Missouri Gravel Co. v. Federal Surety Co.

237 N.W. 635, 212 Iowa 1322
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 20, 1931
DocketNo. 40841.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 237 N.W. 635 (Missouri Gravel Co. v. Federal Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri Gravel Co. v. Federal Surety Co., 237 N.W. 635, 212 Iowa 1322 (iowa 1931).

Opinion

Grimm, J.

On July 24, 1928, the Rock Island Cement Company, hereinafter called the ‘'contractor, ’ ’ signed a contract for the construction of Primary Project No. 149 in Lee County, Iowa, with the State Highway Commission. The project consisted of the paving of a certain street in the City of Keokuk, Iowa, which constituted part of the primary road system of Lee County. The contract was let and the work done under the provisions of Section 4755-b26 of the Code of 1927, which in substance provides that the State Highway Commission is given plenary jurisdiction to hard-surface any road or street which is a continuation of the primary road system within any city or town.

Many of the facts are stipulated in the record.

The contractor, with the Federal Surety Company as surety, signed a contractor’s bond which contained, among other things, a provision for the payment of all labor and material furnished in the work covered by the contract. During the progress of the work, the contractor failed and the construction was completed by the surety company. The work was accepted by the Iowa State Highway Commission on July 10, 1929, at which time there remained unpaid on the work.the sum of $3,620.57. This was the portion of the contract price retained under the law.

*1324 Six material men filed proper claims with the Iowa State Highway Commission. Three of the said six claimants also filed original duplicates of their claims with the auditor of Lee County. On August 26, 1929, the Missouri Grayel Company, one of the claimants which filed its claim with the Iowa State Highway Commission and did not file its claim with the auditor of Lee County, filed its petition in the Lee County District Court, seeking to establish its claim. Notices were served upon all the other interested parties and they appeared and filed pleadings. The pleadings are quite voluminous. The material defenses may be stated as follows:

1. That the Iowa State Highway Commission was not the proper party with which to file the claims for improvements of this character, it being alleged that the Iowa State Highway Commission as such was not authorized by law to issue warrants for an improvement made under the provisions of Section 4755-b26 of the Code, and that the auditor of state was the party with whom, under the provisions of the statute, these claims should have been filed.

2. That the proper filing of the claim was a condition precedent to the consideration and allowance of the claim.

3. That the claimants having failed to properly file their claims within six months, they are barred under Section 10313 of the Code.

That the materials represented by the claims were furnished and that the claims are correct is not in dispute. The primary and controlling question in the case is with whom should these claims have been filed. The trial court approved of the filing of the claims with the Iowa State Highway Commission.

I. The determination of the key question in this case calls for an interpretation of Section 10305 of the Code of 1927, which reads as follows:

“Claims for material or labor. Any person, firm, or corporation who has,' under a contract with the principal contractor or with subcontractors, performed labor, or furnished material, service, or transportation, in the construction of a public improvement, may' file, with the officer authorized by law to issue warrants in payment of such improvement, an itemized, sworn, *1325 written statement of the claim for such labor, or material, service, or transportation.” (Writer’s italics.)

As previously stated, this public improvement of the street in the City of Keokuk was made by virtue of the power and authority granted the Iowa State Highway Commission by Section 4755-b26 of the Code of 1927. The improvement was a part of the Primary Highway system. In the ordinary course of payment for work done on the primary highway, payments are made under the provision of Section 4755-bl5, which reads as follows:

“Vouchers — payment. All claims shall be itemized upon voucher forms prepared for that purpose, sworn to by the claimants, certified to by the engineer in charge, and then forwarded to the state highway commission for audit and approval. Upon the approval, by the state highway commission, of vouchers which are payable from the primary road fund,, such vouchers shall be forwarded to the auditor of state, who shall draw warrants therefor, and said warrants shall be paid by the treasurer of state from the primary road fund.” (Writer’s italics.)

In this case, the claims were not for payments in the regular course, but for materials and labor furnished and which are to be paid out of the retained portion of the contract price or by the sureties on the bond.

It is the contention of the claimants (appellees) that the state highway commission is authorized by law to issue warrants in payment of such improvements and that the filing of the claims with the state highway commission was a proper filing.

Lee County had voted primary road bonds, the proceeds of which were available for the payment of this project. Prior to the completion of the work, $22,611.49 was paid to the contractor or his assignee. This estimate was made out by the contractor, approved by the resident engineer and the district engineer of the state highway commission, and then filed with the Iowa State Highway Commission on November 1, 1928. The proper expenditure notations were made by the state highway commission, which was audited by the highway commission auditor and forwarded to the county auditor of Lee County, who, in turn, prepared a “primary road bond fund warrant” on the treasurer of *1326 Lee County, which, warrant was paid through a cheek drawn by the county treasurer on the Iowa State Bank of Fort Madison, Iowa. It was in this manner that the more than $22,000.00 estimate was paid. Why this was so done is not explained in the record. By the terms of Section 4755-bl5, hereinbefore quoted, the voucher for the $22,000.00 estimate should have been forwarded to the auditor of state who, in turn, should have drawn a warrant payable by the state treasurer on the primary road fund. We do not overlook Section 4755-bl4, which is as follows:

“Claims.. All claims for improving and maintaining the primary road system shall be paid from the primary road fund provided, however, that when bonds have been issued for improving the primary roads, construction claims may be paid from such bond fund. ’ ’

Nevertheless, we find no provision for paying the cost of primary road construction on contracts made by the state highway commission by warrants drawn by the county auditor.

Section 10306 of the Code of 1927 is as follows:

“Filing claims in case of highway improvements. In case of highway improvements by the county, claims shall be filed with the county auditor of the county letting the contract.”

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237 N.W. 635, 212 Iowa 1322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-gravel-co-v-federal-surety-co-iowa-1931.