Philadelphia Industrial Corp. v. Upper Dublin Township

169 F. Supp. 725, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3872
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 20, 1959
DocketNo. 22348
StatusPublished

This text of 169 F. Supp. 725 (Philadelphia Industrial Corp. v. Upper Dublin Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philadelphia Industrial Corp. v. Upper Dublin Township, 169 F. Supp. 725, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3872 (E.D. Pa. 1959).

Opinion

VAN DUSEN, District Judge.

The facts of this case are not in dispute. On February 4, 1955, the defendant, acting through its Commissioners, contracted with one Carl C. Stinson, trading as Stinson Construction Co. [726]*726(hereinafter referred to as “Stinson”), for the construction of sanitary sewers in North Hills Avenue, Upper Dublin Town-, ship, Montgomery County, Pa. On the same day, Stinson Construction Co., as required by law1 and by the contract,2 applied for and obtained from the London & Lancashire Indemnity Co., of Hartford, Conn., a performance bond and a labor and materialmen’s bond.3 The contract also provided that Stinson commence work 10 days after notified to do so and complete such work in 35 consecutive calendar days. If Stinson failed to complete the work within this time, he was required to pay to the defendant $25 as liquidated damages for each calendar day of delay until the work was completed.4 The contract provided, further, that the contractor make payment within a specified time to his subcontractors and for his supplies, and that the defendant could withhold from the contractor payments due him so as to assure payment to the labor and materialmen until satisfactory evidence of payment of the labor and material bills was presented.5

On February 18, 1955, Stinson was notified by Albright & Friel, Inc., consulting engineers for defendant, to start work on the contract on February 28,, 1955. The work to be performed under the contract was never completed by Stin-son. This work was completed, upon demand of the defendant, by London & Lancashire Indemnity Co., the surety, at a cost of $2,600. The surety was also required to pay $7,221.54 for labor and supplies. On April 20, 1955, Stinson Con-, struction Co. assigned to plaintiff, a Delaware corporation, amounts then or thereafter due and owing under the contract of February 4, 1955.6 Notice of this assignment was given to the Commissioners of defendant. Stinson Construction Co. was adjudicated bankrupt on November 7, 1955. At the time of Stinson’s default, defendant held the sum of $5,691.-35, representing the undistributed balance due under the contract upon completion of all the work. It was paid by defendant to the surety because it completed the work and paid the above-mentioned $7,221.54. It is this amount that plaintiff, as assignee, seeks to recover from defendant by this suit.7

Defendant justifies its payment of this sum to the surety, instead of to plaintiff as assignee, on the ground that the surety, by completing the work and by performing Stinson’s obligations to the labor and materialmen, became subrogated to the rights of the defendant-owner by reason of clause 14(e) of the contract — the withholding clause.8 Plaintiff, on the other hand, asserts that the withholding [727]*727clause in the contract was inserted by defendant without authority and is, therefore, invalid. If such is the case, plaintiff argues, defendant could only be obligated to the prime contractor, Stinson, and defendant’s theory of subrogation could not be validly asserted.

Thus, the principle issue to be determined in this case is whether or not defendant-township had authority to provide in its contract with Stinson for the withholding of payments becoming due under the contract as assurance for the payment of the labor and material bills.9 The cases cited by plaintiff which are most strongly in its favor in support of its contention that such a clause is invalid are McCarthy v. Bridgeport Boro, 1930, 299 Pa. 305, 149 A. 484, and Lesley v. Kite, 1899, 192 Pa. 268, 43 A. 959. In the McCarthy case, the municipality’s contractor defaulted at a time when the municipality owed him more than $3,000 for work already done. The contractor’s surety completed the job and took an assignment from the contractor for the money due. The surety demanded the money from the municipality. The municipality refused on the ground that, since the contract required the contractor to furnish before final payment satisfactory evidence that all labor and material-men had been paid, and since this was not done, it need not pay the money due. In the suit by the contractor for the use of the surety, the court entered judgment for the contractor. This case, however, is distinguishable on its facts from the case before this court. First, it should be noted that McCarthy was suing for money due him for work he had already performed. Second, the basis for the court’s decision was that there was no privity between the municipality and the labor and materialmen. The court particularly emphasized the contractor’s obligation to defend the municipality from suit for nonpayment of labor and material claims. Thus, the court concluded, where the municipality is not liable for the claims of labor and materialmen, it cannot withhold from its prime contractor money he owes to his subcontractors. This case does not meet the precise issue presented by the present case, since there was no withholding provision in the contract involved. Left unanswered, therefore, are the questions of whether or not such a clause would be valid and, if so, whether or not its insertion in the contract would create a privity between the municipality and the labor and material-men. The force of the McCarthy ease, for plaintiff’s purposes, comes from its reliance on Lesley v. Kite, supra. This was a bill in equity by a subcontractor for the appointment of a receiver to take the money in the hands of the municipality due the contractor and distribute it proportionally among the subcontractors. This bill was based on city ordinances providing that the contractor present evidence of full payment to his suppliers before receiving final payment, which was to be made upon approval of the Director of Public Works. The court, in holding that such an ordinance was unenforceable by the subcontractors, said in 192 Pa. at page 274, 43 A. at page 961:

“It is unnecessary to multiply authorities for the purpose of showing that city councils have no authority [728]*728whatever, express or implied, to provide a new remedy in the nature of an attachment, lien, or trust of any kind whereby subcontractors may enforce payment of their claim out of money due the principal contractor. On the grounds of public policy the legislature has hitherto withheld from contractors and subcontractors, not only the right of lien on public buildings, but also the right of attaching money in the hands of the city. On the same principle, it cannot be successfully contended that councils may by ordinance empower the director of public works to retain money due one of the city’s contractors in order that his creditors, who are not parties to the contract, may proceed by bill in equity, or otherwise against him, and thus have the money applied to their claims. In other words, city councils are powerless to provide any remedy to be used as a substitute for attachment or any other remedy which the legislature has heretofore withheld on grounds of public policy, or otherwise.”

But here, as in the McCarthy case, the court held that a municipality cannot withhold money due a contractor to see that his creditors are paid, since there was no contractual relation between such creditors and the municipality. In any event, the effect of that portion of the opinion quoted above has been rendered a nullity by subsequent authorities.10

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Bluebook (online)
169 F. Supp. 725, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-industrial-corp-v-upper-dublin-township-paed-1959.