from the subcontractor, together with costs and attorney's fees.
The trial judge entered the summary final judgment for the appellee, contractor, upon the following ground:
* * * * * *
"2. Summary Judgment is granted in favor of defendant, Fryd Construction Corporation, and against plaintiff, Florida First National Bank at Key West on defendant's Affirmative Defense Number Two.[1] It is undisputed that pursuant to the notice of assignment received by the defendant, jointly paid $12,600.00 to plaintiff bank and the plasterer subcontractor. It is undisputed that the bank had an absolute right to apply these funds to the $5,000.00 debt due from the plasterer to plaintiff bank, and therefore the defense of payment has been established. The Court finds that plaintiff bank had an obligation to apply these funds to said indebtedness."
This holding of the trial judge amounts to a statement of a rule of law that the assignee of a contract who holds the assignment as security for a debt must apply the first funds received under the assigned contract to the repayment of the signed contract to the repayment of the debt or the rights under the assignment will be discharged. The appellant presents this issue by its second point on appeal.
On this appeal each party has urged the court to decide this and other issues in the case "for the good of the industry." But on this pivotal point on appeal neither party has cited any authority. In other words the attorneys ask that we "write some law" for them. We will decide this point upon our own research because it is necessary to a disposition of the appeal.
But we point out that such cases make for weak authority. The Bank urges that it ought not be required to apply the first money received to its debt because it is secured in its position by the knowledge that as the job progresses the contractor is obligated to make future payments through the Bank, thus the Bank can aid the debtor in financing the job. This position seems to us to make good sense. Cf. Florida Builders, Inc. v. Florida Nat. Bank & Trust Co., Fla.App. 1964, 161 So.2d 248. The obvious purpose of the assignment of the payments under the contract was to secure bank financing of the job. The assignment was not for a specific amount then due but rather it was an assignment for all future payments. Having secured the $5,000.00 from the Bank upon the note, the contractor still had continuing obligations *886 to his workmen and materialmen. A contrary holding would require that the subcontractor borrow all the money necessary to complete the contract rather than enough to get started. Such a construction of the law seems unnecessarily restrictive unless it is required by some principal of the law. Appellee has cited no principle that requires reduction of the debt by the Bank from the first proceeds of the security.
Section 679.9-502, Fla. Stat., F.S.A., "Uniform Commercial Code Secured Transactions Collection rights of secured party" states simply that "A secured party * * * who undertakes to collect from the account debtors or obligors must proceed in a commercially reasonable manner * * *." In the absence of a holding that the Bank did not proceed in a commercially reasonable manner, we find that the trial judge erred in holding that the Bank had an obligation to deduct the secured debt from the first payments under the assignment. We must therefore reverse the summary final judgment.
The appellee in its argument under this point urges that the notice of assignment sent by the Bank to the contractor was insufficient in form and substance.
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245 So. 2d 883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florida-first-national-bank-v-fryd-const-corp-fladistctapp-1971.