Gladding, McBean & Co. v. Southern Securities Co.

5 P.2d 639, 118 Cal. App. 727, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 358
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 1, 1931
DocketDocket No. 6881.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 P.2d 639 (Gladding, McBean & Co. v. Southern Securities 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.

Bluebook
Gladding, McBean & Co. v. Southern Securities Co., 5 P.2d 639, 118 Cal. App. 727, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 358 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

HOUSER, J.

Prior to the happening of the particular incidents upon which the action which forms the foundation *728 of the appeal herein depends, a corporation known as Fry Bros. Contracting Company entered into a contract with the street superintendent of the city of Venice for the improvement of a street located in said city, known as Venice Boulevard. Thereupon the contractor filed the required bond for the benefit and protection of persons who might perform labor for, or furnish materials to, the contractor, to^ be used in the performance of the work in question. Thereafter the contractor entered into an agreement with the appellant Southern Securities Company by which, for certain consideration moving to it, the latter corporation agreed to furnish directly to the contractor certain moneys to be used by him in financing the job. In the course of the performance of the work incident to the contemplated improvement, the contractor became indebted to the plaintiff Gladding, McBean & Company on account of certain materials furnished by said plaintiff to the contractor ' and which materials were used in the construction of the said improvement. The said debt not having been paid, and the time being about to expire within which, by the filing of a “stop notice”, the plaintiff might protect its interests in the premises and probably insure the payment of the debt under the provisions of the contractor’s bond, the plaintiff approached the defendant Southern Securities Company with a view to having the latter pay the debt for the contractor in accordance with the authorization so to do under the provisions of the financing agreement to which reference has been had; in pursuance of which, at defendant’s request, at a time preceding by thirteen days the date of expiration of the time within which the plaintiff might have filed its said “stop notice”, the plaintiff procured from the contractor an order expressed in the following words:

“Please pay to Gladding, McBean & Co., the sum of $1353.35, this being in full of their account for material furnished on our Venice Job”; and which order, on at least two occasions prior to the expiration of the time allowed by law within which a “stop notice” might have been filed by tlie plaintiff, the defendant agreed to accept. The evidence adduced on the trial of the action warrants the conclusion reached by the trial court that in violation thereof, both as to the date of its execution, and as .to the *729 contents of the acceptance, the defendant failed to execute its acceptance of the order until after four days had expired following the last day upon which said “stop notice” effectively might have been filed; at which time, in the language hereinafter quoted, the defendant executed its acceptance of the said order, to wit:
“We accept the above order, payable out of any funds that may be due Fry Brothers Contracting Company upon the issuance of the bonds in payment of the above job, in accordance with our contract with Fry Bros. Contracting Company. ’ ’

Thereafter the defendant failed and refused to pay the said debt which was owing by the contractor to the plaintiff, with the result that an action was brought on said acceptance by the plaintiff against the defendant, which eventuated in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, and from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

The foundation of the defense to the action, as well as the basis for this appeal, depends upon the construction which should be placed upon the language of the acceptance of the order, and especially upon that part thereof wherein, in effect, the defendant agrees that it will pay the debt of the contractor owing to the plaintiff “out of any funds that may be due ... in accordance with our contract with Fry Bros. Contracting Company”.

Referring to the contract in question, it is noted that by one of its provisions “said contractor hereby guarantees the repayment to said second party of all monéy advanced by second party to said contractor under and pursuant to this agreement, and any other money that may be due from said contractor to said second party, and said contractor hereby agrees to hold and save harmless the said second party from any loss, damage or expense which second party may suffer or incur by reason of this agreement”.

And it is particularly by reason of such provision, together with the asserted fact that, after deducting “other money . . . due from said contractor to said second party” from the amount that was due to the contractor on account of the Venice job, nothing belonging to the contractor remained in the possession of the defendant, the said defendant claimed at the trial of the action, and here contends, *730 that no liability ever existed against it and in favor of the plaintiff.

As offsetting and overcoming the provision of the financing contract to which attention has been directed, the plaintiff points not only to the fact that in accordance with the provisions of said contract, moneys were furnished by the defendant directly to the contractor, but also to various other provisions thereof, which indicate that the clause “other money due from said contractor to said second party”, had reference to such “other money” only as was disbursed by the defendant to persons who had unpaid claims against the contractor on account of labor performed upon, or materials furnished to, the Venice job. So that, even viewed from the standpoint of the defendant, it could not be relieved from the consequences of its acceptance of the order in question. But by the findings of fact made by the trial court it plainly appears that the basis of its conclusion was that because at a time when the plaintiff might have protected its claim against the contractor by filing its stop notice, it was prevented from doing so by reason of the promise of the defendant that it would unconditionally accept an order from the contractor to pay the claim of the plaintiff, in effect the defendant thereafter was estopped from denying its liability on its acceptance, without reference to whether the contractor either then or at any other time was or would be entitled to a credit either for the amount of money represented by the claim of the plaintiff, or for any other amount of money whatsoever. However, in that connection the appellant contends that neither fraud of the defendant nor mistake of any kind was properly pleaded by the plaintiff, and in consequence that the plaintiff should be precluded from a recovery which rests upon either of such grounds. An examination of the complaint in the action discloses the fact that, relative to the alleged fraud of the defendant, it contains allegations in substance that after the time had expired within which a “stop notice” might have been filed by the plaintiff, “said Southern Securities Company, contrary to and in violation of its promises theretofore made to said plaintiff in that behalf, refused to accept said order, except conditionally”, and thereupon signed a conditional acceptance. Furthermore, “that by reason of the fraud and *731 misrepresentation of said Southern Securities Company hereinbefore set out said plaintiff has lost its right to recover the amount due it as aforesaid from the surety on said contractor’s bond. ...”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 P.2d 639, 118 Cal. App. 727, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gladding-mcbean-co-v-southern-securities-co-calctapp-1931.