Maryland Casualty Co. v. Hanlon

100 A. 352, 87 N.J. Eq. 167, 2 Stock. 167, 1916 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 3
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedDecember 16, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 100 A. 352 (Maryland Casualty Co. v. Hanlon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Casualty Co. v. Hanlon, 100 A. 352, 87 N.J. Eq. 167, 2 Stock. 167, 1916 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 3 (N.J. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Grikkin, Y. C.

The complainant, tty its bill, seeks to compel the defendant to convey certain lands to it under a supplemental indemnity agreement. The defendant, while admitting the agreement, says the contingency has not arisen which gives the complainant this right.

The ease discloses that Lincoln-Stoel-Fleming Company and Joseph A. Morrison, associated (hereinafter called the contractors), had a contract for the construction of certain sewers in district No. 9, town of Greenwich, Connecticut. The contractors, on July 8th, 1915, entered into a subcontract with Gibbons & Hanlon (hereinafter referred to as the subcontractors) for the rock excavation.

To indemnify the contractors, said subcontractors and the complainant gave a bond, dated July 8th, 1915, in the sum of $10,000 to the contractors. On July 7th, 1915, the subcontractors signed the usual printed application for the bond. On July 8th, 1915, John Hanlon, the defendant, one of the subcontractors, signed a memorandum addressed to the complainant as follows:

“X herewith agree, in consideration of the Maryland Casualty Company issuing bond on behalf of Gibbons & Hanlon, to give as further indemnity an assignment of all my right, title and interest in real estate situate 80 and 90 and 124 West Fifteenth street, Bayonne, and 124 West Fourteenth street, Bayonne, N. J., valued at $_20,000, with mortgage of $6,000 thereon.
“Such assignment to be executed in event of claim under bond, and only for an amount equal to legal liability under the bond.
“No prior assignment of above has been or will be made.”

The subcontractors proceeded with the work until about Sep-tember 20th, 1915, upon which date the contractors gave to the subcontractors notice, under article 3 of the contract, that if they did not “proceed to supply sufficiency of properly-skilled workmen and materials and plant of the proper quality, and prose[169]*169ente the work with promptness and diligence, and also settle up the debts already incurred by them” within three days after the receipt of said notice, it would take such action as might be necessary to protect their interests in the matter. This notice was-served on the subcontractors and a copy sent to the complainant.

On September 29th, 1916, the contractors sent a long letter to the complainant charging non-performance by the subcontractors and asking complainant

“to live up to the conditions of your obligation and to at once proceed to carry out the terms and conditions of the contract, the performance of which you have guaranteed.”

On October 2d, 1915, the contractor wrote the subcontractors terminating the employment of the subcontractors, stating that they would hold them and the bonding company liable for their loss and damage. A copy of this letter was also sent to complainant on the same daj', which again called on complainant “to at once proceed to carry out the terms and conditions of the contract.”

While the contractors .allege non-performance of the contract, justifying the service of the notice, the subcontractors aver that while they were doing the work in accordance with the terms of the contract they were wrongfully prevented by the contractors from proceeding further.

In this situation the complainant, declining to carry out the contract on the subcontractors’ account, it was undertaken by the contractors, who, on March 17th, 1916, rendered a bill to the complainant for $12,320.59. This sum is made up substantially of the difference between the alleged cost to the contractor of excavating the rock—about $6.90 a cubic yard—and the contract price, $2.75.

On October 15th, 1915, shortly after the contractor had determined that the subcontractors had abandoned their, work, and before the claim of March 17th, 1916, had been served upon it, complainant filed its bill of complaint, praying (1) that complainant might have a lien upon the premises referred to in the supplemental agreement to secure it against losses incurred and [170]*170to be incurred under the bond; (2) that the defendant might be decreed to execute to complainant an assignment or other suitable evidence of the transfer of his title as security to the complainant against losses incurred and to be incurred; (3) that the further indemnity agreement be decreed to create and to have created and be established as creating and having created from its date a lien on the premises mentioned in the indemnity agreement, as collateral against the losses sustained and to be sustained by the complainant under the bond.

It may be said, in passing, that there is no proof of actual ' loss having been sustained by the complainant.

After the filing of the bill, and on January 5th, 1916, the contractor began suit in the supreme court in Putnam county, New York, against the complainant and the subcontractors on their bond, which suit is held in suspense pending the completion of the work and the ascertainment of the amount of the claim against the subcontractors.

The question whether the complainant is entitled to enforce the indemnity agreement at this time depends on the construction of the clause thereof, which reads as follows: “Such assignment to be executed only in event of claim under bond and for an amount equal to legal liability under the bond.”

In seeking to interpret the language quoted resort has been had to the bond and application. This application is very lengthy, containing thirteen long, intricate covenants printed in small type; and was evidently drafted by the complainant to overcome the effect of decisions of the type of Jeffers v. Johnson, 21 N. J. Law 73. It sheds little light on the subject; and, as no extrinsic evidence has been offered, the contract must be construed,. considering, first, the situation of the parties, and second, the purpose to be accomplished and when.

The complainant is a surety company engaged in business for profit; the defendant is a contractor whose firm required a bond to obtain a contract. The complainant desired indemnity; the defendant was willing to give it, not on the signing of the bond, but on the occurrence of some future condition. The indemnity agreement covers substantially all- of the property of the defendant.

[171]*171What did the parties intend when they used the language “such assignment is to be executed only in event of claim under bond, and only for an amount equal to legal liability under the bond?” The bond, which is on the printed blank prepared by the complainant, in the first condition, which deals with default on the part of the subcontractors and the liability of the surety company in case the contractor should complete or relet the contract,- provides that

“all reserves, deferred payments and all other moneys provided in said contract which would have been paid to the principal had he completed the contract in accordance with its terms, shall be credited upon any claim the said obligee may mate upon said surety.”

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63 L.R.A. 133 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1903)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 A. 352, 87 N.J. Eq. 167, 2 Stock. 167, 1916 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-casualty-co-v-hanlon-njch-1916.