Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Federal Bond & Mortgage Co.

59 F.2d 950, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3501
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 13, 1932
DocketNo. 9358
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 59 F.2d 950 (Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Federal Bond & Mortgage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Federal Bond & Mortgage Co., 59 F.2d 950, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3501 (8th Cir. 1932).

Opinion

VAN VALKENBURGH, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit on a surety bond given by appellant to appellees as trustees in a certain trust deed or mortgage. One Nathan Tatkin and wife were the owners of a building site in St. Paul, Minn., upon which they were about to erect a thirteen-story office building. Appellee Federal Bond & Mortgage Company undertook to finance the construction of this building, and to this end floated a $400,000 bond issue, secured by the deed of trust aforesaid, in which it and Nathan M. Gross, one of its officers, were named as cotrustees. This deed of trust was dated September 1, 1923. November 10, 1923, Tatkin as principal and appellant as surety, for a valuable consideration, to protect the bondholders from mechanic’s liens, executed to appellees a bond in the sum of $150,000 with the following conditions:

“Now, therefore, if the said principal shall well and truly pay, or cause to be paid, all claims of whatsoever nature or kind for labor performed on or materials or skill furnished in and about the erection and construction of the improvement hereinbefore mentioned, and shall save harmless and keep indemnified the obligees against any and all loss, costs or damages by reason of any lien, liens, or claim of liens for such labor, skill and materials so that said mortgage shall be and remain a first lien thereon and if the said principals shall establish and maintain said mortgage as a first lien prior to all other liens on said premises, then the above obligation to be void; otherwise to remain in full force and effect.

“It is expressly agreed as follows:

“(1) That a filing of any lien or liens on said premises on account of said improvements shall constitute a breach of the condition of this instrument; providing that if said principal and/or surety shall promptly cause each lien which may be so filed to be released as provided in chapter 521, of the Session Laws of Minnesota for 1921, and shall maintain such release or releases, then no action shall be brought on this instrument.

“(2) That if in any action an order for judgment or a judgment be obtained declaring any claim for labor, materials or skill on account of the said improvements a lien on said premises, the files and proceedings in such action, or a copy of any part thereof certified by the clerk of the court in which said action is had, shall be conclusive evidence as between the parties hereto of all matters in said files and proceedings set forth with the same force and effect as if said prin[952]*952cipals and sureties were parties to such action and appeared ánd defended therein.

“(3) That if said obligees, their successors or assigns shall in case of the foreclosure of the said mortgage purchase said premises and acquire title under said foreclosure, such purchase and acquisition of the title shall not 'be a payment of said mortgage debt in whole or in part as respects the obligation of this instrument, but said obli-gees, their successors and assigns shall have the same right under this instrument in all respects as if the said mortgage debt was still in full force and fully unpaid.”

Chapter 521, Laws of Minnesota -1921, provides that any one having an interest in property against which a lien claim has been ■filed may obtain a release of the lien upon making a deposit in court in such amount, .sufficient to take care of the lien, as the court may order. The lien is then released óf record, and the parties may still litigate its validity, the sum deposited being substituted for the land subject to the lien.

Toltz, King & Day, Inc., a corporation, was the architect for the proposed building. November 20, 1923, Toltz, King & Day and Tatkin entered into a lease agreement wherein the architectural and engineering fee was fixed at 5 per cent, of the cost of construction, and it was agreed that, in payment for their services, Toltz, King & Day would take a ten-year lease of the.top floor of the building, and would pay an additional rental sum of $1,000 per year therefor. It was made a condition precedent to the final acceptance of this lease by Toltz, King & Day that Tat-kin should complete the building free of all liens, exeept mortgage liens aggregating not more than $500,000. However, it was provided that Toltz, King & Day might waive this condition and accept the lease, if., they elected so to do. April 17, 1924, Tatkin, original owner and principal' in the surety bond, conveyed his interest in the property to Deane, Inc., which, by written agreement, became a principal jointly with Tatkin in the mechanic’s lien bond attached to said agreement, as fully as though originally joined as a principal. To this conveyance appellant formally consented.

December 22, 1924, the first mechanic’s lien was filed against the property. This was followed by numerous others, including that of Toltz, King & Day, Inc., in the sum of $22,182.88. August 1, 1924, Toltz, King & Day, Inc., went into possession of the thirteenth floor of the new .building under a separate agreement with Deane, Inc., and Tat-kin that this occupancy should continue until the condition precedent in the lease agreement should be complied with, and until that agreement should beeome effective. If that., condition should not be complied with, then rent in the sum of $500 per month should be, paid for the period during which the occupancy of Toltz, King & Day, Inc., should continue.

The Toltz, King & Day lien was filed January 7, 1925. On or about January 2, 1925,: the Herzog Iron Works, a lien claimant, commenced.suit in the state district court to foreclose its lien, and thereafter a large nurn-ber of such lien claimants, including Toltz,, King & Day, Inc., joined in- said action, asserted their claims of liens, alleged priority, thereof over the lien of the trust deed, and prayed foreclosure respectively. In this foreclosure action Toltz, King & Day, Inc., claimed, in the alternative, a lease or a lien. The date of their joinder in this foreclosure suit was January 27, 1925.

February 13, 1925, the Federal Bond & Mortgage Company, through its attorneys, wrote attorneys for appellant. Their letter reads in part as follows: “You no doubt are aware of the lien foreclosure proceedings begun by Bishop H. Schriber for the Herzog Iron Works Company. We shall, of course, expect the Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company to assume the defense of this action or deposit sufficient funds in court to pay all the lien claims and get the same discharged of record.”

Additional notices to the same effect ■vyere, served by filing with the insurance commissioner February 26 and May 14, 1925. Action by the surety company was urged upon its attorneys orally. Mr. Mordaunt of counsel for appellant was expressly authorized to act for it generally as its representative in the matter of this" lien bond. September 1, 1925, counsel for appellees wrote Sexton, Mordaunt & Kennedy, attorneys for appellant, as follows: “We feel that we have given you sufficient time to get this matter adjusted on a basis which would be least onerous to your Company. However we do not feel that you can in good faith ask us to wait íonger for you to clear this title. We trust that you will promptly take such steps as are provided in the bond to eliminate the lien claim by Toltz, King & Day.”

To these letters and notice? neither appellant nor its representatives made reply. Since appellant refused or neglected to defend the Toltz, King & Day lien, this burden fell upon attorneys for appellees. All. the

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 F.2d 950, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartford-accident-indemnity-co-v-federal-bond-mortgage-co-ca8-1932.