National Surety Co. v. Hall-Miller Decorating Co.

61 So. 700, 104 Miss. 626
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 61 So. 700 (National Surety Co. v. Hall-Miller Decorating Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Surety Co. v. Hall-Miller Decorating Co., 61 So. 700, 104 Miss. 626 (Mich. 1913).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the chancery court of Hinds county overruling appellant’s demurrer to several bills of complaint filed by certain subcontractors against the Reusch Contracting Company and the National Surety Company, surety upon its bonds for the performance of its contract to construct the State Charity Hospital at Jackson. These bills made the board of trustees of the Mississippi State Charity Hospital parties thereto, and the state intervened in the litigation. All of these suits were consolidated, and all will be settled' by this appeal.

It will be noted that a demurrer was sustained to the bill of the state and the board of trustees, from which decree there was no appeal. The board of trustees of the hospital made a contract with the Reusch Contracting Company to build the hospital, and the contractors made subcontracts with the several complainants to furnish material and construct certain parts of the building. The contractors failed to pay the subcontractors, and these bills were filed to hold the surety company upon its bonds of indemnity.

The Reusch Contracting Company, in the contract to erect the building, bound itself to furnish all material and labor necessary to the completion, within a specified time, of the building according to certain specifications named in or made a part of the contract. The owner, in [628]*628consideration of the erection of the hospital, agreed to pay the builder an agreed sum of money, to wit, forty nine thousand eight hundred and forty-five dollars. As an incident to this building contract, and in furtherance of its performance within the time limit, the contractor, contemporaneously with the execution of the same, executed a bond, with the National Surety Company as surety, obligating itself and its surety to pay the board of trustees of the Mississippi State Charity Hospital and to all subcontractors, workmen, laborers, mechanics, and furnishers of material jointly, as their interests may appear, the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, if it should fail to complete the building according to contract, or if it should fail to pay all of the subcontractors, workmen, laborers, mechanics, and furnishers of material whom it should employ under its said contract. In short, the contractors contracted to furnish all material and labor, and to build within the time fixed a certain building, and at the same time executed a bond in the penalty of twenty-five thousand dollars, with the National Surety Company • as surety thereon, payable to the owners of the building, and to all subcontractors, materialmen, workmen, laborers, and mechanics, and binding itself and its surety thereby to complete the work within the time limit, and binding itself and its surety to pay for all material used in said building, and to pay for all the labor done upon the building, and in default thereof binding it and its surety to forfeit to the obligees, as their interest may appear, the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars.

It is contended by appellant that the bond sued on must be read in connection with the contract and the specifications made part of it; and, in reading the two together, the words in the condition of the bond, ‘ ‘ and shall pay all subcontractors, workmen, laborers, mechanics, and furnishers of material whom he shall employ under his said contract,” are mere surplusage and without legal effect. Two questions are presented by this contention, viz.: [629]*629First, the power of the trustees of the hospital to make or accept a bond for the benefit of third persons; and, second, the right of third persons, the complainants (appellees), to sue upon the bond as a contract made for their benefit.

After stating the question involved here, appellant tentatively admits that the board of trustees was impliedly empowered to require the contractor to execute a bond for the faithful performance of his contract with the board of trustees, but that this power cannot be extended to cover an indemnity to subcontractors. In other words, it is conceded that, while an express power to erect the building carried with it the power to exact a bond from the contractors to insure their performance of their contract to erect the building, the board of trustees was not thereby authorized to demand anything more, and, in the absence of statutory authority, that part of the bond securing the claims of subcontractors was beyond the power of the board to take, or to' enforce after it was taken. It does not appear that anything was required of the contractor which he was not perfectly willing to agree to, and we assume that this bond was executed without pressure from the trustees. It is probable that the bond was given voluntarily and in good faith, and the parties to same were not disturbed by the doctrine of ultra vires.

' Was the provision of the bond for the benefit of subcontractors, materialmen, and laborers ultra vires ? There Is authority for and against the power. In Knapp v. Swaney, 56 Mich. 345, 23 N. W. 162, 56 Am. Rep. 397, Judge Cooley rendered the opinion of the court, saying: £ The county may go to great pains and great expense to make Its courthouse unquestionably safe, that individual citizens may not suffer injuries consequent upon its construction. But if it may do this, it would be very strange If it were found lacking in authority to stipulate in the contract for the building that the contractors, when calling for payment, shall show that they are performing [630]*630their obligations to those who supply the labor and materials, and that the county is not obtaining the building at the expense of the few of its people. . . . We are of the opinion that there was nothing ultra vires in this condition, and that the relators are bound by it.” In U. S. Gypsum Co. v. Gleason, 135 Wis. 539, 116 N. W. 238, 17 L. R. A. (N. S.) 906, referring to a contract for the erection of a public building, wherein it was provided that the claims for labor performed and material furnished should be paid by the contractor, the court said: “This authority is one incident to the powers given it to erect such a building and provide for payment therefor. . . . But in ascertaining the extent of a grant authorizing the doing of some specific thing it is to be taken as embracing the authority to-do every proper act incident thereto and appropriate in the usual and ordinary course to carry such authority into execution. ... We are of opinion that the county had power in this case to contract and secure the plaintiffs as it provided in the contract and the bond given by defendants. ’ ’

The same rule is announced in many of the states. In all of these cases it is held that public boards, like the board of trustees in this case, when given the power to-contract for the doing of public work, have the power to require the contractor to do certain things for the benefit of third persons before they can collect from the public the money due them by the public for the doing of the public work; and some of them hold that such boards also have the inherent power, without statutory grant, to require bonds to secure subcontractors, laborers, and materialmen. City and County of Denver v. Hindry, 40 Colo. 42, 90 Pac. 1028, 11 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1028; Knight & Jillson Co. v. Castle, 172 Ind. 97, 87 N. E. 976, 27 L. R. A. (N. S.) 573; School District v. Iron Works, 147 Mo. 580, 49 S. W. 507; Snider v. Wilkinson Lumber Co. (Ind. App.), 96 N. E. 960; Plumbing & Heating Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
61 So. 700, 104 Miss. 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-surety-co-v-hall-miller-decorating-co-miss-1913.