Miller Et Ux. v. Wayne Title Tr. Co.

35 A.2d 786, 154 Pa. Super. 329, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 364
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 9, 1943
DocketAppeal, 178
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 35 A.2d 786 (Miller Et Ux. v. Wayne Title Tr. 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
Miller Et Ux. v. Wayne Title Tr. Co., 35 A.2d 786, 154 Pa. Super. 329, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 364 (Pa. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

Plaintiffs, Dr. and Mrs. Miller, brought this action of assumpsit against Wayne Title and Trust Company (hereinafter called Wayne) to recover $1,027.82, the remainder of a deposit made by them with the defendant, which, they alleged, it unjustly refused to pay over to them.

The trial judge directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for the amount claimed, with interest, but *331 subsequently entered judgment for the defendant non obstante veredicto. Plaintiffs appealed.

At the outset it must be emphasized that the deposit was not a banking account, subject to check or bearing interest. It was a deposit made by the Millers with Wayne, as their agent and attorney in fact, to secure it against loss resulting from “certain insurances” made by it at their request, in connection with a contract for the construction of a house for them, and to be distributed by it pursuant to the several contracts and obligations involved.

The Millers owned a lot in Tredyffrin Township, Chester County, on which they wanted to build a house. They negotiated with a Philadelphia contractor named Lewis B. Roberts, trading as Roberts Construction Company, (hereinafter called Roberts), for the construction of the house and he agreed to build it according to plans and specifications prepared by an architect for $16,025. They had $5,025 to apply on this amount, and arranged to borrow the balance, $11,000, from the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company on first mortgage, the lender stipulating that it be furnished with a bond or insurance contract insuring the mortgage to be placed on the property as a first lien free of mechanics’ liens and from all claims or loss by reason of non-completion of the building. The plaintiffs arranged with Wayne — chartered as a title insurance company (Act of May 9,1889, P. L. 159) having its principal place of business in Wayne, Delaware County — to furnish this insurance to the mortgagee, and deposited with Wayne as their agent and attorney, $5,025 of their own money as well as the $11,000 to be advanced by the mortgagee from time to time, to be paid out by defendant in accordance with the terms of a certain contract, dated October 13, 1936, entered into between plaintiffs as owners, and Roberts, as contractor, which provided, inter alia, that the contractor should furnilih it bond *332 satisfactory to Wayne in the sum of $16,025, conditioned for the compliance by the contractor with all the terms and conditions of the building agreement, and that no mechanics’ liens or other lien whatsoever should be filed against said building and the curtilage appurtenant by the contractor or any subconstractors, material men or laborers.

The contract further recited that plaintiffs had requested Wayne to make certain insurances of completion and against liens and that it had consented to make the same provided the parties entered into said contract. The contract further provided that the owners, these plaintiffs, constituted Wayne their agent and attorney in fact with authority to declare the contractor in default and to terminate the contract and procure others and charge the cost and expense against the contractor and against any balance in its hands due or thereafter to become due to the contractor. It is unnecessary to recite all the details of this contract and of the powers and authority granted Wayne therein in consequence of its assumption of the contracts of insurance aforesaid requested by these plaintiffs, the owners. It is very broad in its grant of authority as such agent and attorney for the owners, these plaintiffs. In addition the plaintiffs entered into a bond or obligation to Wayne in the penal sum of $32,050, likewise dated October 13, 1936, reciting that Wayne had agreed to insure the mortgage of $11,000 of the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company as a first lien on said premises free of mechanics’ liens and from all claims by reason of non-completion of the contract within the price specified and that the obligors, the Millers, had agreed to indemnify the obligee, Wayne, by reason of such insuiance; said bond being conditioned, “That if the above bounden obligors......shall and do well and. sufficiently indemnify and save harmless the said obligee ...... of and from all suits, loss, damages, *333 whatsoever, which the said obligee......shall be put to or sustain for or by reason of the failure of the said Lewis B. Roberts ...... to carry out the provisions of said contract and to complete the said construction and keep the said premises free from mechanics liens or claims by reason of non-completion of the contract within the contract .price, then the above obligation to be void or else to be and remain in full force and virtue.”

The various papers, contracts and obligations show a delegation of broad power and authority by the Millers to Wayne as their agent and attorney in fact looking to the disbursement of the $16,025 to be deposited with it for the construction of the building and the insurance of a first lien mortgage to the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company.

The contractor duly covenanted and agreed that no mechanics’ liens should be filed against the building and curtilage appurtenant by himself or any subcontractors, material men or laborers and also furnished a bond to the Millers, dated October 19, 1936, in the sum of $16,025, signed by him as principal, with Inland Bonding Company, as surety, satisfactory to Wayne, conditioned for the full and faithful performance by Roberts of the contract for the construction of the building in accordance with its terms and conditions, and the payment and reimbursement of all loss and damage sustained by them by reason of failure or default on the part of said principal.

The waiver of the right to file liens against the building, included in the contract, left to subcontractors no security on their contracts except the personal responsibility of. the contractor, and three of the bidding subcontractors were not willing to enter into subcontracts with him on that basis alone. These were Frank L. Snedaker & Co., whose contract for lumber and mill-.work amounted to $1,684, J. Levitt whose contract for *334 plumbing and heating amounted to $1,355.95, and The Lumber & MillVork Company whose contract for lumber amounted to $900.

For Wayne to have refused to do anything to surmount this initial obstacle would probably have resulted in the breakdown of the whole affair and an immediate breach of its insurance with Penn Mutual. It had anfple funds in hand to provide for the payment of these subcontractors, if they conformed to specifications, and the broad powers given it as agent and attorney in fact for the Millers in the contract and bond above referred to, in our opinion, warranted it in taking the action which it did, viz., it issued, on October 23, 1936, separate guarantees to Snedaker, Levitt and Lumber & Millwork Co., for the payment of their respective subcontracts, “payments to be made upon vouchers approved by the Architect and Owners”. The contractor, Roberts, had previously, (on October 21, 1936), in writing, duly authorized Wayne to disburse to the respective subcontractors the amounts of their several subcontracts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 A.2d 786, 154 Pa. Super. 329, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-et-ux-v-wayne-title-tr-co-pasuperct-1943.