International Steel & Iron Co. v. National Surety Co.

297 U.S. 657, 56 S. Ct. 619, 80 L. Ed. 961, 1936 U.S. LEXIS 949
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 30, 1936
Docket252
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 297 U.S. 657 (International Steel & Iron Co. v. National Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Steel & Iron Co. v. National Surety Co., 297 U.S. 657, 56 S. Ct. 619, 80 L. Ed. 961, 1936 U.S. LEXIS 949 (1936).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Roberts

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The present appeal challenges a statute of Tennessee on the ground that, as construed and applied, it impairs the obligation of a contract .in contravention of Art. I, § 10 of the Federal Constitution.

March 12, 1928, National Construction Company made a contract with the State; through its Department of Highways and Public Works, for the construction of a bridge. An Act of 1917 required such a contractor to furnish a bond with surety to protect the State and to secure payment to persons furnishing materials, supplies, and. labor for the project. 1 The company executed *659 such a bond with the appellee as surety. The appellant agreed with the Construction Company to furnish certain labor and materials for the erection of the bridge. Upon completion of the structure, the appellant, claimed a balance of about $59,'§00. There remained in the possession of the Highway Department some $77,000 which had been retained out of the contract price as directed by the Act of 1917.. In the meantime, the Aet had been amended on April 11, 1929, 2 to provide that instead of withholding the retained percentage pending the presentation of claims by sub-contractors, and paying into court so much as might be necessary to answer suits brought on those claims, the Commissioner of Highways might, upon the date of final settlement, release and pay to the principal contractor the amount so retained, against a refunding bond with proper surety, conditioned for the payment of valid claims of sub-contractors. 3 Pursuant to this amendatory act, the Commissioner, *660 without notice’ to or consent of the appellant, made final settlement with the Construction Company and paid it the retained percentage, taking a refunding bond with the Equitable'Casualty and Surety Company as surety. Thereupon, the appellant filed a bill in the Chancery Court of Davidson County against the Construction Company, the appellee as surety on the contractor’s bond, the Commissioner, and the Equitable Company as surety on the refunding bond, reciting the facts and praying a decree for the balance due under its contract. The Construction Company answered and cross-claimed for alleged breach of contract, asserting that there was no sum due the appellant. The appellee answered asserting that the payment of the retained percentage and the acceptance of a refunding bond released it as surety from liability to the Department of Highways or to sub-contractors. The Commissioner’s answer recited his acts in the premises. The appellant replied to the cross-bill. A de cree was entered in favor of the Commissioner against the Construction Company and Equitable Company on the refunding bond. Subsequently the Commissioner informed the court that the Equitable Company had become insolvent and it was proposed to substitute a refunding bond of the Construction' Company as principal and Consolidated Indemnity and Insurance Company as* surety in the penal sum of $40,000, in place of the original refunding bond, and lodge the new bond in court, ’ such action not to release the Construction Company under the original refunding bond but to operate as a release of the receiver and liquidating agent of -the Equitable Company. It was ordered that the bond be taken and lodged in court to await the outcome of the litigation.

The chancellor thereafter heard the cause on the merits, found in favor of the appellant for a balance of *661 approximately $58,000, held that the amendatory act of 1929 did not affect the appellee’s liability under the bond, but substituted a refunding bond in lieu of the moneys retained by the Commissioner, that the appellant should look first to the refunding bond and, after its exhaustion, recover from the appellee any amount remaining unpaid. The appellee took the case to the Court of Appeals of the State, where it insisted upon its position that the acceptance of a refunding bond and the release of the retained percentage operated to discharge its bond. That court reversed the chancellor’s decision, holding that the act of 1929 was prospective in operation and did not apply to the State’s contract with the Construction Company; that the action of the Commissioner in taking a refunding bond and releasing the retained percentage was unlawful,- operated to the prejudice of the appellee as surety on the contract bond and released it from liability. Both appellant and appellee were granted writs of certiorari by the Supreme Court of Tennessee. The former assigned error to the holding that the action of the Commissioner in paying over the retained funds and taking a refunding bond released the appellee as surety. The latter assigned error to the holding that the amendatory act of 1929 was inapplicable to the contract in question and that the Commissioner was not authorized thereby to proceed as he did, and thus satisfy and discharge the obligation of appellee’s bond.

Upon grounds differing from those stated by the Court of Appeals, the Supreme Court affirmed the decree. It held the amendatory act retroactive and applicable to the contract of the Construction Company; and the Commissioner’s action lawful and effective to supersede and annul the contract bond.

In the course of the opinion the Court said: “. . . our construction of Chapter 80 of the Acts of 1929 does *662 not bring that statute into any constitutional difficulty.” Except for this statement, the record failed to disclose that a question under the Federal Constitution had been presented or decided. In the circumstances, this court had no jurisdiction upon appeal. Counsel for the appellant requested at the bar a continuance of the cguse to afford opportunity for amplification of the record disclosing the basis of decision 4 The application was granted, a petition was filed in the' court below, and, in response thereto, the court added to its opinion a recital that a reargument had been ordered upon “the constitutionality, construction, and applicability” of Chapter 80 of the Acts of 1929, and, prior to reargument, counsel for the appellant had filed a brief raising the federal constitutional question under Article I, § 10, and the Court intended to express the opinion that the Act, as construed by it, “did not impair the obligation of contracts in violation of . . . the contract clause of . . . the Constitution of the United States.” These additional proceedings have been certified and added to the record. Upon the record as thus supplemented we have jurisdiction.

The contention is that Chapter 80 of the Acts of 1929, as construed, releases and discharges the obligation of the appellee’s bond to pay the balance due the appellant, and that such destruction of the obligation cannot be justified by substituting a right of action on another bond without appellant’s consent.

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Bluebook (online)
297 U.S. 657, 56 S. Ct. 619, 80 L. Ed. 961, 1936 U.S. LEXIS 949, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-steel-iron-co-v-national-surety-co-scotus-1936.