Ins. Co. v. . Board of Education

140 S.E. 31, 194 N.C. 430, 1927 N.C. LEXIS 122
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 2, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 140 S.E. 31 (Ins. Co. v. . Board of Education) 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
Ins. Co. v. . Board of Education, 140 S.E. 31, 194 N.C. 430, 1927 N.C. LEXIS 122 (N.C. 1927).

Opinion

Connor, J.

On or about 9 December, 1919, the board of education of New Hanover County entered into a written contract with the Liberty Engineering and Construction Company, a corporation, for the construction of a building in the city of Wilmington, to be known as the High School Building. The contract price for said building was $312,322, subject to such additions and deductions as were provided for in the contract. On 23 January, 1920, defendant, T. F. Boyd, *432 became surety on tbe bond of said Engineering and Construction Company, given in accordance with the provisions of the contract. Pursuant to said contract the said company began the construction of said building and continued therein until 6 May, 1921, when it ceased work and abandoned the contract. It was then and is now insolvent.

Upon the default of said Engineering and Construction Company in its contract, it was agreed by and between the board of education and Ti E. Boyd that said Boyd, as surety on the contractor’s bond, should proceed with the construction of said building in accordance with the contract. The said Boyd, in accordance with said agreement, began work on said building and continued the construction of the building until on or about 1 October, 1921, when he ceased work thereon. The contract at that time had not been fully performed, but the board of education took possession of the building and began to use same for school purposes. The board has since had the building completed according to the contract, and is now using same as the High School Building of the City of Wilmington.

While defendant Boyd was at work on said building the architect issued to him, from time to time as the work progressed, and as was provided in the contract, certificates showing that he was entitled to receive from the board of education for the work done by him the sum of $93,527.25; of this amount the board of education has paid to defendant Boyd the sum of $83,253.28, leaving a balance due him, according to the architect’s certificates, of $10,273.97. After deducting from this balance the total amount expended by the board for the completion of the building, according to the contract, since Boyd- ceased work thereon, the court finds that there is now due by the board of education, on account of the contract price of the said high school building, the sum of $3,846.32, with interest from 1 January, 1922.

Judgments were rendered that plaintiffs, other than the receivers of Citizens Bank and Trust Company, and the Travellers Insurance Company, recover of defendant, T. E. Boyd, as surety on the bond of the contractor, the Liberty Engineering and Construction Company, the amounts of their claims for materials furnished to the contractor for the construction of said building, as stated in the judgments, with interest and costs. The total amount of said judgments, exclusive of interest and costs, is $5,941.98. There was no exception to these judgments.

The facts with respect to the claim of the receivers of Citizens Bank and Trust Company, as found by the referees, are as follows •: On 13 September, 1920, the Liberty Engineering and Construction Company, then engaged in the performance of its contract with the board of education of New Hanover County for the construction of the high school *433 building, borrowed from the Citizens Bank and Trust Company the sum of $4,000, which sum it promised to pay sixty days after date, as evidenced by its note. At the time said money was borrowed and said note was executed, the treasurer of said company stated to the said Trust Company that he had a payroll and some material to take care of. The said treasurer, in the name of the Engineering and Construction Company, gave to the Bank and Trust Company an order in writing-addressed to the board of education of New Hanover County, requesting said board to pay to said Bank and Trust Company the sum of $4,000. The note was not paid at maturity, and was thereafter renewed. The said treasurer thereafter gave to said Bank and Trust Company, as security for the note, an order on Plymouth, and the Bank and Trust Company thereupon surrendered the order on the board of education of New Hanover County. The latter order was not paid, and on 16 February, 1921, this order was surrendered, and the following order given to the Bank and Trust Company:

“Wilmington, N. O., 16 February, 1921.
“New Hanover County Board of Education,
“Wilmington, N. 0.
“Gentlemen:
“Please pay to order of Citizens Bank and Trust Company the sum of $4,000, for money advanced us in the construction of high school.
“LIBERTY ENGINEERING AND CONSTRUCTION COMPANY,
“By H. W. Nutt, Treasurer.”

It appears from the evidence offered at the trial before the referees that attorneys for Citizens Bank and Trust Company on 2 April, 1921, sent this order by mail to the board of education, requesting that it be paid according to its tenor. There is no evidence that the receipt of the order was acknowledged by the board of education, or that said board of education, at any time after the order was sent to it, was indebted to the Liberty Engineering and Construction Company in any sum on its contract or otherwise. The said company defaulted on its contract with said board soon thereafter, to wit, on 6 May, 1921, and did no work on said contract after that date. The contract was thereafter performed, at least' in part, by defendant, T. F. Boyd, surety on the bond of the defaulting contractor.

The referees were of opinion that there was no evidence from which they could find that the money loaned to the Liberty Engineering and Construction Company by the Citizens Bank and Trust Company was *434 loaned for tbe payment of labor done or material furnished in the construction of the high school building; they therefore concluded that defendant, T. E. Boyd, was not liable on his bond for said money. The court was of opinion that upon the facts found by the referees the order was an equitable assignment of the sum of $4,000, due or to become due to the Engineering and Construction Company on its contract with the board of education, and thereupon rendered judgment that L. J. Poisson and N. C. Shepard, receivers of the Citizens Bank and Trust Company, are entitled to the sum now in the hands of the board of education, to wit, $3,846.32, being the balance due on the contract price of the high school building. Defendant, T. F. Boyd, excepted to said judgment and assigns as error the holding of the court that said receivers are entitled to said sum by reason of an equitable assignment made by the Liberty Engineering and Construction Company to the Citizens Bank and Trust Company.

This assignment of error is sustained. Conceding that upon the facts found by the referees, there was an equitable assignment of the sum of $4,000 due or to be due by the board of education to the contractor (Trust Co. v. Porter, 191 N. C., 672; Trust Co. v. Construction Co., 191 N. C., 664; Hall v. Jones, 151 N. C., 419; Anniston Nat. Bank v. School Committee, 118 N. C., 383; Brem v. Covington, 104 N.

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Bluebook (online)
140 S.E. 31, 194 N.C. 430, 1927 N.C. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ins-co-v-board-of-education-nc-1927.