General Insurance Co. of America v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co.
This text of 38 Cal. App. 3d 760 (General Insurance Co. of America v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Opinion
Plaintiff, General Insurance Company of America, surety of the prime contractor involved, appeals from a judgment in favor of defendant, St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company, surety for a subcontractor, which defaulted in its subcontract work under the prime contract. The action is essentially one for damages plaintiff suffered in excess costs and liquidated damages occasioned by the default.
The judgment which was granted on defendant’s motion therefor, pur *762 suant to Code of Civil Procedure section 631.8, apparently rests on two grounds: (1) plaintiff’s failure to comply substantially or .otherwise with the Contractors License Law (Bus. & Prof. Code, §§ 7000-7161); 1 (2) the default of the prime contractor discharged the subcontractor’s obligations to it under the subcontract.
We do not reach the second ground of the trial court’s decision as we affirm the judgment on the first ground alone.
Facts
On February 19, 1963, Diverco Constructors, a limited partnership in which the sole general partner was Diverco Constructors, Inc., 2 entered into a written contract with Shoreham Towers, a general partnership, for the construction in Los Angeles of a high-rise apartment building bearing that name. On the same day plaintiff executed its contract performance bond with the limited partnership as principal and Shoreham Towers and its bank as obligees. About three weeks later the corporation entered into a written subcontract with V. C. Walters Electric, Inc. to perform the electrical work on the Shoreham Towers project called for by the just-mentioned prime contract. About a week thereafter defendant executed a subcontract performance bond with this subcontractor as principal and the corporation as obligee.
*763 On June 14, 1963, plaintiff learned that its principal, the limited partnership, was in financial difficulties. A week later the partnership informed plaintiff, as its surety on several contracts, including the Shoreham Towers’ contract, that it would not be able to complete those contracts without financial assistance from or arranged by plaintiff. A few days thereafter, plaintiff, as surety, notified Shoreham Towers, the owner, in writing, that the owner should make no further payments to the limited partnership without plaintiff’s prior written consent and approval. Plaintiff also assured the owner at this time that it was going to see that the project was completed.
Plaintiff then apparently took a written assignment of all monies due and to be due the limited partnership from the project and arranged that the owner thereafter make all payments for project work to plaintiff. Plaintiff thereafter supplied to the corporation the funds needed to pay all of its past due bills arising from its continued work on the project and thereafter supplied funds as needed to meet all bills arising from the project.
On October 16, 1963, after some two months of negotiation, plaintiff entered into a written agreement with the limited partnership and others under which the limited partnership designated one Lewis E. Douglas (or such other person as plaintiff might name) as the manager of the Shore-ham Towers project and irrevocably abandoned to Douglas the right to act with respect to the project “except with the express written prior permission of . . . [plaintiff].” 3 Pursuant to this agreement Douglas, who
*764 had been picked for the position by plaintiff, at once took over the management of the project. Plaintiff continued to receive all of the owner’s payments due on the project and to supply all of the funds needed to pay the bills of the corporation arising from the project through a special bank account set up for that purpose and controlled exclusively by plaintiff. Following the entry of the agreement, the day-to-day operations of the construction of Shoreham Towers was under Douglas’ control alone. He reported only to plaintiff and could have been discharged by plaintiff at any time.
On December 17, 1963, the aforementioned V. C. Walters Electric, Inc. (then known as Mt. Vernon Electric, Inc.) notified the corporation and Douglas that it could no longer continue its work under its subcontract. After notification to defendant of this default, the corporation, through Douglas, entered into a new subcontract with S & K Electric Co. to complete Mt. Vernon’s work. S & K Electric Co. did this at an increased cost.
The Shoreham Towers project was completed sometime after June 1964. Throughout the year or so of plaintiff’s active association with the project, plaintiff was never licensed under the Contractors License Law.
Discussion
In an unpublished decision filed on December 18, 1969 (2d Civ. No. 33670), this court reversed a summary judgment for defendant in this case on the ground that certain triable issues of fact then existed. We there held though that “a surety company acting in the capacity of a building contractor is subject to the provisions of the Contractors License *765 Law” in view of the stringent public policy involved 4 and because there is no express exemption of surety companies in the law.
Plaintiff argues that since its occupation of surety insurer statutorily includes the guaranteeing of the performance of contracts (Ins. Code, § 105, subd. (1)) and since this was what it was doing in this case, it should not be held subject to the Contractors License Law by reason of its conduct here. We concede that plaintiff acted in this case within the scope of its statutory function as a surety. But it was the manner in which it chose to discharge this function that brought it, in our view, within the Contractors License Law. (Cf. Caron v. Andrew, 133 Cal.App.2d 402, 410-412 [284 P.2d 544].)
The trial court found “that at all times after June 15, 1963, Plaintiff . . . acted as a general building contractor with respect to the work of construction known as Shoreham Towers.” This finding is binding upon us if supported by substantial evidence. We hold on the basis of the facts already set forth by us that it is—subject only to a modification in time that does not affect its validity otherwise.
We deem it unnecessary to decide whether plaintiff acted as a contractor within the meaning of section 7026 of the law during the period between June 21, 1963, and October 16, 1963. This was the period during which plaintiff confined its activities to controlling the flow of funds to and from the Shoreham Towers project. We take this position because it seems clear to us that plaintiff did so act from October 16, 1963 on when, in addition to continuing its financial control of the funds of the project, it placed its man, Douglas, in complete charge of the project to the exclusion of both the limited partnership and the corporation.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
38 Cal. App. 3d 760, 113 Cal. Rptr. 613, 1974 Cal. App. LEXIS 1094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-insurance-co-of-america-v-st-paul-fire-marine-insurance-co-calctapp-1974.