New Amsterdam Casualty Co. v. City of Astoria

256 F. 560, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 899
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedMarch 24, 1919
DocketNo. 7710
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 256 F. 560 (New Amsterdam Casualty Co. v. City of Astoria) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Amsterdam Casualty Co. v. City of Astoria, 256 F. 560, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 899 (D. Or. 1919).

Opinion

WOLVFRTON, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). It is insisted on the part of the Astoria Savings Bank, and other assignees of this fund, that the complainant is without cause of suit, because it has not as yet paid the demands that the principal is required under its contracts to pay, and therefore is without the right of subro-gation. The rule is well stated by Chancellor Walworth, in Sandford v. McLean, 3 Paige (N. Y.) 122, 23 Am. Dec. 773, as follows:

“It is only in cases where the person advancing money to pay the debt of a third party stands in the situation of a surety, or is compelled to pay it to protect his own rights, that a court of equity substitutes him in the place of the creditor, as a matter of course, without any agreement to that effect. In other cases the demand of a creditor, which is paid with the money of a third person, and without any agreement that the security shall be assigned or kept on foot for the benefit of such third person, is absolutely extinguished.”

The principle is stated to the same effect in the headnote to Ætna Life Ins. Co. v. Middleport, 124 U. S. 534 (8 Sup. Ct. 625, 31 L. Ed. 537):

“The doctrine of subrogation in equity requires (1) that the person seeking its benefit must have paid a debt due to a third party before he can be substituted to that party’s rights; and (2) that in doing this he must not act as a mere volunteer, but on compulsion, to save himself from loss by reason of a superior lien or claim on the part of the person to whom he pays the debt, as in cases of sureties, prior mortgagees, etc. The right is never accorded in equity to one who is a mere volunteer in paying a debt of one person to another.”

See, to the same purpose, Prairie State Bank v. United States, 164 U. S. 227, 17 Sup. Ct. 142, 41 L. Ed. 412; Henningsen v. U. S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 208 U. S. 404, 28 Sup. Ct. 389, 52 L. Ed. 547; Derby v. United States F. & G. Co., 87 Or. 34, 169 Pac. 500; Wasco County v. New England E. Ins. Co., 88 Or. 465, 172 Pac. 126, L R. A. 1918D, 732, Ann. Cas. 1918E, 656.

[1-4] Counsel for complainant, however, contends that, although the casualty company is not entitled to present subrogation, it is entitled to have the funds due the contractor from the city impounded in the hands of the city until its rights to such portion of the funds as will meet the obligations of the contractor for which it is surety are determined and apportioned, and that the present suit is a proper proceeding for the accomplishment of that purpose. Let us inquire as to this.

[563]*563These contracts were entered into with a municipality. The municipality is required by a statute of the state, where it enters into a contract for making public improvements, to protect the rights of laborers and materialmen, by causing the contractor to execute a bond conditioned that such contractor shall promptly make payments to all persons supplying him labor or materials for doing the work. Sess. Laws Or. 1913, p. 59. This is a public statute, of which all persons must take notice. The present bonds were given in pursuance of that statute. The whole of the consideration for each of the improvements was made payable within 90 days after the completion of the work. This operated to protect the city against the obligations imposed by law to pay the labor and material claimants, and furthermore it affords the laborer and the materialman a right of action against both the contractor and surety in the name of the state for their respective demands. Now, the retention of the entire payment until 90 days after the contract work had been completed operated as indemnity to the city for insuring full payment to the laborers and materialmen. Wasco County v. New England E. Ins. Co., supra. The court there, speaking through Mr. Justice Harris, says:

“The percentage reserved by the county out of each monthly estimate served to secure the county against any loss it might sustain on account of the nonperformance of the contract, and when Cromer abandoned his contract the county had a right to hold this fund to secure itself against any damages that might have resulted from a nonperformance of the contract by Cromer. * * * The right of the county to retain a specified percentage dates from the time the contract was entei'ed into, and it must be conceded that until the claims for labor and material are paid the county’s right to the fund is superior to that of the bank claiming by an equitable assignment from the contractor.”

Moreover it operated as much for the indemnity of the surety as for that of the principal. Such is the principle declared by the court in Prairie State Bank v. United States, supra. It says:

“That a stipulation in a building contract for the retention, until the completion of the work, of a certain portion of the consideration, is as much for the indemnity of him who may he guarantor of the performance of the work as for him for whom the work is to be performed, that it raises an equity in the surety in the fund to he created, and that a disregard of such stipulation by the voluntary act of the creditor operates to release the sureties, is amply sustained by authority.”

As bearing directly upon this question, the court in the Wasco County Case further says:

“The reserved fund is as much for the indemnity of the surety as it is for the security of the owner for whom the work is to be performed and an equity in such reserved fund is raised in behalf of the surety.”

Such being the rule, and the contracts being for the prosecuting of public work, persons taking assignments from the contractor of funds to be disbursed in final payments are bound to take notice, first, of the terms of the contract; second, that the contract is accompanied by the bond of a surety, and likewise of the undertaking of the surety; and, third, that the reserve fund is for the indemnity of the surety as well as [564]*564that of the city. This subordinates the claims of the assignees of parts of the funds to become due to the demands of the surety.

Now it has been made to appear that the city is going to dissipate these funds reserved for the final payment of obligations incurred by the contractor under these contracts, by paying over to the assignees parts of the several sums due and to become due to the contractor under these contracts, and the complainant sues to have the city restrained from doing that until the conflicting interests may be adjusted, so that it can properly discharge its. obligations under the bonds, and at the same time have the fund protected for its benefit, namely, that it may be reimbursed for the outlays it will be compelled to make. Equity and good conscience would seem to dictate that the complainant is entitled to have the funds remain where they are until it can ascertain its liabilities and adjust them, or so much thereof as will amply protect it against its liabilities incurred under the several bonds. Moore v. Topliff et al., 107 Ill. 241.

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Bluebook (online)
256 F. 560, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 899, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-amsterdam-casualty-co-v-city-of-astoria-ord-1919.