Johnson-Foster Co. v. D'Amore Construction Co.

50 N.E.2d 89, 314 Mass. 416, 148 A.L.R. 353, 1943 Mass. LEXIS 840
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJuly 14, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 50 N.E.2d 89 (Johnson-Foster Co. v. D'Amore Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson-Foster Co. v. D'Amore Construction Co., 50 N.E.2d 89, 314 Mass. 416, 148 A.L.R. 353, 1943 Mass. LEXIS 840 (Mass. 1943).

Opinion

Qua, J.

This suit was heard upon a “Statement of Agreed Facts.”

[418]*418Under date of March 18, 1940, D’Amore Construction Co., hereinafter called the contractor, entered into a general contract with New Bedford Housing Authority, hereinafter called the housing authority, for the construction of a low cost housing project aided by a loan from the United States Housing Authority. On May 20, 1940, the contractor as principal, and the Aetna Casualty and Surety Company as surety, gave to the housing authority “as obligee” a “Performance and Payment Bond,” in the sum of $693,830 and in “the standard form required by” the United States Housing Authority, for the faithful performance of the principal contract. The contractor paid the surety for this bond a premium of $10,407.45. The contractor performed work under the contract until on or about May 8, 1941, when it acknowledged its inability to proceed further. It had then been paid $573,314.40 on account of the contract price and additions thereto. Thereafter the housing authority entered into an agreement with a new contractor for the completion of the work. This bill is prosecuted by a large number of original plaintiffs and intervener plaintiffs, all of whom as subcontractors or materialmen furnished to the original contractor labor and material or material alone which went into and became part of the completed structure, or rented equipment to the contractor for use on this contract, with the possible exception of New Bedford Gas and Edison Light Company and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, the nature of whose claims will later appear. All make claim from the surety under the bond for unpaid balances due or alleged to be due them from the contractor. It is agreed that all the claimants knew and relied upon the terms of the bond “when they submitted bids and contracted to perform work or furnish material and rent equipment, [or to furnish?] public utility service.” The penal sum of the bond exceeds the total of all claims.

The trial judge entered an interlocutory decree that each plaintiff might recover, leaving the amounts to be determined at further hearings. He then stayed further proceedings and reported “the question” to this court. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 214, § 30.

[419]*419Some of the plaintiffs, having filed sworn statements of their claims with the city clerk of New Bedford, or with both the city clerk and the housing authority, contend that the bond was a statutory bond given under the terms of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 149, § 29, as appearing in St. 1938, c. 361. This contention is unsound. That section requires officers or agents “who contract in behalf of any county, city or town for the construction or repair of public buildings or other public- works” to “obtain sufficient security, by bond or otherwise,” for the payment for labor, materials and hired equipment used or employed in such construction or repair. But the housing authority was not itself a county, city or town, and it was not the agent or a department of the city of New Bedford. The statutes establishing housing authorities make it plain that such an authority, although organized by and in each city and town in cooperation with the State, is nevertheless, when organized, a complete corporate entity in itself, distinct from the municipal corporation within whose territory it is set up, and exercising its powers in its own independent right. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 121, §§ 26J-26M, 26R, 26T, 26U, 26W, 26X (f), (i), 26Z, 26DD, 26FF, 26GG, as inserted by St. 1938, c. 484, § 1. See Allydonn Realty Corp. v. Holyoke Housing Authority, 304 Mass. 288. It is an instrumentality of government, but it is also a corporation having the contracting powers of a corporation and suable as such “in the same manner as a private corporation.” § 26FF. Its contracts are its own and are not those of the municipality. § 26GG. Moreover, by the express provisions of § 26FF, the real estate of a housing authority is not subject to ordinary liens for labor and material under c. 254, but the provisions of § 28 of c. 149, relating to actions for labor personally performed, are applicable to housing authorities. If it had been the intention of the Legislature that § 29 of c. 149, as amended, relating to bonds for labor performed or furnished and materials and hired equipment used, should also be applicable to housing authorities, there would have been an express provision to that effect.

But although the bond cannot take effect as a statutory bond, it is valid as the basis of a common law obligation, [420]*420and all parties who, in reliance upon it, have furnished material or labor or rented equipment have become entitled to its benefits by reason of its peculiar terms. After the usual condition for faithful performance of the principal contract and the payment for labor and materials and the hire of equipment, intended as • protection to the housing authority, the bond contains this paragraph: “In addition to the obligations of the undersigned to the New Bedford Housing Authority hereunder this Bond is also made for the use and benefit of all persons, firms and corporations, who may furnish any material or perform any labor for or on account of said contract, or rent or hire out any appliances or equipment used or employed in the execution of said contract, and they and each of them are hereby made obligees hereunder the same as if their own proper respective names were written herein as such, and they and/or each of them may proceed or sue hereon.”

This paragraph was obviously intended to give direct contract rights to subcontractors and others who came within its terms to the same extent as if it had been originally given' to them and they had been originally named in it. The bond constituted a standing offer of security to all who, in reliance upon it, should accept the offer by bringing themselves within its terms through the actual furnishing of material or the performing of labor or the renting or hiring out of appliances or equipment used or employed in the execution of the contract. In Saunders v. Saunders, 154 Mass. 337, at page 338, the possibility- is suggested that a covenant might “purport to be a continuing offer or promise on the part of the defendant, as in the case of a letter of credit or an offer of reward.” The same idea underlies the reasoning in Hudson Real Estate Co. v. Tower, 156 Mass. 82. And see Loring v. Boston, 7 Met. 409; Bishop v. Eaton, 161 Mass. 496; Rome v. Gaunt, 246 Mass. 82, 94. This is not inconsistent with the theory that ordinarily no one not presently identified as a party to a sealed instrument at the time of its delivery can maintain an action upon it. See Stevens v. Hay, 6 Cush. 229; New England Dredging Co. v. Rockport Granite Co. 149 Mass. 381, 383; [421]*421Saunders v. Saunders, 154 Mass. 337; Hudson Real Estate Co. v. Tower, 156 Mass. 82; Congress Construction Co. v. Worcester Brewing Co. 182 Mass. 355, 358; Cavanaugh Bros. Horse Co. v. Gaston, 255 Mass. 587, 590; Am. Law Inst. Restatement: Contracts, §§ 95, 108; Williston on Contracts (Rev. ed.) § 401. Here the suit is not strictly upon the bond as originally delivered to the housing authority. It is upon obligations of the makers of the bond springing into existence after the original delivery of the bond as the result of the operation of ordinary rules of offer and acceptance.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.E.2d 89, 314 Mass. 416, 148 A.L.R. 353, 1943 Mass. LEXIS 840, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-foster-co-v-damore-construction-co-mass-1943.