Martin H. Walrath & Son, Inc. v. Colonial Trust Co.

101 Pa. Super. 79, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 16, 1930
DocketAppeal 184
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 101 Pa. Super. 79 (Martin H. Walrath & Son, Inc. v. Colonial Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin H. Walrath & Son, Inc. v. Colonial Trust Co., 101 Pa. Super. 79, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295 (Pa. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

This was an action of assumpsit brought to recover the purchase price of certain lumber and mill work furnished by plaintiff for a building operation financed by defendant. The case wás tried before a jury which found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the full amount of its claim — $2,100, with interest. Defendant appeals from the judgment entered on this verdict, assigning as error the denial of its motion for judgment non obstante veredicto. Its motion for a new trial was not pressed in the court below.

Keeping in mind the familiar principle that in considering motions for judgment n. o. v. all the evidence and inferences therefrom favorable to appellee are to be taken as true (Dunbar v. Preston, 285 Pa. 502, 504), the facts of this case seem to be as follows: In the early part of May, 1927, appellant, the Colonial Trust Company, entered into a written agreement with Miriam Homes Corporation for the financing of a certain building operation — the erection of sixty-four houses on lots on Miriam Road between Bridge and Sanger Streets in the City of Philadelphia. It was recited therein that the occasion for the making of the agreement was the. fact that Miriam Homes Corporation had applied to appellant “to. insure the title to - certain various owners, mortgagees, assignees *81 and all other applicants to the premises......against loss by reason of liens” for labor done or materials furnished in the construction of the houses, or for street or other municipal improvements, and against loss by reason of failure to complete, etc. The agreement provided for the conveyance of title to the premises upon which the building operation was to be conducted to a straw man who was to execute bonds and mortgages thereon and, immediately after their execution, reconvey the premises, subject to the mortgages, to Miriam Homes Corporation. The latter corporation was then to proceed with the construction of houses. Specific provisions were inserted for the administration of the funds of the building operation, which funds were to be under the control of and disbursed by appellant.

Section 7 of the agreement provided that all moneys derived either from the mortgages placed upon the premises or from the sale of any houses in the building operation were to be deposited with appellant to the credit of the operation, and these moneys were irrevocably appropriated to the payment of debts contracted in and about the erection and construction of the houses and incidental expenses connected therewith.

Section 8 provided that these moneys were to be paid out from time to time to the several contractors and mechanics directly for work actually done and for materials actually furnished in and about the erection and construction of the buildings upon vouchers signed by Miriam Homes Corporation, or its duly constituted attorney in fact, and countersigned by the proper officers of the Colonial Trust Company.

It is apparent from the provisions of section 9 that appellant was not a mere custodian of the funds with authority to approve or disapprove proposed disbursements by Miriam Homes Corporation, but was expressly empowered, in the event of the inability, in *82 capacity, or refusal of that corporation, to do everything appellant might deem necessary and proper to secure the erection and completion of the houses and to pay out the funds, upon orders signed by it alone, for work and materials. The section provided that in order to secure more effectually the proper and specific appropriation of the said moneys to the uses for which they had been appropriated, Miriam Homes Corporation irrevocably constituted the Colonial Trust Company its true and lawful attorney to sign any and all vouchers for the disbursement of the moneys so deposited that the Colonial Trust Company, as attorney in fact, should deem necessary, and expressly authorized the trust company “to do and perform for [Miriam Homes Corporation] _______all matters and things which [Colonial Trust Company] shall in its judgment deem necessary and proper to be done to effectuate the performance of [the] contract and the application of said moneys to the payment of debts contracted or incurred for work done and for materials furnished.”

Appellee furnished, under a written contract which is not involved in this case, certain lumber, mill work and stair work to Miriam Homes Corporation for the construction of some of the houses. It encountered difficulties with that corporation in regard to vouchers for the material delivered under that contract. Consequently, when in October, 1927, Miriam Homes Corporation needed extra lumber and mill work, not covered by its contract, in order to complete certain houses, appellee refused to deliver the required material unless some assurance was given that its account for the' same would be paid. After the communication of this refusal to Miriam Homes Corporation, appellee received a call from a man by the name of Taylor who was an employe of the Colonial Trust Company. He said the work was being held up by reason of appellee’s refusal to deliver the extra ma *83 terial and promised to use his best endeavors to obtain some agreement for its payment if appellee would deliver the first few items on the list of extras. These deliveries were made, after which two representatives of appellee went to Mr. Taylor’s office at the Colonial Trust Company in the latter part of October. At that time Taylor told appellee’s representatives that he had authority from Miriam Homes Corporation to hold the proceeds of the sale of houses which had been made and for which settlements were pending, and that appellee would be paid for the extra material .out of such proceeds. Taylor agreed to confirm this understanding by a letter, and in fact did send appellee a letter, dated November 1, 1927, which read as follows: “We have received an authorization from Miriam Homes Corporation by which $2,100 is to be paid to you when and as the money may become available from settlements of houses sold or which may be sold on the operation on Miriam Eoad and Sanger Street. We are authorized to hold the funds here for your benefit.” This letter was written on the letter head of the Colonial Trust Company and signed “Charles W. Taylor.” The extra material required by Miriam Homes Corporation was furnished by appellee on the strength of this understanding. The proceeds of the sale of the houses referred to in the oral agreement with Taylor, and in his letter, were received by appellant to the amount of more than $13,000. Payment was demanded by appellee but was refused on the ground that no funds were available. This action followed.

The contention of appellee, as set out in its statement of claim, was that appellant, “acting through its duly authorized agent, Charles W. Taylor......in charge of its building operations,” made a verbal contract with appellee that it “should sell and deliver to said operation extra materials of a value of $2,100 and that payment therefor would be made by- defend *84 ant out of the proceeds of the first settlements made of agreements of sale for properties in said operation;” and that the letter was confirmatory of the verbal agreement upon which the suit was based.

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Bluebook (online)
101 Pa. Super. 79, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-h-walrath-son-inc-v-colonial-trust-co-pasuperct-1930.