Morganton Manufacturing & Trading Co. v. Andrews

81 S.E. 418, 165 N.C. 285, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 261
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 81 S.E. 418 (Morganton Manufacturing & Trading Co. v. Andrews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morganton Manufacturing & Trading Co. v. Andrews, 81 S.E. 418, 165 N.C. 285, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 261 (N.C. 1914).

Opinion

AlleN, J:

The contract entered into between the defendants Anderson and Crews, and the bond executed by the Maryland Casualty Company to secure its performance, must be considered together, as contended by the creditors, in order to properly determine the extent of the obligations of the bond; and when we examine the contract, we find first an agreement upon the part .of the contractor to provide all the materials and to perform all the work necessary to erect the building.

The contention of the creditors is that this is an agreement to furnish the materials and labor and impliedly to pay for them, and as the .bond was executed to secure performance of the contract, the Casualty Company, is bound for th'e payment of the claim for materials.

If this is a proper construction of the contract, and the Casualty Company is bound for obligations not expressed in the bond, the conclusion contended for would seem to follow, in the absence of restrictive words in the bond; but we are of opinion this is not a correct view of the agreement of the parties.

The stipulation that the contractor will furnish the materials and labor adds nothing to the agreement to build the house, because it could not be built without the materials and labor, *290 ami there can be no implied promise to pay between the contractor and the owner, the parties to the contract, as the contractor was to furnish the materials, and consequently there could be no implied promise to pay him for them, and the owner made the express promisé to pay $4,600 for the building, which included materials.

The parties undertook to reduce their agreement to writing, and presumably inserted every provision regarded material, and' it is a well recognized principle that there can be no implied contract where there is an express contract between the parties in reference to the same subject-matter. 9 Cyc., 242; Lawrence v. Hester, 93 N. C., 79.

The other part of the contract relied on simply protects the owner against liens upon his property, and against amounts he may be compelled to pay, and cannot extend the liability of the Casualty Company upon its obligation to see that the contract is faithfully performed beyond the amount for which the owner is liable.

If, however, this position was doubtful, the terms of the bond put the matter at rest.

It is therein expressly provided that, “The surety shall not be liable under this bond to any one except the owner,” and that in estimating his damages, .only those claims of mechanics and material men “paid by him” shall be included.

We therefore conclude, as it is not contended that the owner has paid any of the material men, and as he makes no claim against the Casualty Company, that his Honor properly held that the Casualty Company was not liable to the creditors.

The cases from North Carolina principally relied on by the creditors in support of their contention (Gastonia v. Engineering Co., 131 N. C., 363; Voorhees v. Porter, 134 N. C., 591; Supply Co. v. Lumber Co., 160 N. C., 428) are easily distinguishable from the one before us.

In the Gastonia case the reasonable intendment to pay grows out of the provision in the contract “for the payment of all material used and wages of all laborers employed by said contractor.” These words occur .in the contract, and there was *291 nothing in the bond to indicate that the bond did not guarantee such payment. The ease also involved conditions which made it impossible for material men and laborers to protect themselves by filing liens, for the reason that the property belonged to a municipality and was not subject to liens.

In the Voorhees case the purchaser of goods expressly agreed to pay the debts of the seller, and it was held that one who guaranteed the performance of the contract to pay was liable to a creditor.

The Supply Company case was tried on demurrer. The demurrer necessarily admitted the truth of the allegation in the complaint, that the contractor agreed to pay for the material and labor, and that the bond simply guaranteed such payment. The bond contained neither restriction nor condition. It merely provided that, if the contractor should perform his contract it should be null and void, and that otherwise it should remain in full force and effect. If the contractor agreed to pay for material and labor, and the bond guaranteed that he would do so,' it necessarily followed that there was a breach of the condition of the bond when he failed to do so, and the court could not do otherwise than declare that by reasonable intendment the bond in that case was made for the benefit and in the interest of material men and laborers. There was no suggestion in it that liability under it was confined to the owner.

In all these cases there was an express promise to pay in the contract, and- a bond without restrictions to secure performance, while in the case under consideration there is no express promise, and the right to recover on the bond is limited to the owner.

This brings us to the exception of the Morganton Manufacturing and Trading Company to the ruling of his Honor, that the funds in the hands of the owner, being the balance due the contractor, shall be distributed pro rata among the claims of the material men, and not according to priority in filing the notice of liens with the clerk.

The controversy arises because of the apparent conflict between section 2023 of the Revisal and section 2035, both being parts of the same chapter, the first section providing that, “It *292 shall be the duty of the owner to distribute the amount (remaining due the contractor) pro rata among the several-claimants,” and the second that, “The liens created and established by this chapter shall be paid and settled according to the priority of the notice of lien filed with the justice or the clerk.”

"When- laws have been codified, it is' permissible to examine the original legislation as an aid to correct interpretation (Rodgers v. Bell, 156 N. C., 386), and a brief history of the lien laws, enacted to secure the payment of claims for labor done and materials furnished, now collected in chapter 48 of the Revisal,’ will furnish light in the solution of the question.

The first of these in chapter 117, Laws 1868-69, which, with some enlargement, is now section 2016 of the Revisal and the succeeding sections regulating the filing and the-enforcement of the lien. Section 2035 of the Revisal was a part of this statute.

Soon after its enactment, it was held by the Supreme Court that no right to a lien was conferred by the statute unless there was a contract, express or implied, with the owner, creating the relation of creditor and debtor (Wilkie v. Bray, 71 N. C., 205), and as a result, subcontractors were excluded from its benefits, because they had no express contract with the owner, and none could be implied from the use of the materials as they were furnished- to the contractor, and under the express contract between him and the owner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 S.E. 418, 165 N.C. 285, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morganton-manufacturing-trading-co-v-andrews-nc-1914.