In re Duncan Const. Co.

280 F. 205, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 803
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. West Virginia
DecidedMarch 3, 1922
DocketNo. 1057
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 280 F. 205 (In re Duncan Const. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Duncan Const. Co., 280 F. 205, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 803 (S.D.W. Va. 1922).

Opinion

McCRINTlC, District Judge.

[1] By contract dated on the 21st day of October, 1919, the county court of Pocahontas county entered into a written contract with the Duncan Construction Company for certain road work, as set out in the contract, between the county seat. Marlinton, and the village of Huntersville, in that county. The contract provides for certain prices, and also provided the usual agreement as to a reservation of 10 per cent, from each monthly estimate, to be retained by the county court until after the completion of the entire contract and the acceptance of the work to be done by the county court. The work commenced, and progressed until, on the 5th of August, 1920. this 10 per cent, amounted to $4,713.54.

On the 5th of August, 1920, the manager in charge of the work had no money to meet his pay roll, and the men were waiting for their money in the town of Marlinton, the county seat of said county, and the manager applied to the First National Bank in Marlinton for a loan of $2,200 for the purpose of paying the labor then -due and unpaid. The bank refused the loan until Mr. W. H. Barlow, a member of the county court, could be consulted. He came to the bank, and also brought the road engineer, and it was shown to the bank officers that [206]*206this sum above named was retained by the county court, and would be payable to the contractor when the job was finished. No other sums of money were due from the county to the contractor at that time, and it was necessary that the labor should be paid, if the work was to be continued.

The Duncan Construction Company gave a note to the First National Bank of Marlinton for the sum of $2,200, the proceeds of which note were immediately turned over to the contractor, and immediately paid by the contractor to the persons who had performed labor on said work during the preceding month. Notice was immediately given to the county court of that fact, and the work progressed. For this sum of money the Duncan Construction Company gave tó the bank a note bearing date August 5, 1920, for the sum of $2,200, and payable to the bank 30 days after date. This note was given on the collateral form used by the bank, and pledged that amount due from the county court, as understood by all the parties at that time, as follows:

“Having pledged and deposited with the said First National Bank of Mar-linton, West Virginia, as collateral security for the payment of this note and any renewals thereof, the following, viz.: Out of account due from estimates from the county court of Pocahontas county, West Virginia.”

It appears from -the record in this case that at that moment there was actually nothing, in the sense of being immediately payable, “due” from the county court to the contractor, which fact was well known to the contractor, to the county court and the members thereof, and the road engineer. Later, in the month of September, a receiver was appointed by the state court for the contractor, and the work progressed a while under the direction of the court and this receiver. There was an estimate of something over $1,600 for the month of August, and about two-thirds thereof was paid to this receiver, and about onerthird for tools and material used on the work.

The receivership in the state court was followed by the bankruptcy proceeding in this court, and a trustee was appointed, and the work progressed and was finally finished, and, including the sum of $4,713.54, there was paid to the trustee in this cause by the county court as a final estimate the sum of $7,526.02. The question decided by the referee, now before this court for decision, was whether the First National Bank had a secured claim upon the sum of $4,713.54, to secure the payment of its note, with interest from maturity. The referee held that it was not a secured claim, and that the bank was only a general creditor, along with all the other creditors of the contractor, and the whole amount received by the trustee from the county court of Pocahontas county would then be sufficient to pay 24 per cent, upon the debts proven.

Upon the argument here it was claimed in behalf of the trustee that there were two accounts out of which it could be equally claimed that this note, if it had any security at all, was due; that is, the estimate earned in the month of August, as well as the amount in the hands of the county court, under the reservation in the contract at the date of the note. I see no merit in the proposition that it was the duty of the bank to insist upon payment out of the estimates for the month of Au[207]*207gust, for such estimate had not yet been earned, and when it was earned it was used for the purpose of continuing the work, and thereby saving said sum of $4,713.54.

[2] The construction put upon the language typewritten on the note, to wit, “Out of account due from estimate from the county court of Pocahontas county, West Virginia/’ 'by the referee, is in my opinion, under all the circumstances surrounding the transaction, too narrow and technical. In the language of Justice Story, in the case of United States v. State Bank of North Carolina, 31 U. S. (6 Pet.) 29, 8 L. Ed. 308, the word “due,” in its larger sense, covers liabilities matured and unmatured, and he further says that “much depends upon the context and evident purpose intended.” This idea runs through all the deci-. sions upon this word. All the surrounding circumstances must be taken into consideration, to arrive at the meaning intended by the parties at the time the note was made and the security, given. At that time there was no money immediately due, in the sense of being immediately payable, from the county court of Pocahontas county to the contractor.

If the meaning asked to be given to the word “due” by the trustee in this case is correct, then this whole transaction, this whole attempt on the part of the bank to get security for the money which it was then paying out to the laborers of the contractor, and the attempt on the part of the contractor to give security for such present consideration, and the attempt on the part of the county court to accept notice thereof, were all futile and of no effect. It was plainly the purpose, of the parties, at this meeting on the 5th of August, 1920, to give the bank security for this note, and in my opinion it is the duty of this court to put a construction upon the language used and the acts done that would carry out this evident purpose, if it is possible to do so. The laborers, to whom this money was paid, had liens under the laws of West Virginia upon all the property of the contractor, at that time, to secure their unpaid wages, and they likewise would have had liens upon such property in the bankrupt court. The county court was anxious to have the work finished; the contractor was naturally anxious to finish it; it was for the benefit of the community, and it was for the benefit of all the creditors of the contractor, that the work should be finished, and the reserve 10 per cent, paid to the contractor or those claiming under it.

There is no doubt but that the contractor, subject to the rights of the county court under the contract between the court and the contractor, had the right to assign, either as collateral security, or fully and completely, the reserved 10 per cent, then in the hands of the county court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 F. 205, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-duncan-const-co-wvsd-1922.