Guilford Lumber Manufacturing Co. v. Holladay

100 S.E. 597, 178 N.C. 417, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 472
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 5, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 100 S.E. 597 (Guilford Lumber Manufacturing Co. v. Holladay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guilford Lumber Manufacturing Co. v. Holladay, 100 S.E. 597, 178 N.C. 417, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 472 (N.C. 1919).

Opinion

BeowN, J.

This action was brought by plaintiffs, who are material-men, against tbe contractor Holladay, tbe Greensboro College for Women, wbicb owned tbe building, and one Armfield, surety on tbe contractor’s bond. Tbe plaintiffs were awarded judgment against tbe college, tbe owner of tbe building, for tbe amounts of tbeir claims, and tbe college was awarded judgment against tbe surety, Armfield, for tbe amount it is compelled to pay tbe plaintiffs. Tbe controversy is between tbe college and tbe defendant Armfield, surety upon tbe bond of Holladay, tbe contractor.

These facts were found by tbe referee and adopted by tbe court. Briefly stated, they are:

Greensboro College for Women contracted with M. L. Holladay to erect for it a dormitory building. Tbe contractor executed to the college a bond, with Armfield surety, conditioned as follows:

"Now, therefore, tbe condition of tbe above obligation is such that if tbe above bounden, M. L. Holladay, shall construct said building in accordance with said contract, plans, and specifications heretofore designated, and shall supply such labor and material as is named in said contract, and shall fully indemnify and save harmless Greensboro College for Women for all costs and damages wbicb it may suffer by reason of said Holladay’s failure to do so, and shall fully reimburse and pay to said Greensboro College for Women all outlay and expenses which it may incur in making good said default (wbicb outlay and expense shall include attorney’s fees and. increased compensation of architect, if on *419 account of such default said college shall be compelled to employ counsel to defend itself, or pay additional compensation to the architect) ; then, in such case, this bond shall be null and void; otherwise, to be in full force and effect.”

The contractor completed the building according to contract, and college accepted the same.

Upon completion of the building, Holladay, the contractor, gave to the college a complete statement of amounts and persons to whom he was indebted for material, giving names of plaintiffs. '

After this notice the college made up settlement with Holladay, and found it was due him $4,800, which was more than the amount he owed for material, as per his statement.

The college then paid this amount to the contractor Holladay, and he failed to apply the money to the materialmen.

The plaintiffs, the materialmen, make no claim against the surety upon the contractor’s bond. Under the statute they obtained judgment against the college, the owner of the building, and tlieir claims were properly declared a lien thereon. The question presented- upon this appeal is this: Can the college compel Armfield, the surety on the contractor Holladay’s bond, to make good to it the sum it is required to pay the plaintiffs on account of its failure to retain the money when settling with the contractor.

We are of opinion that the college cannot recover against the surety on the contractor’s bond, upon two grounds:

1. The liability sought to be enforced does not come within the terms and conditions of the bond. The bond provides that the contractor Holladay shall construct the building in accordance with the contract, plans and specifications furnished, and shall supply such labor and material as is named in the contract, indemnify and save harmless the college from all costs and damages which it may suffer by reason of said Holla-■day’s failure to do so. The bond further provides that the surety shall fully reimburse and pay to said college all outlay and expenses which it may incur in making good said default. According to the admitted facts, Holladay has fully complied with every one of the conditions named in the bond. He has constructed the building in accordance with contracted plans and specifications. He has supplied the labor and the kind of material specified in the contract. There is nothing required of Holladay in the language of that bond which, so far as the college is con•cerned, Holladay has not performed. He completed the building according to contract and the college accepted the same. Holladay gave to the college the full statement of the amount and persons to whom he was indebted for material, giving the names of the plaintiffs who are mate-rialmen. After receiving this notice, the college had a full settlement *420 with. HoIIaday, and found that it owed Mm $4,800, which is more than the amount he owed for material. The college then voluntarily, without any sort of compulsion, paid this money to HoIIaday, trusting to him to apply the money to the satisfaction of the claims of the materialmen, •which HoIIaday failed to do. It is thus evident to us, from the facts as found, that HoIIaday has fully performed the contract, and that, under the terms of the bond, the college cannot recover of the surety.

2. The second ground, which we think bars a recovery, is equally as strong.

The contention of the surety is that under the express terms of the law the owner was required, upon settlement with contractor and upon notice from the contractor, to withhold payment from contractor, and pay directly to materialmen the amounts due them.

The college having, after notice, in violation of the provisions of the law, paid to HoIIaday, cannot now recover, for its wrongful payment, of the surety.

The law requires the contractor, before receiving the contract price, to furnish a statement of persons and amounts he owes for material. Pell’s Revisal, sec. 2021.

When a statement was made, as was done in this case, the law provides : “It shall be the duty of the owner to retain from the money then due the contractor a sum not exceeding the price contracted for, which will be sufficient to pay such person for material, which said amount the owner shall pay directly to the person furnishing material.” This section was amended, Laws 1913, ch. 150, sec. 4, by adding thereto: “And after notice herein provided for, no payment to the contractor shall be a credit on or discharge of the lien herein provided.”

The contention that the statute was not enacted for the benefit of the surety cannot be maintained. It was enacted primarily for the protection of materialmen and laborers upon the building, but it also protects the owner of the building as well as the surety upon the contractor’s bond. "When a statute provides a duty, and a contract is made involving a performance of that duty, the statute becomes part of the contract. 13. Corpus Juris, 560, sec. 523; N. P. R. R. Co. v. Wall, 241 U. S., 523. This statute existed at the time of making the contract between the college and the surety Armfield. It entered into and formed a part of it for the benefit and protection of all the parties. O'Kelly v. Williams, 84 N. C., 281; Graves v. Howard, 159 N. C., 594. The provisions of the . ■statute are plain and explicit, and all persons entering into building-contracts, including the surety, are supposed to contract with reference to existing, law. In this case it was the plain duty of the college to-withhold the sum necessary to pay these materialmen, as the law directed that the college retain the money and pay it to the person to whom it *421 was due.

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.E. 597, 178 N.C. 417, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guilford-lumber-manufacturing-co-v-holladay-nc-1919.