John W. Egan Co. v. Major Construction Management Corp.

709 N.E.2d 66, 46 Mass. App. Ct. 643, 1999 Mass. App. LEXIS 478
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedApril 21, 1999
DocketNo. 97-P-1592
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 709 N.E.2d 66 (John W. Egan Co. v. Major Construction Management Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John W. Egan Co. v. Major Construction Management Corp., 709 N.E.2d 66, 46 Mass. App. Ct. 643, 1999 Mass. App. LEXIS 478 (Mass. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Kaplan, J.

The Massachusetts Turnpike Authority entered into a contract with Major Construction Management Corporation (Major Construction), as general contractor, for leak repair and associated work at four ventilation shafts of the Sumner and Callahan Tunnels. Major Construction subcontracted a part of the work — painting, glazing, and lead-based coating removal — to the plaintiff John W. Egan Company, Inc. (Egan), for the contract price of $68,720. As required by the payment bond statute, G. L. c. 149, § 29, Major Construction, as principal, and Firemen’s Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey [644]*644(Firemen’s Insurance), as surety, executed a payment bond to secure the payments for labor and materials performed or furnished in carrying out the general contract.

Egan completed the work specified in the subcontract on September 30, 1993. Major Construction paid Egan $32,327 on November 22, 1993, leaving a balance of $36,393. The company was in difficulties and on December 4, 1993, sixty-five days after Egan completed the subcontract, it had failed to pay the balance due.2

The statute just cited, G. L. c. 149, § 29, as amended by St. 1972, c. 771, § 5, provides in the second paragraph:

“In order to obtain the benefit of such bond for any amount claimed due and unpaid at any time, any claimant having a contractual relationship with the contractor principal furnishing the bond, who has not been paid in full for any amount claimed due for the labor, materials . . . within sixty-five days after the due date for same, shall have the right to enforce any such claim (a) by filing a petition in equity within one year after the day on which such claimant last performed the labor or furnished the labor, materials .. . included in the claim and (b) by prosecuting the claim thereafter by trial in the superior court . . . .”

Accordingly, Egan on September 12, 1994, within a year of September 30, 1993, commenced the present collection action against Major Construction and Firemen’s Insurance. The troubled Major Construction defaulted in the action and Egan obtained judgment against it for the $36,393 balance with interest thereon from December 4, 1993, through the date of the judgment, taken to be November 8, 1994, amounting to $4,052.3

Firemen’s Insurance was served with summons and complaint in the action on September 19, 1994. It did not answer on time but got its default removed and then answered, admitting liability. On December 4, 1994 (only coincidentally the an[645]*645ni vers ary of the date December 4, 1993), Egan received $32,980.25 from Firemen’s Insurance, and on February 16, 1995, an additional $3,412.25, for a total of $36,393, the balance noted above.

The foregoing facts appeared on cross motions of the parties for summary judgment and the issue raised for decision was the amount of interest owed by the surety. Egan claimed that Firemen’s Insurance, the surety, owed interest on the unpaid balance from December 4, 1993, to the respective two dates on which the surety paid the portions of the balance — thus interest on $32,980.25 from December 4, 1993, to December 4, 1994, and interest on $3,412.25 from December 4, 1993, to February 16, 1995, a total of about $4,449. (This would conform in method with the calculation of interest against the principal, Major Construction, in the default judgment against it.) Firemen’s Insurance said interest should run, not from December 4, 1993, the date of default, but rather from the date it, the surety, got notice of the default, that is, the date it was served with process in the action4 — thus interest on $32,980.25 from September 19, 1994, to December 4, 1994, and on $3,412.25 from September 19, 1994, to February 16, 1995, a total of $982.12.

A Superior Court judge allowed judgment in favor of Firemen’s Insurance on the interest question and judgment for attorney’s fees in favor of Egan. Egan appeals the first decision, and Firemen’s Insurance appeals the second. We reverse the first, and affirm the second.

Our holding about interest rests upon the common-law precedents in the Commonwealth and the terms and purposes of the payment bond statute.

1. It has long been settled in the Commonwealth that, in the absence of a provision in the bond to the contrary, it is up to the (compensated) surety to keep itself informed of any defaults on the part of the principal; it is not the task of the creditor to inform and give notice to the surety. The court said in Water-town Fire Ins. Co. v. Simmons, 131 Mass. 85, 86 (1881):

“[T]he creditor owes no duty of active diligence to take care of the interest of the surety. It is the business of the [646]*646surety to see that his principal performs the duty which he has guaranteed, and not that of the creditor. [Citing cases.] The surety is bound to inquire for himself; and cannot complain that the creditor does not notify him of the state of the accounts between him and his agent [read ‘principal’ in the present context], for whom the surety is liable.”

To the same effect, see Welch v. Walsh, 177 Mass. 555, 557, 561-562 (1901); Sands v. Melchionda, 186 Mass. 270, 273 (1904); Wakefield v. American Surety Co., 209 Mass. 173, 111 (1911). In Bayer & Mingolla Constr. Co. v. Deschenes, 348 Mass; 594, 602 n.7 (1965), the court referred to the Restatement of Security on the matter of notice.5 See Stearns, Suretyship § 7.16, at 222 (Elder 5th ed. 1951).

2. The obligation of the surety under a payment bond corresponds to that of the principal. Classically and characteristically, this correspondence is signified by a provision that principal and surety are bound, jointly and severally, in a stated penal sum, conditioned on the principal’s performance. See the forms of payment bond referred to in Steams, supra at 537; Hunt, Construction Surety and Bonding Handbook 224 (1990); Mestek, Inc. v. United Pac. Ins. Co., 40 Mass. App. Ct. 729, 730 (1996). The decisions have recognized this correspondence between the liabilities of the principal and surety enforceable by the creditor. The point is made in Welch v. Walsh, 111 Mass, at 559, where Justice Coring says: [647]*647Again, in Bassett v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., 184 Mass. 210, 214 (1903):

[646]*646“The difference between the contract of a guarantor and the contract usually entered into by a surety, is that in [the] case of a guarantor, the promise of the person secondarily liable is a collateral promise to pay, in case default is made by one who is primarily liable for the thing guaranteed, while a surety contracts directly as a principal to pay the sum of money for which he is secondarily liable.”
[647]*647“[T]he obligation of a surety on a probate bond is the obligation of the principal. The bond is a joint bond and the judgment necessarily must be the same against both! This is more than a technical rule of law, it is an instance where the true character of a surety’s liability comes to the surface.”

See Steams, supra, § 1.1, at 1.

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Bluebook (online)
709 N.E.2d 66, 46 Mass. App. Ct. 643, 1999 Mass. App. LEXIS 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-w-egan-co-v-major-construction-management-corp-massappct-1999.