Pacific Coast Steel Co. v. Old National Bank

235 P. 947, 134 Wash. 457, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 687
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 1925
DocketNo. 19004. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 235 P. 947 (Pacific Coast Steel Co. v. Old National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific Coast Steel Co. v. Old National Bank, 235 P. 947, 134 Wash. 457, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 687 (Wash. 1925).

Opinion

Mackintosh, J.

C. L. Graves made a contract with Whitman county and Colfax city for the building of a bridge. In order to obtain money with which to finance his contract, Graves assigned to the appellant “all estimates ... on work under contract.” This assignment was mailed to the county auditor, who returned it to the appellant saying that the county would not accept it as an assignment covering the whole amount; that assignments should be filed on each estimate as it became due. The Colfax city clerk also was notified by the appellant of Graves’ assignment to it. The appellant received from the city on assigned estimates approximately $12,500 and from the county $21,250. The amount received from the city was on warrants made payable to Graves and sent to appellant ; the amount received from the county was on warrants payable to Graves, on which the county auditor placed an authorization for the appellant to endorse Graves ’ name. After the last payment received by the appellant, Graves allowed accounts for labor and ma *459 terial to remain unpaid and various claims had been filed against the bond which he had furnished. After the work had been completed, the county and city paid to laborers and materialmen the fifteen per cent reserve fund which, according to the contract and by §§ 10320 and 10322 Rem. Comp. Stat., had been withheld from the estimates. This suit involves the amount remaining after the payment of the fifteen per cent reserve and the amounts already received by the appellant.

The contract provided, as already said, for retention by the city and county of 15 per cent of all estimates for the purpose of paying labor and material claims. It also provided that, if the city or county, prior to paying any of the estimates (that is the 85 per cent) received written notice from any laborer or materialman that they had claims for which liens might be filed under the laws of this state if the work were not a public work or claims which might be proper against the bond, that the city and county,

“ ... should have the right to retain out of the payments then due or to become due to said contractor an amount in addition to the 15 per cent above provided to be retained until the final completion of said work, sufficient to cover all such claims or claims of which notice shall have been given.”

The question raised by this appeal is whether the appellant is entitled to the fund remaining in the hands of Whitman county and Colfax city other than the reserved 15 per cent, the appellant contending that it is entitled to the fund by reason of its assignment, and the respondent contending that, under the provisions of the contract, Whitman county and Colfax city are entitled to hold the funds until claims due from the contractor to laborers and materialmen are paid. These claims were filed with the municipalities; and *460 after they had notice of snch claims, they refused to make any further payment to the appellant under its assignment until the claims were paid.

The municipalities base their refusal on the provisions of the contract which we have quoted. In the answer which the municipalities filed in the action, they insist upon their right, under this provision, to retain the fund until the claims have been paid, although they tendered the amount of the fund into court to be properly disbursed. The estimates which were paid by the municipalities to the appellant were paid before they had any notice of any outstanding claims for labor or material. The right which the appellant has, through its assignment, is the same right and no larger than that which Graves had by virtue of his contract. First National Bank v. Seattle, 71 Wash. 122, 127 Pac. 837.

To arrive at the rule of law which is applicable to the facts as outlined, it is necessary to consider several prior decisions of this court which have had under consideration situations arising under contracts similar to the one here.

In State ex rel. Bartelt v. Liebes, 19 Wash. 589, 54 Pac. 26, it was held that a contract for the construction of public work which provided that the contractor should not be paid until the claims for labor and material had been settled was a valid provision, and that, when the contract provided for the withholding of no special amount to meet those claims but provided that all the contract price shall be withheld until all the claims were paid, the entire contract price thus became a trust fund for the benefit of unpaid laborers and materialmen and that an assignee of the contractor would not be entitled to payment until the claims had been paid.

In Dowling v. Seattle, 22 Wash. 592, 61 Pac. 709, *461 there was a contract for public work, which provided that the contractor was to complete the work and pay for all labor and material, and that he should be allowed monthly 70 per cent of the amount earned by him upon estimates, and that the balance of 30 per cent of the contract price should be retained by the city to secure the payment of laborers and material-men. An assignee was held entitled to the 70 per cent after the assignment had been assented to by the city, even though it was “true that the city by virtue of a provision of the agreement . . . might have withheld all payments from the contractor until it was satisfied that all just claims for labor and material had been fully paid;” the court saying that the city was, however, not obliged to withhold such payments and not having done so, it was not a trustee for the laborers and materialmen of any portion of the 70 per cent and that the assignee to whom payments had been made of the 70 per cent of the estimates was entitled to retain them.

In First National Bank v. Seattle, supra, the contract for public work provided that 70 per cent of the amount earned during each month should be paid to the contractor as the work progressed and that the remaining 30 per cent should be kept by the city to pay laborers and materialmen. The amount involved in that case was the balance due the contractor under the 70 per cent provision, the 30 per cent remaining having been paid out to the lien claimants. The assignee of the contractor asserted that it was entitled to the balance of the 70 per cent, as against laborers and ma-terialmen and regardless of their claims. The contract provided that,

“The contractor agrees to pay the wages of all persons and . . . the board of public works may with *462 hold any and all payments under this contract until satisfied that all wages have been fully paid.”

In addition, the assignment itself provided that “this assignment is not valid as against any claim for labor, material, provisions and goods supplied and furnished in the prosecution of this contract.” It was held that the balance of the 70 per cent not having been paid, and the city having knowledge of the liens for labor and material, the laborers and materialmen were entitled to the fund by reason of the provision of the contract giving the city the right to use such portion of the 70 per cent as was necessary to pay laborers and materialmen.

In Northwestern National Bank v. Guardian Casualty & Guaranty Co., 93 Wash. 635, 161 Pac. 473, Ann. Cas.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
235 P. 947, 134 Wash. 457, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-coast-steel-co-v-old-national-bank-wash-1925.