Getchell & Martin Lumber & Manufacturing Co. v. Peterson & Sampson

100 N.W. 550, 124 Iowa 599
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 13, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 100 N.W. 550 (Getchell & Martin Lumber & Manufacturing Co. v. Peterson & Sampson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Getchell & Martin Lumber & Manufacturing Co. v. Peterson & Sampson, 100 N.W. 550, 124 Iowa 599 (iowa 1904).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

The defendant H. W. MeQuaid entered into a written contract with the firm of Peterson & Sampson, whereby the latter undertook to furnish the labor and materials and erect for the former a dwelling house in the city of Des Moines for the agreed compensation of $2,897. The work was to be done under the direction and to the satisfaction of Libbe, Nourse & Pasmussen, architects. Payments upon the contract price were to be made from time to time, according to the progress of the work, in manner ■stated as follows: “ An estimate to be given by the architects for eighty-five per cent, of the amount of work and material in place at the time estimate is given. The final payment shall be made within thirty-two days after this ■contract is fulfilled. All payments shall be made - upon written certificates of the architects to the effect that such payments have become due.” It was also provided that upon a certificate by the architects that the contractors had failed to perform the work as agreed, or to prosecute it with proper diligence, the owner might terminate the employment, take possession of the building, and proceed to its completion; and, if the expense thus incurred should exceed the unpaid balance of the contract price, the contractors would make good the loss. To secure the due performance of the ■contract, Peterson & Sampson, together with the National •Surety Company, made and • delivered to the said H. W. [602]*602McQuaid their bond, the material part of which is the following words:

Know all men by these presents, that we, Peterson & Sampson as principal, and National Surety Company as sureties, are held' and firmly bound unto H. W. McQuaid, Des Moines, Iowa, and to all persons who may be injured by any breach of any of the conditions, of this bond, in the-penal sum of one thousand ($1,000) dollars, lawful money of the United States, for the payment of which sum well and. truly to be made, we bind ourselves, our heirs, legal representatives and assigns, jointly and severally, firmly by these presents. The condition of the above obligation is such, that whereas the said Peterson & Sampson, entered into contract with H. W. McQuaid, bearing date the 10 th day of July,. 1901, wherein said Peterson & Sampson undertakes and agrees to erect frame residence on Linden street, Des Moines, Iowa, and to faithfully perform all the terms and requirements of said contract within the time therein specified, in a good and workmanlike manner, and in accordance with the-plans and specifications attached to said contract, and made-a part thereof. Now, if the said Peterson & Sampson shall well and truly perform the covenants and stipulations in said contract contained, and pay all damages which may be sustained to the said H. W. McQuaid, and to any person or persons, resulting from the negligence of said Peterson & Sampson, their agents or employes in the performance of said work, and well and truly pay all claims for labor and material furnished, for said work, and save said H. W. McQuaid'. harmless from any and all claims for damages, as aforesaid, and from any liens and claims for labor and material under-the laws of the State of Iowa, then this bond to be void,, otherwise to remain in full force and effect.

Peterson & Sampson- proceeded with the construction of the house, but, failing to complete it within the time agreed, McQuaid took possession, and employed other mechanics to finish the work. Before the discharge of the contractors they had purchased materials for the building in considerable amounts from the plaintiff and from the defendant Chicago Lumber & Coal Company, whose claims on such accounts are unpaid. This action was begun by [603]*603the plaintiff to establish and enforce a lien upon the building for the amount of its said claim. Subsequently, by an amendment to its petition, the surety company was made, a defendant, and recovery demanded upon the bond to which reference has already been made. The defendant Chicago •Coal & Lumber Company by cross-bill also sets up the indebtedness of Peterson & Sampson to itself for materials, claims a lien therefor on the building, and asks, to recover the amount of said claim from the surety company on the bond. H. W. .MeQuaid, answering, alleges that of tbe contract price of $2,897 he has paid to Peterson & Sampson $2,003.54, and expended the further sum of $252.95 in completing the building after the contractors were discharged, leaving in his hands an unexpended balance of $640.51, against which he makes a claim of further damages in the sum of $300 on account of the failure of said contractors to have the building ready for use within the time fixed by the contract. The surety company denies all liability on the bond for the alleged reasons; (1) that it was deceived and misled into signing the bond by false representations of LI. W. MeQuaid as to the ownership of the land on which the building is erected; and (2) that, without its consent, Mo Quaid failed to observe the terms of the contract, and made payments to Peterson & Sampson without requiring certificates and estimates from the architects. By the decree of the trial court plaintiff’s claim for a lien was established in the sum of $812.60, and subject thereto, the lien of the Chicago Lumber & Coal Company was also established for $593.78. It was also found that, after giving MeQuaid credit for all payments made on the contract, and for all damages to which he was entitled, there remained in his hands applicable to the claims of subcontractors the sum of $400.51, ■which sum he was ordered to- pay over to the plaintiff, to'be applied in reduction of the amount of its recovery as aforesaid. It was further adjudged that the surety company be required to pay upon the bond in suit the. sum of [604]*604$1,045, the same to be applied pro rata to the discharge of the judgments in favor of plaintiff and the Chicago Lumber & Coal Company, and, in case such judgments shall have been discharged by McQuaid or by the sale of his property, he shall be entitled to receive the indemnity paid by said surety. Prom this decree the surety company and Peterson & Sampson alone appeal, and of these appeals that of the surety company is alone argued.

Counsel for the appellant have simplified the somewhat complicated record by stating certain specific propositions upon which they rely for a reversal, and we shall confine our review entirely to the questions thus presented. These propositions are: (1) that the payments by McQuaid to Peterson & Sampson were made without requiring the architects’ estimates and certificates, thus releasing the surety; (2) tire bond never became of binding force or effect, because of the false representations by McQuaid as to the ownership of the property; (3) the surety cannot be held liable beyond the compensation named in the contract; (4) there is no privity of contract between the subcontractors and the surety. McQuaid is the only person protected by the bond, and the only person who can maintain action upon it; (5) no recovery can be had against the surety until the entire contract price has been paid by the owner; (6) since the 'trial below, McQuaid has taken an assignment of the subcontractors’ claims; and (7) judgment cannot be rendered against' the surety in excess of the penalty named in the bond.

i Contractor’s o£Nsuretks'Itto material men. I. Reversing to

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Bluebook (online)
100 N.W. 550, 124 Iowa 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/getchell-martin-lumber-manufacturing-co-v-peterson-sampson-iowa-1904.