Metropolitan Casualty Ins. v. United Brick & Tile Co.

1934 OK 14, 29 P.2d 771, 167 Okla. 402, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 540
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 16, 1934
Docket22761
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1934 OK 14 (Metropolitan Casualty Ins. v. United Brick & Tile Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Casualty Ins. v. United Brick & Tile Co., 1934 OK 14, 29 P.2d 771, 167 Okla. 402, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 540 (Okla. 1934).

Opinion

OSBORN, J.

This action was commenced in the district court of Kay county by the United Brick & Tile Company against the Southwestern Construction Company and the Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company of New York for the purchase price of a quantity of brick furnished by plaintiff to the construction company. From a judgment in favor of plaintiff, the defendant Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company of New York has appealed.

The United Brick & Tile Company will bo referred to herein as plaintiff, the Southwestern Construction Company will be referred to as the defendant construction company, and the Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company of New York will be referred to as defendant surety company.

This case was tried on a stipulation of facts which, in substance, shows that the defendant construction company, on September 13, 1928, entered into a contract with the city of Ponca City, Okla., to do certain paving in improvement district No. 75 of said city.

The defendant surety company executed a bond as provided by statute which guaranteed the payment of all indebtedness incurred for labor and material furnished in the construction of said street improvement district No. 75. It is shown that defendant construction company signed an application for said bond whereby it agreed that it would use the funds derived from district No. 75 in payment of labor and material bills on said district, but plaintiff had no knowledge of such agreement.

It is stipulated that between December 14, 1928, and December 28, 1928, plaintiff sold and delivered to defendant construction company certain paving brick which were used in the construction of improvements in district No. 75, the cost of said brick being $9,303. This action was filed within the statutory period of six months from the date of the completion of the paving contract.

Before plaintiff furnished or agreed to furnish said brick for district No. 75, the duly authorized representative of defendant construction company approached a representative of plaintiff and sought, to make an arrangement for buying said brick on credit. Plaintiff refused to sell said brick on credit *403 unless defendant construction company should give plaintiff: security for the payment of $9,717.19, which defendant construction company then owed to plaintiff for paving brick furnished for the construction of improvements in improvement district No. 74, in Ponca City, Okla., which had theretofore been constructed by defendant construction company under a separate contract. The labor and material bond for said district 74 had been executed by the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, a solvent surety company.

Thereupon, in order to induce plaintiff to furnish material for said district No. 75, the defendant construction company executed and delivered to plaintiff an assignment dated October 26, 1928, in which it assigned to plaintiff, out of the funds to be delivered in payment for the construction of the improvements in district No. 75, the sum of $9,717.19 with the express instructions that the same should be applied as credit upon plaintiff’s account arising in connection with the paving of district No. 74, and that said sum was so applied by the plaintiff. It is agreed that plaintiff knew that said funds were delivered from the funds paid to defendant construction company for work performed in district No. 75, and that defendant surety company had no knowledge of said assignment or payment thereunder, and had not consented thereto.

It is further stipulated that when plaintiff sold to defendant construction company the materials used in the construction of improvements in district No. 74, it knew of the surety bond executed by the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, and relied upon recovering payment therefor either from the defendant construction company or from the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company.

On February 4, 1929, plaintiff filed suit in the district court of Kay county, No. 14102, against the Southwestern Construction Company and the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company seeking recovery for the value of the material furnished in the construction of the improvements in district No. 74.

The defendant construction company became insolvent prior to November, 1929, and the defendant surety company paid claims of parties other than the plaintiff herein for labor and material furnished on district No. 75. amounting to the sum of $5,574.55, all of said creditors assigning their rights to the defendant surety company.

It was further stipulated that if the court should hold that this judgment should be rendered for plaintiff and against the defendant surety company, said judgment should be for $9,303, with interest and costs. But if the .court should find that judgment should be rendered for the defendant surety company against the plaintiff, then costs should be taxed against plaintiff and llic sum of $9,303 should be applied in satisfaction of the claims of plaintiff for materials sold to defendant construction company and used in ' constructing improvements in district No. 75, and if defendant is entitled to recover on its cross-petition, that the balance of $414.19 should be paid by plaintiff to the defendant surety company.

The cause was duly submitted to the court, and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff and against defendants in the sum of $10,284.45, with interest from March 9, 3931, at 6 per cent.

The defendant, in seeking a reversal of the judgment of the trial court, divides its argument in five specifications of error, which may be summarized to the general effect that it claims an equitable right in the funds covered by the assignment dated October 26, 1928, by which defendant, construction company assigned to plaintiff certain funds which were a portion of the contract price for paving district No. 75, and since the funds of district No. 75 were involved, said funds should be applied to the indebtedness arising from the paving of district No. 75 instead, of district No. 74.

Plaintiff contends that the surety company has no such right in said funds covered by the assignment, and that the rule of law applicable hereto is that a creditor may apply a payment voluntarily made by the debtor without any specific directions as to application, where there are two or more debts, to whichever debt he pleases, and a surety cannot control the application of the payment, and in this case the debtor directed how the payment should be applied, of which the surety cannot complain.

The' question presented is not free from difficulty, for the decisions from the various jurisdictions are not entirely in harmony. In order to determine the rule applicable in this jurisdiction, we take notice of section 10613, O. S. 1931, which provides as follows:

“The rule of common law requiring a strict construction of the obligations of a surety shall have no application io the obligations of a surety.or guarantor or indemnitor for hire, but all such obligations shall he liberally construed in accordance with the núes of the general law applicable to policies of insurance.”

*404 In the case of Southwestern Surety Insurance Co. v. Board of Com’rs of Coal County, 77 Okla. 137, 187 P.

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Bluebook (online)
1934 OK 14, 29 P.2d 771, 167 Okla. 402, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-casualty-ins-v-united-brick-tile-co-okla-1934.