Philadelphia Nat. Bank v. McKinlay

72 F.2d 89, 63 App. D.C. 296, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4455
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 18, 1934
Docket6181
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 72 F.2d 89 (Philadelphia Nat. Bank v. McKinlay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philadelphia Nat. Bank v. McKinlay, 72 F.2d 89, 63 App. D.C. 296, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4455 (D.C. Cir. 1934).

Opinion

GRONER, Associate Justice.

Appellants filed their bill of complaint in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia against Prank T. Hines, Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs, and William II. Woodin, Secretary of the Treasury, and joined with them as codefendants McKinlay, trustee of L. Balkin Company, Union Indemnity Company, Beckner and Levy, receivers of the Union Indemnity Company, New York Indemnity Company, Van Sehaiek, superintendent of insurance of New York, and International Reinsurance Corporation. The purpose of the bill was to obtain an order directing Hines, as Administrator, and Woodin, as Secretary of the Treasury, to *90 pay or cause to be paid to the receiver to be appointed by the court, the sum of $68,-244.86, the balance determined to be due under a construction contract between the Balkin Company and the United States for the construction of the Veterans’ Hospital at Canandaigua, N. Y. The bill recites that the contract was entered into May 23, 1931, and provided that, if the Balkin Company refused or failed to prosecute the work on the buildings with such diligence as would insure its completion within a specified time, or failed to complete the work within such time, the United States might by written notice terminate its right to proceed with the work; that the contractor gave the bond required by law (the Hurd Act [40 USCA § 270]), the New York Indemnity Company becoming surety, and in turn reinsuring its liability in part with International Reinsurance Corporation and Union Indemnity Company. The bill then further recites that at the time the bond was given the Balkin Company executed an assignment to the surety of all deferred payments or moneys that might be then due or thereafter become due and payable to it at the time of any breach or default in the contract, the same to be credited upon any loss occasioned to the surety.

The Balkin Company entered into the performance of the contract, but failed to prosecute the work, and on March 30, 1932, the United States terminated the contract and declared the Balkin Company in default. Notice of the default was given to the New York Indemnity Company, which company had then come under control of the Union Indemnity Company, and the surety thereupon undertook the performance of the balance of the contract under an agreement with the United States, whereby the completion of the work was upon consideration that the United States would make payment to the surety as the work progressed of the balance of the contract price, including retained percentages, subject, however, to the limitation that such payment to the surety by the United States should not exceed the cost incurred by the surety in completing the work. The United States paid the surety $130,290.17, all of which, plus the further sum of $78,590.15, the surety expended in the performance of the work. Upon the completion and acceptance by the United States of the buildings, there was due, as we have seen, from the United States, on account of the total contract price and extras, the sum of $68,244.86.

Appellants are six corporations (Philadelphia National Bank, a corporation, assignee, etc.; Truscon Steel Company, a corporation; MeClintic-Marshall Corporation, a corporation; Buffalo Steel Company, a corporation; Gray Knox Marble Company, a corporation; and Federal Seaboard Terra Cotta Corporation, a corporation), which entered into contract with.the Balkin Company, prior to its default, to furnish all of the various materials and labor in the prosecution of the construction of the work. The materials and labor furnished by four of them were furnished to the Balkin Company prior to its default. T.wo of them, in addition, furnished labor and materials to the surety after default by the original contractor.

The bill recites that there are approximately $150,000 due to persons who furnished labor and materials on the buildings; some of these persons having furnished labor and material to the original contractor, some to the completing surety, and some to both. The purpose of the bill, in addition- to impounding the fund in the hands of a re-' eeiver, is to have the court ascertain the persons who furnished labor and material on the buildings and whose debts are unpaid and for the distribution of the fund on a pro rata basis among such creditors.

On January 31, 1933, and prior to the institution of this suit, the Balkin Company was adjudged a bankrupt, and Robert W. McKinlay, one of the appellees, was elected trustee. This appellee moved to dismiss the bill on the ground that, the Balkin Company having been adjudicated a bankrupt, the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia had no jurisdiction to administer for the benefit of the creditors of the Balkin Company the amount owing by the United States upon the contract-originally between the- United States and the Balkin Company. Appellee, to sustain his position, relies largely upon our decision in American Surety Company v. Owens, Trustee in Bankruptcy, 22 App. D. C. 210, 66 F.(2d) 190, but, in our view, the facts in that ease clearly distinguish it from the ease under consideration. In that case there was a fund due by the United States on account of work done by a contractor, which was admittedly insufficient to pay the labor and material claims owing on account of the work. The contractor had filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy, and a trustee had been appointed, and thereafter the surety filed its bill in the District Supreme. Court against the *91 contractor and the Secretary of the Navy, to enforce an equitable lien on the retained pay of Gray, as contractor for the work. The question was whether the money should he paid to the bankrupt's trustee or to the surety. Wo held it should he paid to the bankrupt’s trustee. But the basis of our decision in that ease was that it was admitted the fund belonged to the bankrupt estate, and so we held that, until the claims of tho creditors, who had done work and furnished material, had been satisfied, the surety had no claim to the fund, and likewise that, the bankrupt’s trustee being entitled to the fund, the bankruptcy court had jurisdiction to ascertain liens against it or rights to it. But tho facts just recited are entirely different from the facts we find here. In the Owens Case the contractor completed the work, and there was no question that, had bankruptcy not intervened, he would have been entitled to demand and receive the fund from the United States. When bankruptcy did intervene, title to all of the property of the bankrupt, wherever situated, vested in his trustee, and thereafter the bankruptcy court had exclusive jurisdiction to control and administer the estate for the benefit, of the creditors of the bankrupt.. In this case the bankrupt defaulted in the performance of the contract, and its surety thereupon entered into a new contract with the United States, in which it undertook to complete the work and tho United States, on its part, to pay so much of the contract price and the retained percentages as was necessary to reimburse it.

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72 F.2d 89, 63 App. D.C. 296, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-nat-bank-v-mckinlay-cadc-1934.